Ashtavakra Rescues His Father from the Depths
Aranyaka Parva
Can a deformed child overcome humiliation and intellectual challenge to rescue his father from a watery grave?
Ashtavakra is born deformed due to a curse from his father Kahoda, who is later defeated in a debate by Bandi and drowned. Learning of his father's fate, Ashtavakra journeys to King Janaka's court, debates the gatekeeper, answers the king's riddles, and defeats Bandi in a philosophical contest. Bandi reveals himself as Varuna's son and releases Kahoda and the other defeated sages.
8 stories · 0 pivotal · Chapters 429–431
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Spine stories carry the arc's main thread. Essential adds key turning points. Supporting covers depth and backstory.
Ashtavakra's Birth and Curse by His Father
Yudhishthira asks Lomasha to explain the power of the brahmana who vanquished Bandi and why he was born with eight deformities. Lomasha tells the story: Kahoda, a devoted disciple of Uddalaka, marries Uddalaka's daughter Sujata, and their unborn child — radiant as fire — speaks from the womb to correct his father's recitation. Insulted before his own students, Kahoda curses the child to be crooked in eight ways.
Chapter 429 · ~1 min
Kahoda Defeated by Bandi and Drowned
Pregnant and poor, Sujata asks her husband Kahoda how they will survive after the child is born. Kahoda goes to King Janaka's court to seek wealth — but Bandi, a skilled debater, defeats him in a contest, and Kahoda is drowned in the waters. Uddalaka learns of the defeat and tells Sujata to keep it secret from her son.
Chapter 429 · ~1 min
Ashtavakra Learns His Father's Fate
For twelve years, Ashtavakra believed Uddalaka was his father and Shvetaketu his brother. Then Shvetaketu saw him on Uddalaka's lap, grasped him by the hand, and told him the truth: "This is not your father's lap." Weeping, Ashtavakra goes to his mother, who finally tells him everything about Kahoda's defeat and drowning at Janaka's court.
Chapter 429 · ~1 min
Ashtavakra Encounters King Janaka on the Road
Ashtavakra and Shvetaketu set out for King Janaka's sacrifice. On the road, Ashtavakra encounters the king himself and is restrained. He speaks words to Janaka — words that will set the stage for a confrontation with Bandi, the man who drowned his father.
Chapter 429 · ~1 min
Ashtavakra Debates the Gatekeeper for Entry
Ashtavakra, a ten-year-old boy with a twisted body, arrives at King Janaka's great sacrifice but is stopped at the gate. The gatekeeper bars him, citing Bandi's order: no child brahmanas may enter. Ashtavakra does not plead. He argues — that age is measured by learning and vows, not by years or limbs — and demands entry to face Bandi in debate.
Chapter 430 · ~2 min
Ashtavakra Answers King Janaka's Riddles
Ashtavakra enters King Janaka's court and declares his intent to defeat Bandi in debate. Janaka tests him with riddles — about the wheel of time, the wind and its offspring, and the nature of fish, eggs, stones, and rivers. Ashtavakra answers each one without hesitation, and Janaka recognizes him as no ordinary child.
Chapter 430 · ~2 min
Ashtavakra Debates and Defeats Bandi
At King Janaka's great sacrifice, the suta's son Bandi boasts that all other kings are inferior to Janaka. The deformed young sage Ashtavakra, his wrath aroused, challenges Bandi to a debate — a contest of numerical riddles that climbs from one to thirteen, until one of them falls silent.
Chapter 431 · ~3 min
Bandi Reveals He Is Varuna's Son
Ashtavakra demands that Bandi be seized and immersed in water, following the same dharma Bandi imposed on other defeated brahmanas. But Bandi reveals he is the son of King Varuna — and that the brahmanas he defeated were not drowned, but sent to witness a divine sacrifice.
Chapter 431 · ~2 min