Friday, November 18, 2011

Matsya Avatar

In Hindu mythology there are four eras [yuga] – Satya yuga, Treta yuga, Dwapara yuga and Kali yuga. Each Yuga is supposed to be a day for Lord Brahma. One day of Lord Brahma is 4320 million human years. After the end of every yuga Lord Brahma goes to sleep. The power of Lord Brahma’s creation comes from the Vedas. When Lord Brahma sleeps there is no creation and the universe comes to an end.
Lord Vishnu is the God of Preservation. Whenever the earth was in danger and when evil threatens to overpower good, Lord Vishnu descends from the heaven to incarnate on the earth. There are ten incarnations of Lord Vishnu. [Dasavatar – Das meaning "ten" and avatar is "incarnation", the last avatar – Kalki avatar is yet to come] The first avatar of Lord Vishnu is called as Matsya Avatar [Matsya means "fish"].
In the Satya Yuga there was a king by name Manu. He was a staunch devotee of Lord Vishnu. His greatest desire was to see Lord Vishnu with his own eyes. For this he performed severe penances for thousands of years.
The Satya Yuga was about to end and a great flood was to come and destroy all the life on earth to start afresh for the next Yuga. Lord Brahma after a day full of creation, was tired. He wanted to go to sleep and was soon snoring loudly.
While Lord Brahma was sleeping an asura Hayagriva emerged from Brahma’s nose. With Brahma asleep, Hayagriva realized that it was the right time to take in all the knowledge of the Vedas. Hayagriva concentrated and soon absorbed the knowledge in the Vedas. He then hid deep inside the ocean, thinking that nobody would find him there.
Lord Vishnu saw this and was worried. If the Vedas were stolen by the asura, the knowledge of the Vedas could not be passed on to the Next Yuga. As a Preserver, it was his job to make sure the knowledge survived to the next Yuga.
Wondering what to do, Lord Vishnu looked at Manu performing penance. Lord Vishnu smiled realizing that he could complete quiet a lot than just save the Vedas…
The next morning, Manu went to the river to begin his prayers. He took the water in his hands and held it high above his head and offered it to the Lord Vishnu to mark the beginning of his prayer. He was about to pour the water into the river, when he heard a tiny voice from his hands. "O great king! Please do not put me back in the river…"
Surprised Manu stared at his hands. In the palms of his hands was a tiny fish, squirming. The fish looked at Manu, pleading, "Please do not put me back in the water. There are so many bigger fishes in the water, they will eat me. Please, O great king…"
Manu looked at the tiny fish with pity. As a king it was his duty to protect anybody who came to him for help. The king readily agreed and put the fish inside his "kamandalam". [Kamandalam is a small jug carried by sages in those days to carry water]
Manu finished his penance and went home for the night. He had left the fish inside the kamandalam, knowing that the fish would be safe inside. He woke up next morning hearing a strong voice, "O king…Help me…Your kamandalam is stifling me. I cannot breath in here…" Surprised Manu looked at his kamandalam, only to find a big fish staring at him from the top of the kamandalam. The fish was pushing the sides of the jug as the jug was too small for it.
Overcoming his surprise, Manu ran inside his house to get a bigger vessel. The fish gulped few breaths and said softly, "Thank you, kind king."
Manu smiled and was about to walk out the home to begin his morning prayers, when he heard an even more powerful voice, "King, this vessel in too small for me. Please get me another one."
Manu blankly stared as the fish stared out of the vessel he had got just minutes back. The fish was again struggling for breath. Manu brought the biggest vessel in his house and threw the fish inside it. The fish thanked him and after checking that the vessel was big enough for the fish, still puzzled, was about to walk out of the house, when he heard a strong voice, "I am sorry this vessel is also not sufficient for me, king"
Manu stared in disbelief as he saw the huge fish stare out of the big vessel. However realizing that this was not the time for questions, he carried the fish and ran to the river, where he had found the fish and threw the fish inside.
The fish gulped a few breaths inside water, "Thank you…king. You have protected me. But please don't leave me here. I am afraid the other bigger fishes may eat me…"
Manu began to get suspicious, but he was a king. He could not just stop protecting someone who had come to him for help. He stared at the fish for long and before his very eyes saw the fish getting larger and larger, till it had covered up the entire river.
The same routine followed again. Manu carried the fish from one river to another river, but the fish kept getting bigger.
Finally he dropped the fish inside the ocean, only to find that the fish grown to full one side of the ocean. Looking at gigantic fish, a sudden flash came to Manu. He bowed before the fish, "Narayana, you are Narayana..my Lord."
The fish smiled, "You wanted to see me and here I have come." Manu stared with tears in his eyes, as a huge horn grew on the head of the fish.
"My Lord, you have granted me my only desire. I want nothing more. What do you want me to do now?" Manu said prostrating before the fish.
"Manu, the Yuga is about to end in seven days. There will be a great flood and all living things on the earth would perish. I want you to build a big ship. Take the seeds of all plants, the male and female of every animal, and the seven sages along with their families. Take them all on the ship"
Manu nodded. The fish continued. "Don't forget to bring Vasuki, the snake God also." Manu nodded again as he watched the fish tear through the ocean to the other side.
One half of the fish’s work completed, the fish went to the other side to complete the other reason for the incarnation. On the other end of the ocean, the fish saw Hayagriva guarding the Vedas. Seeing the huge fish, Hayagriva was terrified. What a huge fish…However no sooner than he had thought this, the fish attacked him. The fish was so huge, that a single push sent the asura reeling. Still dazed Hayagriva tried fighting the fish, but the fish was huge and powerful.
After a brief and futile struggle, the asura was dead. Once the asura was dead, the vedas imbibed by him went back to Lord Brahma, who was still asleep.
On the other side of the ocean Manu was building his ship. He had also brought the seven sages with their families.
Soon there were torrential rains which washed away everything. The water level kept increasing and very soon there was a flood. The ship wobbled and many times was about to capsize, but Manu and that others were steadfast in their belief that Lord Vishnu would protect them.
Soon the fish came as promised, "Manu, use Vasuki as a rope to tie my horn to the ship" It bellowed loudly, above the roar of the rain.
Once the fish was tied to the ship, the fish guided the ship in sea and kept the ship safe while the storm raged outside. The fish taught the Vedas to Manu and the others during the voyage. After the storm abated and everything was washed away, the fish deposited the ship at Mount Himavan for the people there to continue the new yuga.


