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Indra
Indra is the god of weather and war, and lord of Svargaloka in Hinduism.
Mentioned first as the chief deity in the sacred text of Rig Veda, Indra is
bestowed with a heroic and almost brash character.
Origins
Indra is attested as a god of the Mitanni. If Indra as a deity is cognate to
other Indo-European gods, either thunder gods such as Thor or Perun, or heroic
gods, or gods of intoxicating drinks, his name has either not been preserved in
any other branch, or else it is itself an Indo-Iranian innovation. Janda
(1998:221) suggests that the Proto-Indo-European (or Graeco-Aryan) predecessor
of Indra had the epitheta *trigw-welumos "smasher of the enclosure" (of Vritra,
Vala) and diye-snūtyos "impeller of streams" (the liberated rivers,
corresponding to Vedic apam ajas "agitator of the waters"), which resulted in
the Greek gods Triptolemos and Dionysos.
In the religious practices of the Vedic civilization, Indra has prominence over
the continuation of chief god of the Indo-European pantheon Dyēus (Dyēus appears
in the Vedas as Dyaus Pita, a relatively minor deity who, interestingly, is the
father of Indra). Compare to this the comparatively low status of Tyr compared
to Odin or Thor in Norse paganism. The battle between Indra and Vritra is
reflected in the Avesta, but only among the Indo-Aryans does Indra appear to
have risen to the head of the pantheon.
Indra in the Rig Veda
The Rig-Veda states,
He under whose supreme control are horses, all chariots, and the villages, and
cattle;
He who gave being to the Sun and Morning, who leads the waters, He, O men, is
Indra. (2.12.7, trans. Griffith)
It further states,
“Indra, you lifted up the outcast who was oppressed, you glorified the blind and
the lame.” (Rg-Veda 2:13:12)
Indra is the chief god of the Rigveda (besides Agni). He delights in drinking
Soma, and the central Vedic myth is his heroic defeat of Vritra, liberating the
rivers, or alternatively, his smashing of the Vala, a stone enclosure where the
Panis had imprisoned the cows, and Ushas (dawn). He is the god of war, smashing
the stone fortresses of the Dasyu, and invoked by combatants on both sides in
the Battle of the Ten Kings.
The Rig-Veda frequently refers to him as Śakra - the mighty-one. In the Vedic
period, the number of gods was assumed to be thirty-three and Indra was their
lord. (The slightly later Brihad-aranyaka Upanishad enumerates the gods as the
eight Vasus, the eleven Rudras, the twelve Adityas, Indra and Prajapati). As
lord of the Vasus, Indra was also referred to as Vāsava.
By the age of the Vedanta, Indra became the prototype for all lords and thus a
king could be called Mānavendra (Indra or lord of men) and Rama, the hero of the
Ramayana, was referred to as Rāghavendra (Indra of the clan of Raghu). Hence the
original Indra was also referred to as Devendra (Indra of the Devas). However,
Sakra and Vasava were used exclusively for the original Indra. Though, modern
texts usually adhere to the name Indra, the traditional Hindu texts (the Vedas,
epics and Puranas) use Indra, Sakra and Vasava interchangeably and with the same
frequency.
"Of the Vedas I am the Sama Veda; of the demigods I am Indra, the king of
heaven; of the senses I am the mind; and in living beings I am the living force
[consciousness]." (Bhagavad Gita 10.22)
Status and function
Indra is an important god in many tales and epics. He leads the Devas (the gods
who form and maintain Heaven and the elements, such as Agni (Fire), Varuna
(Water) and Surya (Sun), and constantly wages war against the demonic Asuras of
the netherworlds, or Patala, who oppose morality and dharma. He thus fights in
the timeless battle between good and evil. In addition, he is one of the
Guardians of the directions, representing the east.
Presently, Hindus see Indra as minor deity and contemporary Hindus often worship
a personal supreme God such as Shiva,Vishnu, Devi or Surya, seen by them as the
great god. A puranic story illustrating the subjugation of Indra's pride is
illustrated in the story of Govardhan hill where Krishna, avatar or incarnation
of Vishnu carried the hill and protected his devotees when Indra, angered by
non-worship of him, launched rains over the village.
Characteristics
In RigVeda, Indra is repeatedly described as a fair or yellow-skinned person:
"Fair cheeks hath Indra, Maghavan, the Victor, Lord of a great host, Stormer,
strong in action. What once thou didst in might when mortals vexed thee, where
now, O Bull, are those thy hero exploits?" (RigVeda, Book 3, Hymn XXX: Griffith)
"May the strong Heaven make thee the Strong wax stronger: Strong, for thou art
borne by thy two strong Bay Horses. So, fair of cheek, with mighty chariot,
mighty, uphold us, strong-willed, thunderarmed, in battle." (RigVeda, Book 5,
Hymn XXXVI: Grffith)
Indra's weapon, which he used to kill Vritra, (with the help of other gods), is
the thunderbolt (Vajra), though he also uses a bow, a net and a hook. He rides a
large, four-tusked albino elephant called Airavata. When portrayed having four
arms, he has lances in two of his hands which resemble elephant goads. When he
is shown to have two, he holds the Vajra and a bow (Masson-Oursel and Morin,
326).
