Why is the lesson called "dharm juddha "?give reasons.
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As the "Dharam Juddha " stands for a war or fight against wrong and injustice and which is not good for humanity.
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Dharma is frequently deciphered as religion, making "dharma yuddha" a strict conflict.
Dharma Yuddha
- Dharma is frequently deciphered as religion, making "dharma yuddha" a strict conflict. Everybody in the fight is Hindu and they are similarly passionate. On the Kauravas' side, Gandhari is an extraordinary Shiva bhakt. Bheeshma is a Vishnu bhakt. Karna is the child of Surya dev and furthermore an extraordinary lover.
- On the Pandavas side, Arjun spends a year in Tapasya before he gets shelter from Shiva. Krishna himself is on this side. The dharma of this "dharma yuddha" is plainly not religion. So then, at that point, what is Dharma? I won't actually endeavour to decipher it. All things considered, I'll give guides to gather from.
- We should check Arjuna out. In his relationship with Bheeshma, Arjuna's dharma is to be a decent extraordinary grandson and approach him with deference and respond to his adoration. With Drona, Arjuna's dharma is to respect his master who showed him everything with bows and arrows.
- At the point when Arjuna was in Indraloka and learnt execution expressions, his dharma was dance and music. At the point when he spent a year in Tapasya looking for Shiva, bhakti was his dharma. With Panchali, being a decent spouse to her and having descendants together is his dharma. At the point when the cows of his residents were being taken, it was Arjuna's dharma as a Kshatriya to safeguard them. In this way, dharma shifts by relationship and circumstance. This is valid for each character we find in the Mahabharata and for every one of us, in actuality.
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