INDRAJIT
Indrajit or 'Meghanaad meaning Thunderous', a warrior mentioned in the Indian epic Ramayana, was the son of the
Lankan king Ravana. The word 'Indrajit' literally means the 'conqueror of Indra
(the Hindu king of gods)'. He is also known as Meghnad or Meghanad. Indrajit played an active role in the great War between Rama and
Ravana. He was said to be invincible in battle because of a Yajna he used to
perform before every battle. He twice defeated Lakshmana and even Rama once,
but on the third occasion Lakshmana disrupted the Yajna with the help of Vibhishana
and fought with him for three days and three nights and finally killed him.
Indrajit
was born to Ravana and his wife Mandodari, the daughter of Mayasura. He was
named "Meghanada" because his birth cry sounded like thunder. He defeated
Indra, the king of the Devas, after which he came to be known as 'Indrajit'
("the conqueror of Indra"). At a very young age, Meghnada became the
possessor of several supreme celestial weapons, including Brahmastra, Pashupatastra
and Vaishnavastra, under the guidance of Shukra, the guru of the daityas (demons).
He was married to Sulochana, the daughter of the King of the Serpents Shesha Naga.
During
the Devasura Sangram (the
battle between the devas and the asura). He then turned the tables on Indra,
tying him up and mounting him onto his celestial chariot. At this juncture, Brahma
intervened and asked him to free Indra. Meghnada obliged, and was granted a
chance to ask for a boon from Brahma. Meghanada asked for immortality, but
Brahma remarked that absolute immortality is against the law of the nature.
Instead, he was then granted another boon: he would never be won over in any
battle, until his Yagna
(fire-worship) of his native goddess Nikumbala was disturbed and destroyed. On
the completion of the Yagna, a supreme celestial chariot would appear, boarding
which; Indrajit would become invincible in any battle. But Brahma also
cautioned him that whosoever would destroy this yagna would also kill him. It
was Brahma who gave him the name Indrajit
("the conqueror of Indra").
Indrajit
joined the battle when all his brothers had been killed by Rama and his army.
His father, Ravana, had been humiliated in the battle by Rama, and his paternal
uncle Kumbhakarna had been killed by Rama. Indrajit fought with Rama's army for
three days. On the first day of his battle with Rama's army, Indrajit was swift
with his weapons. He swiftly wiped out the Armies of the Sugriva, calling on
the Lord Rama and Lakshmana to come out of their hiding, so he could avenge the
deaths of his paternal uncle and his brothers. When Rama and Lakshmana appeared
before him, he fought fiercely, and arrested both the brothers using his most
nefarious weapon Nagapash (a
trap made of million snakes). Both the brothers fell on the ground breathless.
They were rescued by the Garuda on behest of Hanuman. Garuda was the enemy of
the serpents and also the flying vehicle of Narayana.
When
Indrajit learned that both the Brothers Rama and Lakhsmana were still alive and
were rescued by Garuda, he was fiery and vowed to kill at least one of the
brothers that day. When the battle started, he used all his force to cast havoc
on the armies of Sugriva. At this Lakshmana appeared before him, and fought a
fierce battle with him. When Indrajit realised that Lakshmana could not be won
over, he started using his supreme magical powers, darting across the clouds
and skies like a bolt of lightning. He combined his skills of sorcery and
deceptive warfare, repeatedly vanishing and reappearing behind Lakshmana's back
to catch him off-guard, when used his fiercest and deadliest weapon, Shakti. On being impaled in the back
by the weapon, Lakshmana fell unconscious, poised to die precisely at the
following sunrise. His life was saved by Lord Hanuman, who kidnapped the Rajvaidya (royal physician) Sushena from the Lankan fortress, and
brought the whole mountain of Dronagiri from the Himalayas to Lanka overnight
to find the remedy (the magical herb - Sanjivani)
for the weapon used by Indrajit. Sushena first was hesitant to use the herb on
an enemy, which was only common as he was abducted from Lanka and was in a bad
mood, but when Rama reminded him of the ancient saying that physicians then
used, "A physician has no friends or enemies", Sushena bowed beneath
the saying and cured Lakshmana, who, aroused and ready, challenged Indrajit
once more.
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