Mahabharat Katha || Chat Club #1 - Page 22

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sambhavami thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago

Happy Shivaratri btw guys! ❤️

1215019 thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago

Originally posted by: metacrisis

^Hey sorry for disappearing...at the time when this was taken literally, did they like beef or disliked it (Bheeshma from the dialogue seems to not be in favour so much)?

I read in one article that at one point beef was reserved for esteemed guests?

Śāntiparvan 29.119 tells us that whenever Rantideva Sāṅkṛti spent the night at home, 120,000 cattle were slaughtered for his guests. That's a lot of esteemed guests!


Harivaṃśa chapter 10 tells the story of Satyavrata "Triśaṅku" being cursed for slaughtering his guru's milk-cow and for eating the beef without offering it to the Pitṛs. No condemnation just for eating beef here. Harivaṃśa chapter 16 tells the story of seven brāhmaṇas who killed a cow that they were supposed to be protecting, and lied about it, so they were reborn as hunters, but because they offered the beef to the Pitṛs before eating it, they had spiritual knowledge of their reincarnation. Again, no condemnation of beef-eating itself.

sambhavami thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago

^Thanks!

How/When did the perception change? Was it the effect of Buddhism/Jainism on Hinduism that came up after them?

1215019 thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago

Originally posted by: metacrisis

^Thanks!

How/When did the perception change? Was it the effect of Buddhism/Jainism on Hinduism that came up after them?

I don't know, but since the customary recipients of cow-gifts were brāhmaṇas, the idea that cows are not to be eaten probably originated with them when agriculture in India had evolved the diversity that made a nutritious vegetarian diet possible.


Cows are not sacred in Buddhism/Jainism, nor in the story of Kṛṣṇa producing wolves from his body to prey on the cows of his community (Harivaṃśa chapters 52-53). Cows are sacred in the story of Kṛṣṇa worshipping and lifting Govardhana (Harivaṃśa chapters 59-62), in which buffaloes etc. are the edible animals slaughtered for the feast (viśasyantāṃ ca paśavo bhojyā ye mahiṣ'ādayaḥ; Harivaṃśa 60.13).

sambhavami thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago

Interesting! I thought that the overall tenets of non-violence that formed the base of both Jainism and Buddhism had some effect on the eventual shift of Hindu preference of a vegetarian diet, which could have been a possible trigger for beef falling out of favour.

Although, Buddhism as far as I remember does not have a strict veg mandate, it only frowns upon needless slaughter of animals.

Astraea1306 thumbnail
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Posted: 2 years ago

Hello Everyone,

I am a newbie just taken admission into this forum, hardly know anyone. I am choosing this platform to advertise my new story on the forum. I have started writing a fanfiction about Pandavas exile period from Yudhishthira's POV. Please give it a read and let me know by your comments if you like it or not.


Being a newbie the platform doesnot allows me to share the URL. So I am writing the complete topic name through which you can search from the list of topics.


FF on Mahabharat: Those Days In Exile from Yudhishthira's POV


Thank you.

1215019 thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago

Welcome to the Mahabharat Katha forum!


If you want all of India Forums (not just this one forum) to read your fan fiction, you can migrate it into a book in the Fan Fiction section.

https://www.indiaforums.com/fanfiction

I have written out step-by-step instructions here:

https://www.indiaforums.com/forum/suggestions-comments/5307644/how-to-add-fan-fictions-to-profile


When you reach Groupbie status (50 posts), you will be able to post links. Then you can share your fan fiction book in this list:

https://www.indiaforums.com/forum/mahabharat-katha/5297834/mahabharat-katha-fan-fictions-index


Meanwhile, you may enjoy reading the Nano Dramas and Nano Tales that were written for our Dharmakshetra Writing Contest recently.

https://www.indiaforums.com/forum/post/162389844

https://www.indiaforums.com/forum/post/162389952

https://www.indiaforums.com/forum/post/162396435

https://www.indiaforums.com/forum/post/162471424

https://www.indiaforums.com/forum/post/162471429

https://www.indiaforums.com/forum/post/162471427

Delusional_Minx thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago

Originally posted by: metacrisis

Interesting! I thought that the overall tenets of non-violence that formed the base of both Jainism and Buddhism had some effect on the eventual shift of Hindu preference of a vegetarian diet, which could have been a possible trigger for beef falling out of favour.

Although, Buddhism as far as I remember does not have a strict veg mandate, it only frowns upon needless slaughter of animals.

indeed. Even in Ashokan edicts, there is a "reduction" in the number of animals slaughtered in the royal kitchen, not a complete ban.


Around Gupta times, when there is proliferation of agriculture and lot of land and cows given in grants, around that time, probably people stopped eating cows/beef and began using milk and other products more.

sambhavami thumbnail
Posted: 2 years ago

^Thanks Neha! I find it a very interesting topic...how Hinduism morphed, changed and evolved with each new philosophy that it came in contact with!

Astraea1306 thumbnail
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Posted: 2 years ago

Thank you so much 😊

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