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Sri Sukadeva Gosvami said: Lord Sri Krsna, accompanied by Balarama and surrounded by
the Yadu dynasty, executed the killing of many demons. Then, further to remove the burden
of the earth, the Lord arranged for the great Battle of Kuruksetra, which suddenly erupted
in violence between the Kurus and the Pandavas. Because the sons of Pandu were enraged by
the numerous offenses of their enemies, such as duplicitous gambling, verbal insults, the
seizing of Draupadi’s hair, and many other cruel transgressions, the Supreme Lord engaged
those Pandavas as the immediate cause to execute His will. On the pretext of the Battle of
Kuruksetra, Lord Krsna arranged for all the kings who were burdening the earth to assemble
with their armies on opposite sides of the battlefield, and when the Lord killed them
through the agency of war, the earth was relieved of its burden.
The Supreme Personality of Godhead used the Yadu dynasty, which was protected by His own
arms, to eliminate the kings who with their armies had been the burden of this earth.
Then the unfathomable Lord thought to Himself, “Although some may say that the earth’s
burden is now gone, in My opinion it is not yet gone, because there still remains the
Yadava dynasty itself, whose strength is unbearable for the earth.”
Lord Krsna thought, “No outside force could ever bring about the defeat of this family,
the Yadu dynasty, whose members have always been fully surrendered to Me and are unrestricted
in their opulence. But if I inspire a quarrel within the dynasty, that quarrel will act
just like a fire created from the friction of bamboo in a grove, and then I shall achieve
My real purpose and return to My eternal abode.” My dear King Pariksit, when the supreme almighty
Lord, whose desire always comes to pass, had thus made up His mind, He withdrew His own
family on the pretext of a curse spoken by an assembly of brahmanas.
The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krsna, is the reservoir of all beauty. All beautiful
things emanate from Him, and His personal form is so attractive that it steals the eyes
away from all other objects, which then seem devoid of beauty in comparison to Him. When
Lord Krsna was on the earth, He attracted the eyes of all people. When Krsna spoke,
His words attracted the minds of all who remembered them. By seeing the footsteps of Lord Krsna,
people became attracted to Him, and thus they wanted to offer their bodily activities to
the Lord as His followers. In this way Krsna very easily spread His glories, which are
sung throughout the world by the most sublime and essential Vedic verses. Lord Krsna considered
that simply by hearing and chanting those glories, conditioned souls born in the future
would cross beyond the darkness of ignorance. Being satisfied with this arrangement, He
left for His desired destination. King Pariksit inquired: How could the brahmanas
curse the Vrsnis, who were always respectful to the brahmanas, charitable, and inclined
to serve senior and exalted personalities and whose minds were always fully absorbed
in thought of Lord Krsna? King Pariksit continued inquiring: What was
the motive for this curse? What did it consist of, O purest of the twice-born? And how could
such a disagreement have arisen among the Yadus, who all shared the same goal of life?
Please tell me all these things. Sukadeva Gosvami said: The Lord, who bore
His body as the amalgamation of everything beautiful, dutifully executed the most auspicious
activities while on the earth, although He was, in fact, without any endeavor already
satisfied in all desires. Residing in His abode and enjoying life, the Lord, whose glorification
is in itself magnanimous, now wanted to annihilate His dynasty, as there still remained some
small part of His duty to be carried out. The sages Visvamitra, Asita, Kanva, Durvasa,
Bhrgu, Angira, Kasyapa, Vamadeva, Atri and Vasistha, along with Narada and others, once
performed fruitive rituals that award abundant pious results, bring great happiness and take
away the sins of Kali-yuga for the whole world by merely being recounted. The sages duly
executed these rituals in the home of the chief of the Yadus, Vasudeva, the father of
Lord Krsna. After Lord Krsna, who was staying in Vasudeva’s house as time personified,
respectfully sent the sages off at the conclusion of the ceremonies, they went to the holy place
called Pindaraka. To that holy place, the young boys of the
Yadu dynasty had brought Samba, son of Jambavati, dressed in woman’s garb. Playfully approaching
the great sages gathered there, the boys grabbed hold of the sages’ feet and impudently asked
them with feigned humility, “O learned brahmanas, this black-eyed pregnant woman has something
to ask you. She is too embarrassed to inquire for herself. She is just about to give birth
and is very desirous of having a son. Since all of you are great sages with infallible
vision, please tell us whether her child will be a boy or a girl.”
Thus ridiculed by deceit, the sages became angry, O King, and told the boys, “Fools!
She will bear you an iron club that will destroy your entire dynasty.”
Upon hearing the curse of the sages, the terrified boys quickly uncovered the belly of Samba,
and indeed they observed that therein was an iron club.
The young men of the Yadu dynasty said, “Oh, what have we done? We are so unfortunate!
What will our family members say to us?” Speaking thus and being very disturbed, they
returned to their homes, taking the club with them.
The Yadu boys, the luster of their faces completely faded, brought the club into the royal assembly,
and in the presence of all the Yadavas they told King Ugrasena what had happened.
O King Pariksit, when the inhabitants of Dvaraka heard of the infallible curse of the brahmanas
and saw the club, they were astonished and distraught with fear.
After having the club ground to bits, King Ahuka [Ugrasena] of the Yadus personally threw
the pieces, along with the remaining lump of iron, into the water of the ocean.
A certain fish swallowed the iron lump, and the bits of iron, carried back to the shore
by the waves, implanted themselves there and grew into tall, sharp canes.
The fish was caught in the ocean along with other fish in a fishermen’s net. The iron
lump in the fish’s stomach was taken by the hunter Jara, who fixed it as an arrowhead
at the end of his shaft. Knowing fully the significance of all these
events, the Supreme Lord, though capable of reversing the brahmanas’ curse, did not
wish to do so. Rather, in His form of time, He gladly sanctioned
the events.