Click here for audio story. Voices by SA Krishnan and family

35 comments:

  1. Very great story. It reminds me of Noah, though I'm sure this was first. Thank you so much for all of your stories.

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  2. Today i was searching for this avtar to expalain my daughter and found your site which has got very elaborate explaination. Thanks a lot and best wishes for maintaining wonderful site.

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  3. This story is wonderful firstly I say thanks this site which is useful for us .

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  4. 1000 times four eras is a one day of Brahma, see bhagvat geeta 8.17 for reference, and this is not stories this is all fact.............great work

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  5. Thank u so much! This story has helped in my dance theory. Please produce more stories like this with detail. Thank u once more!

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  6. All are right but the part of hagriv between this story I think wrong

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    1. I agree. The asuras that stole the vedas were Madhu-Kaitapa and not hayagriva. Hayagriva infact is an avatar of Vishnu himself.

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    2. See this story: http://www.apamnapat.com/articles/Devibhagavata010.html

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    3. Sir/Madam, The demon Hayagriva had a boon that he could be destroyed only by someone who has the same name as him. So Hayagriva is the name of Demon and the incarnation of Lord Vishnu by which Lord Vishnu killed the demon

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    4. Sir/Madam, The demon Hayagriva had a boon that he could be destroyed only by someone who has the same name as him. So Hayagriva is the name of Demon and the incarnation of Lord Vishnu by which Lord Vishnu killed the demon

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  7. Isn't too much strange that all the ancient civilizations of the world describing the Same Giant flood of the world's end... nd same concept of creating a ark .....?????

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  8. See "Your Inner Fish" on Nova, It will give a scientific perception to this Avatar. was the lord pointing out he is present in all life and that we owe our origins to fish ?

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  9. The Satya Yuga was about to end and a great flood ...

    It is said that Vishnu incarnates four times in satya yuga. So how can the first incarnation be at the end of satya yuga?

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    1. Dear sir/madam,
      The Bhagawat Purama considers sages like Kapila and kings like Pitru etc. to be the avatars of Vishnu. So it is possible that there were other incarnations in the Satya Yuga before the Matsya Avatar.
      However I do not know exactly what these avatars are. I will let you know, if I find them.

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    2. Thanks for this hint … Bhagavata Purana mentions 24 incarnations but lists only 22. Matsya is the 10th.

      Brahmana, Varaha, Narada, Naranarayana, Kapila, Dattatreya, Yajna, Rishabha, Prithu, Matsya, Kurma, Dhanvantari, Mohini, Narasimha, Vamana, Parashurama, Vyasa, Rama, Balarama, Krishna, Buddha, Kalki.

      Garuda Purana mentions 22.

      Sanatkumara, Varaha, Narada, Naranarayan, Kapila, Dattatreya, Yagya Deva, Rishabha, Prithu, Matsya, Kurma, Dhanvantari, Mohini, Narasimha, Vamana, Parshurama, Vyasa, Rama, Krishna, Balarama, Buddha, Kalki.

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  10. THanx for letting me know the story. :) Will spread the story and moral of it :)

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  11. Thank you very much for the wonderful narration of Lord Maha Vishnu's Matsya Avataram.. i feel blessed.. Namo Venkatesha !!

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  12. very clearly narrated. thankyou

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  13. Continuous rain can bring flood but complete coverage of land with water can happen only by raise in sea level if such a process has happened even probably due to ice melting the temperature variation would have effected the fishes and somehow manu was able to connect the dots to know about catastrophe also he would have used the fishes to navigate(go where fishes go) to safer waters or lands

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  14. I want to know which weapon god vishnu used to kill hey grid? ?

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  15. Wow you made stort very easy so that we can understand it easy mane.. really thanks for the story(past fact)

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  16. Narration of mastya avatar is very good and easy to understand.

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  17. Thank you very much for providing this story...

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  18. Thank you so much for giving such a story

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  19. Amazing story, read it in childhood in school lessons, saw Noah an Hollywood movie, heard a debate over Noah in Christianity vs nuh in Islam.
    Just wondering are all these same?
    Different point of view of different people???
    Bcz the essence of the story is same in all the 3.
    God's advice to build an ark, built by man, saved mankind from drowning.
    If it is, it just proves that he is one. The almighty, call him Vishnu, Allah, Jesus, or anything, he is that one ultimate power that runs the wheel of this world.

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  20. For dance class, I needed this. Thank you very much for such an amazing website!

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  21. You have done a "Great" Job. While/After reading this, unknowingly both of my hands joined together and my heart sincerely thanked the writer (before even checking who has written this page). I just want to say "Thank You". Please keep up the good work, and stay blessed!! Please write/share more and more.

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  22. But what about kurmaavtara it was at the starting of satya yuga in samudramatana right?!then how we can say mastyavatara is the first incarnation

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