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Vibhishana

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Vibhishana
King of Lanka[1]
Member ofChiranjivi
Rama crowns Vibhishana as King of Lanka
AffiliationRakshasa,Vaishnavism
PredecessorRavana
AbodeLanka
TextsRamayanaand its versions
Personal information
Parents
SiblingsRavana
Kumbhakarna
Shurpanakha
ConsortSarama
Mandodari
ChildrenTaranisena,Nila(sons),Sananda,Trijataand Analte(daughters) by Sarama
DynastyRakshasa

Vibhishana(Sanskrit:विभीषण,romanized:Vibhīṣaṇa,lit.'formidable')[2]is the younger brother ofRavana,the King ofLanka,in the ancient Indian epicRamayana.[3]Though arakshasahimself, Vibhishana turned his back on Ravana, and defected toRama's side, owing to hisdharma.[4]After Rama defeated Ravana, the former crowned Prince Vibhishana as the King of Lanka before returning toAyodhya.

Vibhishana (left) shows thePushpaka Vimanato Rama and Lakshmana

Legend[edit]

Rama and Sita worshipShivaatRameshwaramas Vibhishana (right) looks on with Lakshmana,TumburuandNarada

Early life and boon from Brahma[edit]

Prince Vibhishana is portrayed as a pious and pure of heart in the epic. After performing a penance to invoke a boon fromBrahma,he begged the deity to always set his mind on the path to righteousness, and nothing more.[5]

Vibhishana was the youngest son of the rakshasi Kaikesi and the sageVishrava,who was himself a son of the sage Pulastya, one of thePrajapati.Vibhishana was the younger brother of the King of Lanka, Ravana, and also the sibling ofKumbhakarna.Even though he was born as arakshasa,he was pious and considered himself aBrahmin,since his father was a sage.

Rama's devotee and Lanka war[edit]

Due to Vibhishana's differences with Ravana, and because he was against the act of kidnapping Sita, he fled Lanka. His mother,Kaikesi,advised him to go and serve Rama, who was at that time assembling an army to defeat Ravana and to recover his wife. As a consequence, he divulged the secrets of Ravana's army and made sure Rama was victorious in the great battle. Rama accepted Vibhishana's fealty and anointed him the King of Lanka after Ravana's death. In some versions of the epic, he takes his slain brother's queenMandodarias his second wife, though in others he merely seeks her blessings during his coronation.[6]

In the Lanka War, Vibhishana's knowledge about the secrets of Lanka proved invaluable to Rama.[7]Vibhishana freely divulged many secrets that became key to the success of Rama's attack, including revealing the secret path to the temple of Nikumbala, the family deity of the Pulastya clan.[8]In the climactic battle between Rama and Ravana, when Rama was unable to kill Ravana, he revealed the secret of Ravana's invulnerability to Rama. He told Rama that Ravana has stored the nectar of immortality in his belly and it is necessary to dry it. With this knowledge, Rama was finally able to kill Ravana.[9]He had a daughter namedTrijata.

Chiranjivi[edit]

When Rama was about to leave Ayodhya at the end of his reign, he assumed his true form of Vishnu, ordering Vibhishana to stay on earth and serve the people and guide them to the path of truth anddharma.Hence, Vibhishana is considered one of the immortals, theChiranjivis.[10]Vishnu also ordered Vibhishana to pray to the family deity ofSolar dynasty,Ranganatha.[11]

Characterisation[edit]

In theRamayana,Vibhishana's characterisation assists in demonstrating the practical implications of the concept ofdharma.The epic stresses that neither Vibhishana nor Kumbhakarna strayed from the path ofdharmaand that there is no single way out of a moral dilemma. TheRamayanateaches that Kumbhakarna adhered to thedharmaof loyalty to his kin when his advice fails, while Vibhishana chose to oppose his kin when his advice failed.[12]

Regional legends[edit]

Srirangam[edit]

ThestatueinLankatilaka Viharaof Vibhishana andwifeisSaramaas in position ofguardian deityofSri Lanka[13]

Vibhishana is featured in theregional legendof theRanganathaswamy templeofSrirangam,considered the foremost of theDivya Desams,the abodes of Vishnu inSri Vaishnavism.During the coronation ofRama,the avatar of Vishnu, Vibhishana was presented the sacrosanct Sri Rangavimana.He decided to carry it to his kingdom of Lanka. Midway his journey, in order to rest, he placed the image on the banks of theKaveri.After performing his routinepuja,he tried to lift the vimana, but it could not be lifted.[14]Vishnu appeared to him and said that he desired to stay as Ranganatha in the place, which went on to becomeSrirangam.Vishnu also desired to watch thebrahmotsavamat Tirucherai. The festivals of the temple are thus considered sacred.[15]

