10 shared moments across the Mahabharata.
Yudhishthira, Bhima, and Krishna debate the Rajasuya and JarasandhaYudhishthira doubts his worthiness to perform the Rajasuya, the imperial sacrifice. Bhima counters with a plan, and Krishna lays out the grim reality of Jarasandha's tyranny — and the righteous path to empire that lies through defeating him.
Yudhishthira expresses doubt about attacking JarasandhaConfronted with the plan to attack the mighty Jarasandha as a prerequisite for the Rajasuya sacrifice, Yudhishthira voices his deep fear. He argues that the mission risks everything he depends on, and that his very heart is against the course.
The disguised heroes enter the palace and confront JarasandhaDisguised as snataka brahmanas but adorned like warriors, Krishna, Bhima, and Arjuna enter Jarasandha's palace during a ceremony. The king greets them with honor but then challenges their disguise and their breach of his mountain. Krishna defends their actions as fitting for an enemy and declares the king will witness their kshatriya energy today.
The three heroes breach Girivraja by breaking a mountainFacing the impregnable city of Girivraja, Krishna and the Pandavas bypass its main gate—a worshipped site—and go to the sacred Chaitya mountain peak. With their bare arms, they break the ancient, hallowed rock, creating their own entrance in a direct challenge to the king's authority.
Jarasandha and Krishna Debate Dharma and Challenge Each OtherConfronted by three disguised brahmanas, King Jarasandha demands to know why they consider him an enemy when he believes he has done no wrong. Krishna reveals their identities and mission: to stop Jarasandha from sacrificing the captive kings he has imprisoned. The debate that follows is a clash over the very definition of a king's dharma.
Jarasandha Prepares for Battle and Krishna Remembers DestinyWith the debate over, Jarasandha prepares for battle, remembering his famed generals. Krishna, in turn, remembers a prophecy about how Jarasandha must die, and makes a deliberate choice about who should face him.
Bhima and Jarasandha's thirteen-day duel and Krishna's counselBhima and Jarasandha engage in a brutal wrestling match that lasts thirteen days and nights. On the fourteenth night, seeing the king exhausted, Krishna gives Bhima a cryptic piece of advice that reveals Jarasandha's fatal weakness.
Jarasandha chooses Bhima as his opponent for the duelKrishna asks Jarasandha which of the three Pandavas he will fight. The king of Magadha selects Bhimasena, prepares for battle according to kshatriya dharma, and rushes at the Pandava like a tidal wave.
Bhima kills Jarasandha by breaking his backWith his mind set on killing the tyrant Jarasandha, Bhima declares he will not spare the evil king's life. Krishna urges him to show the divine strength he inherited from the wind god, and Bhima lifts, whirls, and breaks the king over his knee.
Dhritarashtra confesses his grief and guilt to SanjayaWith the Pandavas gone to the forest, Dhritarashtra sits in his palace, consumed by a grief that puzzles his charioteer Sanjaya. The blind king then lays bare the full horror of what happened in the assembly hall — the disrobing, the omens, the warnings he ignored — and admits that his own love for his son has doomed them all.