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Set in the sixth book of the Mahabharata is the ], another masterpiece of ] thought, wherein ] is advised by ] that he must fulfill his duty by participating in a battle, at the risk of losing many friends and relatives in the fighting. Set in the sixth book of the Mahabharata is the ], another masterpiece of ] thought, wherein ] is advised by ] that he must fulfill his duty by participating in a battle, at the risk of losing many friends and relatives in the fighting.


Relevant links: ==External links==
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*http://www.hindunet.org/mahabharata/ Full etext in ] and in transliterated ] *http://www.hindunet.org/mahabharata/ Full etext in ] and in transliterated ]

Revision as of 11:15, 3 April 2003

The Mahabharata is a sweeping epic of Indian mythology, analogous in both size (over 100,000 verses) and religious significance to the Christian Bible. It tells the story of a war between the Pandavas, the sons of King Pandu, and the Kauravas, the sons of Pandu's older, blind brother, King Dhritarastra. The Epic is written in eighteen books.

Set in the sixth book of the Mahabharata is the Bhagavad Gita, another masterpiece of Hindu thought, wherein Arjuna is advised by Krishna that he must fulfill his duty by participating in a battle, at the risk of losing many friends and relatives in the fighting.

External links