The Mahabharata is not only the saga of the war of the Kauravas and the Pandavas, but this book is filled with stories of countless characters whose roles may have been limited, but their struggles, spirit and decisions make these epic more mysterious. One such unprecedented story is night Ashwasen – a snake that Arjuna regarded as an enemy of his life and whose sole purpose was Arjun’s death. Let us know why this story of Ashwasen began and how his revenge remained incomplete. According to the legend of Mahabharata, the fire of Kandavaprastha and the death of Ashwasen’s mother, when the Pandavas found a country surrounded by the deserted and dense forests of Khandavaprastha, Arjuna set fire to Khandava’s proposal on Sri Krishna. This fire was the beginning of a new construction, but many creatures died due to its destruction. One of these was Night Ashwasen’s mother, who was scorched in the fire. Ashwasen somehow left after saving his life, but his soul could never forget this damage. Ashwasen’s revenge against Arjuna, after his mother’s death, filled Ashwasen’s mind a feeling of hatred and revenge towards Arjuna. He promised that one day he would avenge his mother’s death by killing Arjun. But Arjuna was a big fighter and it was almost impossible to defeat him in a straight war. So Ashwasen made a plan plan for a hidden attack. While Karna and Arjuna fought face to face during the Kaurava-Pandava War, Ashwasen saw his revenge event during the Kaurav-Pandava War. He sat in a subtle form and sat in the Carna’s arrow booth. As soon as Karna took out an arrow to shoot Arjuna, Ashwasen embraced him. Carna finds it strange and tries to remove Ashwasen from the arrow, but he did not remove. When Karna Ashwasen asked her introduction, she told the whole story: “I’m the same Ashwas, whose mother was killed in the fire of the Khandav Forest. Arjuna killed my mother and now I took revenge on her.” Carna’s Dharmascat and Valor Introduction Carna heard the story of Ashwasen carefully, but as a true fighter he followed Ashwasen, following religion and policy, “I can understand how great injustice happened to you. But Arjuna did not do it on purpose. He further said: ‘I will definitely fight with Arjuna, but not mislead with your help. If I kill Arjuna with your help, it will be against my fighter religion. ‘ Ashwasen was affected by Carna’s truth and loyalty and returned quietly from the battlefield. The introduction of the true fighter is clear from this story that Karna, who was the enemy of Arjuna, still followed his principles and religion and held the truth and dignity supremacy. This is the identity of a true fighter. Ashwasen’s story emphasizes the depths of Mahabharata, where there is a conflict between revenge, sadness and religion. It states that Mahabharata is not only the saga of war, but also a Mahasangram of human feelings and morals.
In the Mahabharata, if carna does not speak the truth, Arjuna’s life takes a snake
