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How the Mahabharata Uses Hidimba and Ghatotkach—and What It Reveals About Power

A hard look at dharma, caste, and the bodies the epic leaves by the roadside The Mahabharata is perhaps the most celebrated ethical text in Indian civilization. Generations have turned to it for guidance on dharma—righteous conduct, duty, cosmic order. Its heroes are revered. Its battles are remembered as the struggle between good and evil. Its god, Krishna, is worshipped as the supreme teacher of the Bhagavad Gita. But a hard look at one small episode—the story of Hidimba and her son Ghatotkach—reveals something darker. Something the epic shows plainly but rarely acknowledges as problematic. Something that passes for dharma only if you are willing to confuse power with righteousness. This is the story of a rakshasi who saves a hero, marries him under conditions, bears his child, and is abandoned. It is the story of a son who is ignored for years, summoned to die in a war not his own, and mourned—if at all—as a tool, not a child. And it is the story of an epic th...

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