Publisher's Synopsis
Ramayana is one of the two major epics of India. In this poem, the ideals of human society are explained by describing the roles of the ideal servant, the ideal brother, the ideal wife, and the ideal king in addition to describing the mutual duties of various relationships. Ramayana is also not just a story, it is presented through narrative parables with teachings of Hindu sages, and philosophical and devotional elements in this epic. The basic elements of Indian cultural consciousness are reflected in the characters of Rama, Sita, Lakshmana, Bharata, Hanuman, and Ravana. However, with the presence of the demon-slaying hero from the jungle and various mythical creatures, the story quickly becomes fictional.
However, from a historical point of view, Ramayana is considered to be an older book. The main source of the mythological story about Rama is the epic Ramayana written by Rishi Valmiki. Besides, Vishnu Purana mentions Rama as the seventh avatar of Vishnu. Chapters 10 and 11 of the ninth skandha of the Bhagavata Purana describe the story of Rama. Besides, the story of Rama is also mentioned in Mahabharata. Indian civilization is at least thirty thousand years old. Vedas, Upanishads, Puranas, and Smriti were written down in the Devanagari language at least five thousand years ago, but these scriptures existed for thirty thousand years in the Sruti tradition. By which not only our progress but also the welfare of the world and is Dharma. Religion is not a set of beliefs, superstitions, or superstitions.
Dhritti (Be content with what you have and always be patient), 2. Forgiveness, 3. Dum (Self-control i.e. controlling yourself from pride), 4. Asteya (abstain from immoral things i.e. cheating, hypocrisy, betrayal, etc.), 5.Suchita (being physically and mentally pure and clean at all times), 6.Indriya Nigraha (preventing the body's senses from greedy objects), 7.Dhi (drugs and other mind-destroying substances, vices, laziness, delusion, etc. 8. Vidya (acquiring accurate knowledge of all matters), 9. Honesty (considering the substance as it is, speaking as it is, and doing as it is), 10. Akrodha (giving up anger or anger and peace etc. qualities). Acceptance). These ten are the signs of religion. Within the Ramayana poem, an attempt has been made to reveal the above features through various events and incidents.
Ramayana is not just a story, it is presented through narrative parables with teachings of Hindu sages, philosophical and devotional elements in this epic. The basic elements of Indian cultural consciousness are reflected in the characters of Rama, Sita, Lakshmana, Bharata, Hanuman and Ravana to educate people on various subjects, to maintain awareness and social order, and above all for the welfare of people.