JATAYU
In
the hindu epic Ramayana, Jatayu is the son of Aruna and nephew of Garuna. A
demi-god who has the form of a vulture, he was an old friend of Dasharatha. He tries to rescue Sita from Ravana when Ravana is on his way to Lanka after kidnapping Sita. Jatayu
fought valiantly with Ravana, but as Jatayu was very old Ravana soon got the
better of him. As Rama and Lakshmana chanced upon the stricken and dying Jatayu
in their search for Sita, he informs them of the fight between him and Ravana
and the direction in which Ravana had gone (i.e., south).
Jatayu
and his brother Sampati, when young, used to compete as to who could fly
higher. On one such instance Jatayu flew so high that he was about to get
seared by the sun's flames. Sampati saved his brother by spreading his own
wings and thus shielding Jatayu from the hot flames. In the process, Sampati
himself got injured and lost his wings. As a result, Sampati lived wingless for
the rest of his life.
The
spot where a wounded Jatayu was found by Lord Rama is on the outskirts of the
Taaked village in Nashik District in the state of Maharashtra. While Jatayu was
wounded and lying on the ground when Lord Rama arrived, Lord Rama sensed the end
result and decided that Jatayu get moksha. Lord Rama hit an arrow in the ground
so as to call all seven sacred rivers, called teertha. Six rivers' waters
arrived, one river water failing to obey Lord Rama's call. Since Lord Rama was
himself an incarnation of Lord Vishnu, He forced the Gaya teertha to arrive at
the spot. Finally Jatayu was given the waters of seven rivers and he attained
moksha. Today, the six river waters are seen together in one pond, whilst the
seventh is a few feet away as a punishment. It mixes with the remaining six
waters in an invisible manner. Taaked village remains a tourist and religious
attraction today. A fair is organized on the Mahashivratri festival near the
sacred water pond. According to other legends, Lepakshi is the place where
Jatayu fell after being wounded by Ravana. Rama is said to have commanded the
bird to rise Le Pakshi, and
hence the name for that town.
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