Sri Lanka[edit]

In some period of historySinhalese peoplehave considered Vibhishana as one of theSathara Waram Deviyo(four guardian deities).[16]This belief was more prominent in theKotte period.According to theRavana Kathaof Wickramasinghe Adigar, after the defeat of Ravana, Vibhishana transferred theYakshacapital fromAlakamandawa toKelaniya.[17]In the 15th-century poem ofThotagamuwe Sri Rahula Thera,thesælalihini sandesaya,Mynais ordered to carry the missive to Vibhishana at his temple in Kelaniya. After the 16th century, he was replaced as a God of the four warrants by the goddessPattini.He continues to be worshipped by a diminishing number of adherents, mainly in the Kelaniya area.[18]

Literature[edit]

The Sapta Chiranjivi Stotram is a mantra that is featured inHindu literature:

अश्वत्थामा बलिर्व्यासो हनुमांश्च विभीषण:।
कृप: परशुरामश्च सप्तैतै चिरञ्जीविन:॥
सप्तैतान् संस्मरेन्नित्यं मार्कण्डेयमथाष्टमम्।
जीवेद्वर्षशतं सोपि सर्वव्याधिविवर्जितः॥


aśvatthāmā balirvyāsō hanumāṁśca vibhīṣaṇaḥ।
kṛpaḥ paraśurāmaśca saptaitai cirañjīvinaḥ॥
saptaitān saṁsmarēnnityaṁ mārkaṇḍēyamathāṣṭamam।
jīvēdvarṣaśataṁ sopi sarvavyādhivivarjitaḥ॥

— Sapta Chiranjivi Stotram

The mantra states that the remembrance of the eight immortals (Ashwatthama,Mahabali,Vyasa,Hanuman,Vibhishana,Kripa,Parashurama,andMarkandeya) offers one freedom from ailments and longevity.

References[edit]

  1. ^"Story of Vibhīṣaṇa".28 January 2019.
  2. ^wisdomlib.org (24 June 2012)."Vibhishana, Vibhīṣaṇa, Vibhīṣaṇā: 28 definitions".wisdomlib.org.Retrieved28 October2022.
  3. ^"Ravana | King Ravana - Viral Sri Lanka".3 January 2020. Archived fromthe originalon 4 August 2018.Retrieved24 January2020.
  4. ^Buck, William (2000).Ramayana.Motilal Banarsidass Publ.ISBN978-81-208-1720-3.
  5. ^Saraswati, Smt T. N. (2 March 2019).Vibhishana.Bharatha Samskruthi Prakashana.ISBN978-93-89020-78-6.
  6. ^Shashi, S. S. (1998).Encyclopaedia Indica: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh.Vol. 21–35. Encyclopaedia Indica. p. 222.
  7. ^Ranganayakamma.RAMAYANA The Poisonous Tree.Sweet Home Publications.
  8. ^Maheshwari, Vipul; Maheshwari, Anil (18 October 2020).Ramayana Revisited: An Epic through a Legal Prism.Bloomsbury Publishing.ISBN978-93-89351-07-1.
  9. ^Keshavadas, Sadguru Sant (1988).Ramayana at a Glance.Motilal Banarsidass Publ. p. 200.ISBN978-81-208-0545-3.
  10. ^Ramesh, M. S. (1997).108 Vaishnavite Divya Desams.T.T. Devasthanams. p. 262.
  11. ^Saraswati, Smt T. N. (2 March 2019).Vibhishana.Bharatha Samskruthi Prakashana.ISBN978-93-89020-78-6.Retrieved6 September2020.
  12. ^Keshavadas, Sadguru Sant (1988).Ramayana at a Glance.Motilal Banarsidass Publ.ISBN978-81-208-0545-3.
  13. ^"Lankatilaka Temple near Kandy".
  14. ^Kalyanaraman, Srinivasan."Evidence for temples in Bhāratam, from ca. 4th-3rd millennium BCE".{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal=(help)
  15. ^M., Rajagopalan (1993).15 Vaishnava Temples of Tamil Nadu.Chennai, India: Govindaswamy Printers. pp. 66–75.
  16. ^Kariyawasam, A.G.S (1995)."The Gods & Deity Worship in Sri Lanka".The Wheel Publication No. 402/404, Buddhist Publication Society.ISBN955-24-0126-7.Archived fromthe originalon 8 December 2015.Retrieved26 September2014.
  17. ^Dr. Mirando Obeysekere,Was Maya Dannawa the architect of Sigiriya?,Daily News, 6 March 2003.http:// rootsweb.ancestry /~lkawgw/mdannawa.html
  18. ^Nandasena Ratnapala,Folklore of Sri Lanka,State Printing Corporation, Colombo, 1991;ISBN955-610-089-X

External links[edit]