Beaconsfield Parade,St Kilda |
The
Skanda Purana relates King Indradyumna’s quest to find a deity form of Krishna
after dreaming of a beautiful blue deity named Nila Madhava.Disguised an old
man, Vishvakarma, the architect of the demigods, arrived to carve the deities
under the condition that he would remain undisturbed for twenty-one days. King
Indradyumna consented, and the artist worked behind locked doors. Before the
time period was up, however, the noise stopped, and King Indradyumna’s intense
curiosity prompted him to open the doors. Vishvakarma had disappeared. In the
room, the three deities of Jagannatha, Baladeva, and Subhadra looked as if
unfinished—without hands or feet—and Indradyumna became greatly perturbed,
thinking he had offended the Lord. Devotees now worship the same “unfinished”
forms of Jagannatha, Baladeva, and Subhadra in Puri and in temples around the
world. These forms are part of their eternal pastimes.
The
Utkala-khanda of the Skanda Purana gives another account related to Krishna’s
appearance as Jagannatha. (Utkala is the traditional name for Orissa.) Once,
during a solar eclipse, Krishna, Balarama, Subhadra, and other residents of
Dwaraka went to bathe in a holy pond at Kurukshetra. Knowing that Krishna would
be there, Srimati Radharani, Krishna’s parents Nanda and Yashoda, and other
residents of Vrindavana, who were burning in the fire of separation from the
Lord, went to meet Him. Inside one of the many tents the pilgrims had set up at
Kurukshetra, Rohini, Lord Balarama’s mother, and narrated Krishna’s Vrindavana
pastimes to the queens of Dwaraka and others.
Beaconsfield Parade,St Kilda |
Beaconsfield Parade,St Kilda |
Jagannatha to the right, Baladeva to left and Subdhra in the Middle |
It
is said that the participants in the festivities will be blessed immensely by
Lord Jagannatha (Krsna) such as (1) By the sight of Jagannatha's merciful large
two eye globes, the devotee will be blessed with astute purity of mind and
spiritual elevation; (2) Observing the rathayatra will dissipate the sins
committed by the embodied person in the past births; (3) The accompanying
person in the rathayatra will receive opulence at par with Lord Vishnu even if
he hails from a poor family; (4) Dancing, singing and chanting in the
rathayatra entourage, the participant will be elevated to a level superior to
yogis; and (5) Active participation in the rathayatra by any means will receive
the utmost blessings of Lord Jagannatha.
Srila Prabhupada said, "If you participate in these car
festivals, as stated in the scriptures, rathe ca vanam drstva punar janma na
vidyate... If you kindly see these Jagannatha deities riding on these cars or
these processions, and as Caitanya Mahaprabhu chanted the Hare Krsna mantra in
front of this car, then according to the Vedic scripture, in your next life
you'll go back, back to Godhead." Those who participate in the festival
have a food for thought in the years to come and it may drag down even to the
final moments of their life to affix the attention in the eventful pastimes of
Jagannatha as Krsna tells in Bhagavad Gita (8.5-6),
My son |
For
a brief history of Rath Yatra, the
internal meaning and the glories of participating, appreciating or simply
looking at Rath Yatra, please refer to my last year’s blog article.
For
further details of the event, conducted by ISKCON at Melbourne, please visit
the below link.
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