Thursday, April 24, 2008

Ramayana: Victory of Virtue Over Vice


The Ramayana is an age-old Sanskrit ballsy attributed to the artist Valmiki and an important allotment of the Hindu canon. The Ramayana consists of 24,000 verses in seven cantos and tells the adventure of Rama, whose wife Sita is abducted by the demon baron of Lanka, Ravan.

Like its ballsy accessory Mahabharata, the Ramayana is not just an accustomed story. It contains the article of the actual age-old Hindu sages and presents them through apologue in anecdotal and the interspersion of the abstract and the devotional. The characters of Rama, Sita, Lakshmana, Bharat, Hanuman and Ravana (the villain of the piece) are all axiological to the cultural alertness of the world.

Morals in Ramayana

The abrupt account of the absolute Ramayana adventure by the academician Narada to Valmiki, forms the aboriginal sarga of Valmiki Ramayana. Narada lists the sixteen qualities of the ideal man and says that Rama was the complete man possessing all sixteen of these qualities. Although Rama himself declares "he is but a man", and never already claims to be divine, Rama is admired by Hindus as one of the a lot of important avatars of God Vishnu and an ideal man.

Sita is the wife of Rama and the babe of baron Janaka. She is the apotheosis of Goddess Laxmi (Lord Vishnu's wife). Sita is the apotheosis of chichi abstention and virtue. She follows her bedmate into banishment and there gets abducted by Ravana. She is confined in the island of Lanka by Ravana. Rama rescues her by acquisition the demon baron Ravana.

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