WHERE WAS THE KIDNAPPED SITA?
Sad but true: against the archeological evidences of
Mahabharatian places, there are no Ramayan ones, except those consecrated after
Tulsidas’ Ramayan, centuries later.
Scholars mourn the lack of empirical evidence of Ayodhya,
Chitrakoot, Dandakaranya, Lanka, Panchavati, Videha, Kosala; when Buddha was
teaching at Savatthi 58 km from Ayodhya, it was called Oudh by pilgrims
including Fa Hien and Hieun Tsang.
But ... Yes, but there is some ray of hope. Valmiki
scholars are excited by recent developments.
Valmiki’s 'Kishkinda
Kand' Section 40-43 offers detailed directions to the four Vaanar brigades hunting
for Sita after her abduction. Those to
the westbound brigade came up for close scrutiny:
This route’s ultimate
culmination was Mt. Asta (अस्त) or Sunset Mountain. What do they cross
before Ast?
Valmiki described
a route due west from the Vindhyas, from a point where “the sindhu falls into
the sea” i.e. either where the Narmada entered the Arabian sea or the Indus
entered it at Karachi, taking the Vanaras to the Persian Gulf. (The word ‘sindhu’ also meant ‘river’). The next landmark was a Mt. Meru, after
which the team had to look out for an elusive 'gigantic ten-leaved
date-palm-tree, which was completely golden and shone forth with a marvelous
podium'. Assyrian artifacts with stylized palm trees suggested some sacred
connotations.
Ironically, the
search party that went east had more luck in crossing oceans to “three leafed
palm tree etched on Sunrise mountain i.e. a mountain near Mt. Udaya, visible
from the ocean”. That three-leafed palm tree visible from
the ocean, could be the ancient Paracas Trident of Peru etched on the mountain
in the Andes chain in South America! Picture below:
Certainly enhances
possibility of finding a similar one in the west, somewhere in the mountains
of Iran or Iraq, doesn’t it?
|
The next
landmarks were a Hemgiri peak that touched the sky, a waterlogged mountain,
Paariyatra, along the sea and a Mt. Vajra that shone like a diamond -- the
Zagros Range on the Persian shore. At
that ocean’s 4th quarter would be Mt. Chakravan with its megalithic
circular wheel with 1000 spokes structure, built by the 'celestial architect'
'Vishwakarma, atop a mountain. Otherwise
the Sudarshan chakra was accepted as Vishkarma’s celestial weapon.
Which is this rounded
city across seas and mountains west of India? Possibilities mind-boggling, from
Armenia, to Iran, Iraq and Russia.
= Armenia’s circular 'Yerevan', among the
oldest continually inhabited cities, at the heart of the Armenian Ayrarat highland
with a Mt. Ararat 64 ‘yojanas’ away.(6-15 kms); even Narek close by for Narak. Very possible old names “Chakravan” and “Varaaha” may have been
corrupted to “Yeravan” and “Ararat”.
= Today’s Baghdad, built on prehistoric ruins,
also resembles Valmiki’s circular city description.
Ancient Baghdad
= Firuzabad in Iran, then “Gor”, the
Sassanid capital and also a weapon. Possibly built on the Ramayan’s Chakravan’s
ruins?
Ancient circular city GOR
= Russain circular Vedic city, 'Arkaim', deemed
a weapon storage facility.
Comments