23 December,2018 06:54 AM IST | Mumbai | Devdutt Pattanaik
Illustration/Devdutt Pattanaik
However, Prahalad refuses to accept his father as God, and keeps worshipping Vishnu or Narayan, and keeps saying Narayan is present everywhere, in day and night, within and without. Prahalad prefers to worship only Vishnu, chanting his name all the time.
This irritates his father to such an extent that Hiranyakashipu decides to torture Prahalad and, in different versions of this story, found in many folk literatures, there are elaborate tortures designed to make Prahalad change his mind. He is thrown off cliffs, he is put in jail, he is whipped, he is also put in fire. There are attempts to drown and impale him, but Prahalad escapes unscathed, being rescued by Vishnu each time. Thus, Vishnu's power is established, and Vishnu becomes the God who saves his devotees from all problems.
Hiranyakashipu gets immensely frustrated trying to find the whereabouts of Vishnu and desires to meet him. Prahalad keeps saying that Vishnu is present everywhere and in everything. Hiranyakashipu, one day, very mockingly, points to a pillar in his palace and asks Prahalad if Vishnu is present in the pillar. Prahalad, without a moment's hesitation, confirms Vishnu's presence there.
Hiranyakashipu kicks the pillar and breaks it, and, to his horror, from where the pillar stood, emerges a grotesque creature, neither human nor animal. It drags Hiranyakashipu to the threshold of his palace, which is neither inside or outside, at twilight, which is neither day nor night, picks him up and places him on its thigh, which is neither above nor below, and disembowels him with its claws, which are neither weapons nor instruments. Thus, all conditions required to destroy Hiranyakashipu are met. This creature is Narasimha, a manifestation of Vishnu. Narasimha blesses Prahalad and makes him king.
This is one of the earliest stories found in the Puranic traditions to establish Vishnu as God. The idea of God is elaborated as someone who is present everywhere and is all-powerful and protects those who believe in him. The story also shows that God can outsmart even the smartest of villains. All this becomes a simple way of explaining to the common man what God is about.
In poster art, we often see Hiranyakashipu as a monstrous being, dark in complexion, while his son is shown as a light-skinned boy. This leads to the question if Prahalad is an asura. In the Puranic traditions, asuras are a species of beings like humans, grandchildren of Brahma, sons of Kashyapa, just like devas. In time, children of Brahma were given a moral flavour, with devas being seen as the good guys and asuras seen as the bad guys. But, if asuras are the bad guys, what do we make of the son of a bad guy, Prahalad, a devotee of Vishnu? By demonising all asuras as bad, aren't we promoting prejudice against communities and stereotyping? Something to think about.
The author writes and lectures on the relevance of mythology in modern times. Reach him at devdutt@devdutt.com
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