Kamada Ekadashi
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The untold glories of Kamada Ekadasi are described in the
Varaha Purana in a delightful conversation between Maharaj Yudhistira and Sri
Krsna.
The king asked: "My dear Lord, crowning jewel of the
yadu dynasty.Please enlighten me about the nature of this most auspicious
dayKamada Ekadasi. Please advise me how one should observe this Ekadasi that
falls during the month of Chaitra while the moon is waxing. Please also
describe what the benefits of such observance are and advise me how to reap the
result."
"Sri Krsna replied: "My dear maharaja Yudhisthira,
please hear attentively the description of this Ekadasi day which has been
recorded in the ancient Purana. One time Maharaja Dilip, the great grandfather
of Sri Ramacandra, asked his dearly beloved and most magnanimous spiritual
master Vasistha, about the name and procedure for observing this Ekadasi,
'Kamada' which occurs during the month of Chaitra (March/April.)
"The saintly & sagacious Vasistha replied, 'O my
dear King, naturally i will fulfill your desire to hear the glories of this
Ekadasi day. The name of this inscrutably alligned, constellatory opportunity
is Kamada. The essence of such a day is the realisation of the delineation of
lust and love; and knowing the difference between the two. This sacred Ekadasi
burns all one's sinful reactions to ashes and awards the observer the privelege
of having an intelligent and confident son. Now, please hear the glories of
this Ekadasi."
"Once, in the city of Ratnapura (Bhogipura) there was a
great and venerable king known by the name of Pundarika. He was accompanied by
his joyful and kindly munificent subjects which included the Gandharvas,
Kinnaras and the Apsaras. In that sweetly opulent city there lived a
fantastically beautiful Apsara named Lalita and a handsome, regal Gandharva
known as Lalit. They lived happily as husband and wife and were consistently
overwhelmed by each other's love; to the point of madhness. They were
constantly engaged in sporting activities and relished each others company
until their association burned at the heartstrings and knarled their brains to
the point of exhaustion."
"One time in the court of King Pundarika many
Gandharva's were engaged in blissful frivolities, they were singing and dancing and covorting
in great bliss. Lalit sang with the Gandharvas although his wife did not,
rather she danced in great ecstacy with the many joyous Apsaras. Due to the
pangs of separation that Lalit was experiencing in separation from his devoted
wife, he felt intense hankering and dove into an ocean of tears. His
innunciation during his singing grew weaker and he forgot the words to many
songs that he knew off by heart."
"Oh king, in that assembly there was one serpent from
the Patala Region, he went by the name of Karkotaka and knew well the mystery
of this situation. He complained in a greatly thunderous voice, "O lalit
you have spoiled the perfomance here by your attachment to your wife, you have
upset the taal (rhythm) of the piece and distracted the singers. Therefore i
curse you to be a man-eater cannibal.'
"Being thus cursed by such a serpentine character,
Lalit immediately transformed into a great demon and all could see there was
fearsome fire in his eyes. When lalita saw her husband's terrifying form she
was extremely hurt and distressed. In intense pain and distress she spent her
days and nights simply thinking of where to go, what to do and who to see.
However, her fears allayed she felt no understanding of where she was, what she
was doing and who she was seeing. She was simply lost on an ocean of delinquent
separation. Surrendering all embarrassment she lived with her husband in the
forest."
"Once, while wandering within the dense forest with her
husband, Lalita saw the most sacred ashrama of the sage and Sringi situated at
the peak of the Vindhiya Mountain. Lalita immediately went there and offered
her respectful obeisances to the sage. Upon seeing this lady, the sage
inquired, 'O beautiful one, who are you and where do you come from? Why have
you come here and what duty will you perform here?'
"Lalita replied: "O great soul, I am the daughter
of the great and kind hearted Gandharva named Viradhanva. My name is Lalita and
I live in this forest with my husband. He has been cursed by a ferocious
serpent and is now in the form of a demon. O brahmana! I am greatly indebted to
you for your kind darshan and have no means of rescuing my husband myself.
Please, as a great brahmana you must surely have the ability to help. If there
is at all some way of atonement that will remove this horrendous afflication,
then please; tell me!"
"After hearing Lalita's pathetic request, the sage
Sringi said, 'O daughter of the Gandharva, in a few days time during the waxing
Moon of the Chaitra month. There is a munificent Ekadasi day, known as Kamada.
By observance of this day all one's sinful reactions can be completely
annhiliated. By following this (vow) and giving the entire merit to your
husband, all one's desire's will be fulfilled. Then, by the influence of this
merit your husband will immediately become freed from the curse."
"O King! Being instructed in this way by the sage,
Lalita gladly observed the vow of this Ekadasi. On the day of Dvadasi, Lalita
gladly sat in front of the brahmanas and the Supreme Lord Vasudeva and
announced: "I have observed the Ekadasi vrata as you reccomended, I have
abstained from food and water for the duration and am now gladly offering my
results unto my dearest husband. I pray that my piety will remove his demoniac
condition and alleviate our suffering."
"As soon as Lalita had finished her prayer, her
husband-turned-demon, 'Lalit' became freed from the reactions of his sins and
regained his divine Gandharva form. From that time on Lalit and Lalita lived
happily together."
"Lord Krsna concluded, "O Maharaja Yudhisthira! O
best of kings! Anyone who hears the narration of this most charmingly blissful
day should certainly observe it to the best of his ability. There is no better
vow as it can eradicate even the sin of killing a brahmana and easily
counteracts demoniac curses."
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