Veni Vidi Vici - Alexander the Great and Chanakya's Chant
Veni Vidi Vici -
Alexander the Great and
Chanakya’s Chant
The Latin Phrase “Veni Vidi Vici” means “I came, I saw, I
conquered”. Alexander the Great, the
Greek Emperor and great conqueror after conquering most of the world and
reaching Asia, he reportedly said “Veni Vidi Vici” - “I came, I saw, I
conquered”.
This writer was greatly fascinated by the above phrase,
and found to be fit in by the above words in my real life. Two of my major work places and the
illustrious real life scenario given the testimony for the above belief.
Jesus
Christ, the writer’s Dad and Alexander the Great – they all lived 33 years only
in this world.
Alexander III of Macedon known as Alexander the Great was
born in BC 356. By the age of 30 he had
conquered most of the ancient world. He
was undefeated in battle and is considered one of the history’s most successful
military commanders.
“There is nothing impossible to him who will try” – a famous quote by Alexander the Great.
Alexander said “Thank the Gods to
have been born Greek.”
Alexander resembled the Greek myth of Adonis
the God of Beauty and Desire.
During his youth Alexander was
tutored by the great thinker and philosopher Aristotle till he attained the age
of 16. Alexander attributed his father
for his life and his teacher for how to live the life king size and wise. Alexander succeeded his father to the throne
when he was twenty. Alexander was the
emperor par excellence.
“An army of Sheep led by a Lion is better than an army of Lions
led by a Sheep” – Alexander the Great.
Like our own Indian political
honchos like Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi, Alexander’s father, mother and
wife were assassinated. Though mystery
shrouds Alexander’s death, we shall examine the end scripted by our English
writer Ashwin Sanghi in his treatise “Chanakya’s Chant”.
In his novel “Chanakya’s Chant”
Ashwin Sanghi examines life of Alexander the Great who was a contemporary of
Indian Demi God Brahmin “Chanakya”.
Chanakya has written “Arthashastra”, the “Science of Wealth”. Chanakya was also known as Kautilya or
Vishnugupta. Chanakya was a shrewd political
advisor and master mind to unify India under one roof, one umbrella through the
historical ruler and his contemporary King Chandragupta Mourya.
I would like to use here few
excerpts from Ashwin Sanghi’s fiction “Chanakya’s Chant” which I found
interesting in respect of Chanakya. In
his work Ashwin Sanghi examines the present day Chanakya, Pandit Gangasagar
Mishra and his protégé Chandni Gupta in parallel with Chanakya and his protégé
Chandragupta Maurya almost 2300 years ago.
“King Dhanananda of
Magadha spent his life amidst wine and women in his pleasure palace. His Prime Minister Shatkar wanted him to
spend less time satisfying his carnal desires and concentrate to
rule the
kingdom wisely to strengthen it and make a better life for its subjects. An infuriated King Dhanananda orders to take
Shatkar in custody. A close friend of
Shatkar and the father of Chanakya – Acharya Chanak revolted against this act
of King Dhanananda. Acharya Chanak was a scholar and all the Kings wanted their
Princes to get educated under him. Acharya
Chanak being famous and well-known for his wisdom found a large gathering to
listen to his speech. By sighting huge
assembly of people to listen to Acharya Chanak and by threatened so, King
Dhanananda orders to behead Chanak. King
Dhananada’s men severed Chanak’s head from his body and hanged it with the lock
of his hairs on a tree branch. Chanakya’s eyes welled up with tears after
seeing his father’s head hanged on the tree branch. Chanakya, supported by one of the influential
friends of his father secretly climbed on the tree before sunset and releases
the head and then wrap it with fresh muslin and swam across the other side of
river and conducted the necessary funeral ceremony there with the presence of a
Hindu priest. Then, Chanakya decides
that this is the only occasion he will cry, and rest of his life he will make
others who found guilty to cry. He unlocked his hair and took an oath that
after the murder of “Dhanananda” who killed his father then only he will tie it
again……finally one day Chanakya took his revenge by eliminating Dhanananda from
this world.”
Chanakya’s greatest asset was his
uncanny ability to plumb the lowest depths of the human mind.
Chanakya lived in 4th
Century B.C. Chanakya graduated from the University of Takshasheela and was a
sharp student. Chanakya was a strategist, great teacher and visionary.
