Rishis of the Forest

ebook

By Chinmoy Mukherjee

cover image of Rishis of the Forest

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In the heart of ancient Bharat, there lay a forest so sacred that even the gods revered it. This was Tapovan, a sprawling, emerald sanctuary where the veil between the mortal and divine worlds was exquisitely thin. Here, thirty six rishis, each a beacon of wisdom and power, lived in communion with the cosmos. The ancient banyan trees, their aerial roots like the matted locks of meditating sages, whispered ancient secrets on the breeze. The rivers, born from celestial glaciers, did not merely flow; they sang hymns of the Vedas, their currents a liquid melody of primordial truth. Within this hallowed ground, the rishis meditated until their consciousness touched the stars, performed yajnas where the fire god Agni himself danced with joy, and imparted knowledge to disciples who sought the light of dharma. The very air was a tapestry of scents: the sharp, clean fragrance of sacred havan smoke, the sweet perfume of wild jasmine, and the rich, earthy aroma of damp soil teeming with life.

This was a land of profound peace, reminiscent of the tranquil days in Ayodhya before the serpent of discord coiled around the throne. Yet, the rishis, in their infinite wisdom, understood that light necessitates shadow. Just as the noble prince Rama had to endure exile in the fearsome Dandakaranya forest, a place of both ascetics and rakshasas, so too was Tapovan a jewel coveted by darkness. One day, as the sun god Surya began his descent, painting the western sky in hues of saffron, rose, and molten gold, a dark cloud loomed on the horizon. It was an unnatural blot on the canvas of twilight, a malevolent purple-black that seemed to swallow the light. The forest's symphony faltered; birds fell silent, the deer grew restless, their sensitive ears twitching at a sound beyond mortal hearing. The air, once pure, thickened with an ominous presence, carrying a faint, coppery stench of old malice. The rishis, deep in their various practices, felt the disturbance as a discordant note in the song of the universe—a powerful, hateful force threatening their sacred abode. Little did they know, a demon of immense power, its heart a cold stone of envy, had set its sights on Tapovan, intent on destroying the peace and sanctity that the rishis had nurtured for centuries.

Rishis of the Forest