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-: Myths & Characters :-
Ravana
appears in the Ramayana as the demon-king of
Lanka and the principal antagonist of Rama. In
all versions of the Ramayana, he is vanquished
and killed by Rama in a ferocious battle where
both are compelled to call upon all the
resources at their command, including the most
awesome weapons. Thus is Sita, who had been
abducted by Ravana, restored to her husband. If
Rama stands forth as a shining example of the
virtuous ruler, Ravana is, in the common
imagination, the very sign of evil. In Hindi,
for instance, a man who behaves wickedly is
described as behaving like Ravana, and the
effigies of Ravana that are burnt at Dusshera
mark the triumph of good over evil.
There are Indian traditions, however, where
Ravana is not only vindicated as a figure of
immense moral and physical strength, but where
he appears as the chief protagonist of the
Ramayana. His immense penance, learning, and
devotion to Brahma earned him the latters
gratitude. Brahma conferred on Ravana the boon
of near invulnerability, making him immune from
destruction by gods or (other) demons; he also
acquired the capacity to change his form, and in
the Ramayana he is described as having ten heads
and twenty arms. He was endowed with the
strength of moving the seas and splitting the
tops of mountains. Ravanas body bore all the
marks of one who had fought the devas: the
thunderbolt of Indra, the tusks of Indras
elephant Airavata, and the discus of Vishnu had
all scarred him.
If Ravana had a fatal flaw, it was doubtless his
hubris. When Brahma conferred on him a boon, and
Ravana asked that the devas should be unable to
inflict harm on him, he did not think it
worthwhile to ask for protection from men or
animals. Consequently, Vishnu had to incarnate
himself as a human being, Rama, and it is an
army of monkeys, led by Hanuman, which assists
Rama in liberating Sita from Ravanas clutches
and vanquishing him. Ravanas hubris extends so
far that at first he refuses to take Rama
seriously, since he thinks that the idea that
any human being could pose a threat to him is
utterly contemptible. When Rama and Ravana meet
in battle, it is characteristic of Ravana that
he flaunts his prowess, and speaks arrogantly of
crushing Rama to bits; Rama, meanwhile, simply
goes about his task. When Rama sends his final
weapon, the "Brahmasthra", hurtling towards
Ravana, he aims it at his heart. Though Ravana
had sought invincibility, and could replace his
head or arms with another set, he had not
thought of safeguarding his heart. Perhaps in
recognition of the fact that he had nearly met
his match, or that Ravana was a Brahmin by
birth, well-versed in the Vedas and prolific in
his knowledge of Sanskrit, Rama ordered that the
funeral arrangements for Ravana be those
befitting his grandeur.
No one who has read the Ramayana can have failed
to wonder why Ravana, who lusted after Sita and
kept her in captivity for years, did not violat
her. He repeatedly urged her to become his wife,
and on more than one occasion threatened to put
an end to her life; but she was just as
persisting in refusing his advances. Devout
readers are prone to the interpretation that
Sitas purity made her inviolable. Yet Ravana
had the advantage of strength, and she was his
captive. The Ramayana itself suggests a number
of other readings. It is said that one of
Ravanas wives dissuaded him from violating Sita.
Ravana is himself said to have been
incapacitated by a curse to the effect that if
he made any attempt to molest her, he would be
reduced to ashes. And it is even possible to
argue that, having kidnapped her, Ravana wished
to have Sita for himself only if she gave her
consent; to do otherwise was to abandon the
badge of honor that he, the mightiest of the
asuras or demons, carried. What is remarkable is
his extraordinary discipline and tapasya: right
beside him, subject to his overwhelming power,
was a woman for whom he had a burning desire,
and yet he restrained himself. Would being burnt
to ashes have been so high a price to pay for so
unimaginable a good?
Certainly some interpreters, such as the
nineteenth-century Bengali writer, Michael
Madhusudan Dutt (1824-1873), have been inclined
to the view that Ravana displayed the qualities
of masculinity, honor, consistency, reliability,
and justice to a greater extent than did Rama.
How could Rama, a hero of an earlier, pastoral,
village republic commend himself to the
attention of moderns, and what was so
particularly noble about a hero who, having
allowed himself to be exiled, showed himself
incapable of protecting his own wife? If the
welfare of the nation had been entrusted in the
past to inept and feminine leaders like Rama,
and these supposed heroes were still held up for
emulation, was it any surprise that India had
come under British rule? Though the character of
Ravana may seem like a closed book, there is
sufficient plurality in Indian traditions that
even Ravana is capable of some recuperation. |