Indra lives in Svarga in the clouds around Mt. Meru. Deceased warriors go to his
hall after death, where they live without sadness, pain or fear. They watch the
Apsaras and the Gandharvas dance, and play games. The gods of the elements,
celestial sages, great kings and warriors enrich his court.
Relations with other gods
He is married to Indrani (whose father, Puloman, Indra killed), and is the
father of Arjuna (by Kunti), Jayanta, Midhusa, Nilambara, Khamla, Rbhus, Rsabha.
Indra is also the father of Vali and Surya. He is attended to by the Maruts (and
the Vasus), children of Diti (mother of demons) and Rudra. Indra had slayed
Diti's previous wicked children, so she hoped her son would be more powerful
than him and kept herself pregnant for a century, practicing magic to aid her
fetal son. When Indra discovered this, he threw a thunderbolt at her and
shattered the fetus into 7 or 49 parts; each part regenerated into a complete
individual, and the parts grew into the Maruts, a group of storm gods, who are
less powerful than Indra.
According to one belief, Indra pulled his father, Dyaus Pita, from the sky by
the foot; he fell to his death; afterwards, Indra married his mother Prthivi,
who supported the murder.
Some scholars have also argued that there is a continuity between Indra and
Shiva (Rudra).[4] Scholars such as Dr. David Frawley, Koenraad Elst and many
Hindu dovotees believe that Indra in indeed Shiva. Lord Indra is said to be a
bull while Lord Shiva has a bull as a vehicle. Lord Indra fights with the Maruts
(who as children of Lord Rudra) as his soldiers. Lord Indra is too an outsider
as is Lord Shiva and is also connected with tiger skin (e.g. in RV 5:4:1:11),
which is what Lord Shiva meditates upon.[2]
Stories about Indra
Indra is not a perfect being, and is ascribed with more human characteristics
and vices than any other Vedic deity. Perhaps consequently, he also has the most
hymns dedicated to him: 250 (Masson-Oursel and Morin, 326). A well-known story
about Indra tells of a sin that he committed and how he was punished for it.
Ahalya's curse
Indra had an affair with Ahalya, wife of Gautama Maharishi. He was punished by
Gautama with a curse that one thousand phalluses would cover his body in a
grotesque and vulgar display, and that his reign as king of the gods would meet
with disaster and catastrophe. Gautama later commuted the curse, upon the
pleading of Brahma, to one thousand eyes, instead of phalluses. Due to this sin
Indra's throne remains insecure forever. He is repeatedly humiliated by demonic
kings like Ravana of Lanka, whose son Indrajit (whose name means victor over
Indra) bound Indra in serpent nooses and dragged him across Lanka in a
humiliating display. Ravana released Indra when Brahma convinced him to do so,
but Indra, as the defeated, had to pay tribute and accept Ravana's supremacy.
Indra realized the consequences of his sin, and was later avenged by the Avatara
of Vishnu, Rama, who slew Ravana to deliver the three worlds from evil, as
described in the epic Ramayana.
Indra and Vritra
Vritra (Verethra in Avesta), an asura, stole all the water in the world and
Indra drank much Soma to prepare himself for the battle with the huge serpent.
He passed through Vritra's ninety-nine fortresses, slew the monster and brought
water back to Earth.
In a later version of the story, Vritra was created by Tvashtri to get revenge
for Indra's murder of his son, Trisiras, a pious Brahmin whose increase of power
worried Indra. Vritra won the battle and swallowed Indra, but the other gods
forced him to vomit Indra out. The battle continued and Indra fled. Vishnu and
the Rishis brokered a truce, and Indra swore he would not attack Vritra with
anything made of metal, wood or stone, nor anything that was dry or wet, or
during the day or the night. Indra used the foam from the waves of the ocean to
kill him at twilight.
In yet another version, recounted in the Mahabharata, Vritra was a Brahmin who
got hold of supernatural powers, went rogue and became a danger to the gods.
Indra had to intervene, and slew him after a hard fight. A horrible goddess
named Brāhmanahatya (the personified sin of Brahmin murder) came from the dead
corpse of Vritra and pursued Indra, who hid inside a lotus flower. Indra went to
Brahma and begged forgiveness for having killed a Brahmin. "Vajrayudha" which
Indra possessed is believed to be prepared from backbone of a sage Dadhichi to
kill Asuras.
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