Chanakya has written Arthshastra
a book of total management or science of wealth and Chanakya Neeti. Arthshastra contains 15 books and 150 Chapters
and 600 Sutras or Shlokas. Arthshastra
known as a Book of Economics, State Craft, Punishment, Warfare and Strategy
etc.
The seven traits to be seen in a
person vying to become a Chanakya are –
- To inspire and mold good performers to be future leaders.
- To build a successful organization that manifests fortitude and cohesion.
- To be more efficient and effective.
- To experience a dose of self-discovery and transformation.
- To face and overcome business challenges.
- To get a gamut of ancient Indian yet universally relevant business knowledge.
- To get a course in experiential management and economic practices.
Vishakanyas - Hiss of Death
“Vishakanya is a poison maiden
groomed in Chanakya’s foundation “gurukul” or “institute” to deal with their
enemies.
The Vishakanyas are the most beautiful celestial creatures with
deadly poison. Chanakya had personally
supervised the creation of an entire army of such maidens. All the girls in the institute was born on a
Tuesday during the seventh lunar day of Vishaka. Vishaka means Heavenly Star.
One of the Vishakanya named Vishaka was used to kill King Paurus of Magadha by
Chanakya. Paurus was a threat to his protégé Chandragupta Maurya and thus
Chanakya wanted to eliminate him by using Vishakanya named Vishaka. Vishaka, undoubtedly was a celestial
creature. Her utterly seductive hour glass body, translucent ivory complexion,
her sensuous mouth, her full ruby lips, delicate pert nose and mischievous
emerald eyes were partially covered by her cascading, silken, auburn hair. Her
clove-and-cardamom scented breath set Paurus on fire. An excited and aroused Paurus kissed Vishaka and
experienced that his throat was burning with Sankhiya poison. Vishakanyas are trained with poison intake
from the age of puberty, and when they graduate from Chanakya’s institute they
were asked to put their hands in a basket with deadly poisonous snakes. The snakes bites Vishkanyas but by the time
Vishkanyas becomes immune to snake poison and any man who cohabit with them would
die.”
Once upon a time Chanakya said to
one of the messenger of Seleucus called
Megasthenes that let us not discuss war but love, marriage and happiness. He
continued that our King Chandragupta has already married the lovely lady
Cornelia your master’s daughter via Gandharva Vivah. He explained to him that in ordinary marriage
the couple celebrate sex on “Suhaag Raat” or first night but in “Gandharva
Vivah” they first enjoy sex and then the marriage takes place by garlanding
each other and taking ceremonial oath of marriage without any witness.
The
death of Alexander the Great
“Alexander had spent a night drinking
excessively at a banquet organized by his dear friend Medius of Larissa. By the time the night was over, Alexander was
shaking violently from tremors of malarial fever. Alexander’s royal cup bearer, Iolla, knelt by
Alexander’s side offered him the medicated water that had specially sent by
Antipater – Alexander’s supreme commander of his European forces – to cure him
of the fever. What the divinity did not
know was that this medicated water contained Hellebore and Strychnine a deadly mixture - that had been transported secretly to
Babylon inside a Mule’s hoof by
Antipater’s son not to cure but to kill Alexander. Thus, gradually Alexander the great met with
his death due to poisoning.”
Alexander’s gravest of the
mistake was his attitude and the damages he done to Zoroastrianism.
Ashwin Sanghi begin and ends with a mantra –
“Adi Shakti Namo Namah
Sarab Shakti Namo Namah
Pritum Bhagvati
Namo, Namah
Kundalini Mata Shakti,
Mata Shakti Namo Namah”
It’s an ancient Sanskrit mantra
extolling the virtues of feminine energy.
2 Comments:
Well everywhere it says it's Julius Caesar who said these wordings and not Alexander,the great.
The phrase is attributed in plutarch's Life of Caesar and Suetonius's Lives of the Twelve Caesars: Julius. Plutarch writes that Caesar used it in a report to Amantius, a friend of his at Rome.
Suetonius states that Caesar displayed the three words as an inscription during his Pontic triumph.
I don't disagree that it was Julius Caesar who used the phrase first.
However, it was most suitable incase of Alexander the great who after conquering most of the world and reached Asia.
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