Bhishmaka

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Krishna meet Bhishmaka

In Hinduism, Bhishmaka (IAST:Bhīshmaka, Devanagari:भीष्मक) (or Bhishmak) was the king of Vidarbha. He was the father of Rukmi and Rukmini, who married the Hindu deity Krishna.

Previous life[]

Once there was a temple priest who was a staunch devotee of Shiva. He used to do Pooja to Lord Shiva's feet (Shiva Paada Pooje) every day. After finishing his Pooja and closing the temple premises, the priest brought prasadha (food from the temple which is first offered to the lord) for a dog which waited outside the temple. As dogs symbolise loyalty, the dog used to accompany the priest till he reached home every day and only ate food offered by this priest. The priest had great affection towards the dog as well.

On one new moon day (Amavasya), after some delay in finishing his temple duties, the priest shut the temple premises and walked out to offer food for the dog. Because it was a dark night, the priest accidentally walked over the dogs face. Every dog's nature is to attack anyone who attacks it. The dog instantaneously bit the priest before it could realise that the person it bit was the priest whom the dog admired. Albeit getting bit by the dog, the priest offered the dog the prasadha. The dog, regretting its previous action, did not accept the food. The dog never ate anything after the incident and died in front of the same Shiva temple. The gods, seeing this great gesture of loyalty from the dog, awarded the post of the sun (Surya) with the name Vivasvan.[clarification needed] Many years later, the priest had also died in memory of the dog.[clarification needed] In his next life, this Brahmin priest took birth as a king at the land of Vidarbha with the name Bhishmaka. The position he attained in this birth is attributed to all the Shiva Paada Pooje (worshipping lord Shiva's feet) that was performed by the Brahmin priest.


References[]

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