The last question of the Yaksha was that how can you revive your dead brothers? Who do you want to come back to life? Brainly Answering Legend Contest is active. Start answering!
Yaksha is the name of a broad class of nature-spirits, usually benevolent, who are caretakers of the natural treasures hidden in the earth and tree roots. They appear in Hindu, Jain and Buddhist literature. The feminine form of the word is yak?ī or Yakshini.
Kaunteya (Sanskrit: ???????) - sons of Kunti (Yudhishthira, Bhima, Arjuna). Karna is also called Kaunteya when his real identity as Kunti's son comes to be known after the war. These three are also called Partha, since Pritha is another name of Kunti.
Yudhisthira was a Pandava King of Mahabharata time. He was the son of King Pandu. Yudhisthira was the King who led the Pandava side in famous Kurekshetra war mentioned in Mahabharata. Here the king Yudhisthira was feeling anxiety because his siblings who had gone for water from a pond, had not returned.
Yudhishthira's response, "The friend of a traveller is his companion. The physician is the friend of one who is sick and a dying man's friend is charity". Question 7.
Yaksha was the God of Death – Yama Raj, who presided over hell and who was also Yudhishthira's father. Prior to going on exile, Yaksha, in the form of a crane, came in front of Yudhishthira and asked him several questions to confirm his sincerity and righteousness.
After seeing his brothers lying dead on the ground, Yudhishthira himself went in front of the celestial pool. There, Yudisthira heard a divine voice which was of yaksha. Yudhishthira answered them one by one, and then he got the pool which had fresh water in it. This is how Yudhishthira reached the pool of clean water.
Yaksha, also spelled yaksa, Sanskrit masculine singular yak?a, Sanskrit feminine singular yak?ī or yak?inī, in the mythology of India, a class of generally benevolent but sometimes mischievous, capricious, sexually rapacious, or even murderous nature spirits who are the custodians of treasures that are hidden in the
Yudhishthira had two wives, Devika and Draupadi.
Yakshinis are the female counterparts of the male Yaksha, and they are attendees of Kubera, the Hindu god of wealth who rules in the mythical Himalayan kingdom of Alaka.
A yakshi is a female earth spirit, accepted as a symbol of fertility by the Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain faiths. She is usually portrayed as a wide-hipped, voluptuous woman, who can cause a tree to bear fruit simply by touching it with her foot.
So Kunti was not completely bereaved. In order to keep the scales of justice even, he wanted to revive Madri's son Nakula. Thus, Yudhishthira's impartiality pleased the Yaksha most. So Yaksha rewarded him by reviving his all dead brothers.
Yudhishtir replied him that everyone knows that death is the ultimate truth but he supposes that he will leave forever . This is the greatest wonder of the world. Explanation: everyday Man creatures depart to Yama's Kingdom; and yet those who remain want to live forever.
The five Pandava brothers – Yudhishtira, Bhima, Arjuna, Nakula and Sahadeva –and their wife Draupadi left for theHimalayas. They were followed by a Dog.
Nakula. In the Hindu epic Mahabharata, Nakula was fourth of the five Pandava brothers. Nakula and Sahadeva were twins born to Madri, who had invoked the Ashwini Kumaras Nakula and his brother Sahadeva, are both called as Ashvineya(????????), as they were born from Ashvinas.
According to Yudhishthira, a man can become happy and rich when he completely gives up his anger, pride, desires and extreme greed for wealth or material gain.
Actually, each of the Pandavas had a divine father, as Pandu was incapable of fathering a child due to a curse. Therefore, father of Yudhishthir was Yama; father of Bheem was Vayu; father of Arjun was Indra and the fathers of the twins Nakul and Sahadev were the divine Ashwini twins.
Originally Answered: Who was Nakul? Nakul was the fourth Pandava. Nakul and Sahadev were twins from Ashwini Kumaras invoked (by boons given to Kunti) by Pandu and Madhri. He lost his parents since they were cursed by a Rishi.
In the Vedas, the apsaras are water nymphs, often married to the gandharvas. By the time the Puranas and the two epics were composed, the apsaras and gandharvas had become performing artists to the gods; the apsaras are singers, dancers, and courtesans, while the gandharvas are musicians.
Answer: The pool belongs to the god of death (Yama) who is called by the name of Yaksha in the story of the enchanted pool. Explanation: It begins with a deportation Pandavas from their own land by their cousin brother 'Duryodhana'.
Originally Answered: What happened to all the brothers of Yudhishthira? That is where they parted the company of Yudhistara one by one, youngest being the first with Bhima being the last. Yudhistara went into the space on a special chariot sent for him by celestials.