When the demon king Ravana was attacked by Lord Rama and was
nearing his death, Rama asked his brother Lakshman to go to him and learn
something which no other person except an erudite Brahmin like Ravana could
ever teach him.
The story goes that after shooting the fatal arrow on the
battlefield of Lanka, Ram told his brother, Lakshman, “Go to Ravana quickly
before he dies and request him to share whatever knowledge he can. A brute he
may be, but he is also a great scholar”.
At this Ravana said that if you have come to me as a student
then you must sit at my feet because teachers must be respected and you want to
learn lessons.
Lakshman went to Ravana and this time he stood near his feet.
Ravana seeing Lakshman standing near his feet told him secrets that would make
anyone’s life successful.
Ravana said, the most
important lesson of life is that you must defer the bad action as much as you
can and you must do good action without any delay and as much early as you can.
If you follow this rule, you can save not only yourself but many other people
from being damaged.
Ravana also told Lakshman about politics and statesmanship:
1- Do not be the enemy of your charioteer, your gatekeeper,
your cook and your brother, they can harm you anytime.
2- Do not think you are always a winner, even if you are
winning all the time.
3- Always trust the minister, who criticises you.
4-Never think your enemy is small or powerless, like I thought
about Hanuman
5- Never think you can outsmart the stars, they will bring
you what you are destined to
6- Either love or hate God, but both should be immense and
strong.
7--A king who is eager to win glory must suppress greed as
soon as it lifts its head.
8--A king must welcome the smallest chance to do good to
others, without the slightest procrastination.
Valmiki describes Ravana as the greatest devotee of Shiva. In
many folk versions of the epic, such as Ram-kathas and Ram-kiritis, we are
informed that Ravana composed the Rudra Stotra in praise of Shiva, the
ascetic-God.
He designed the lute known as Rudra-Veena using one of his 10
heads as the lute’s gourd, one of his arms as the beam and his nerves as the
strings.
His ten heads were Kama (lust), Krodha (anger), Moha
(delusion), Lobha (greed), Mada (pride), Maatsyasya (envy), Manas (mind),
Buddhi (intellect), Chitta (will) and Ahamkara (the ego) -all these ten
constitute the ten heads.
Ravana is of all the ten qualities. Such is the wisdom of
Ravana, no wonder Ram asked Laxman to learn from him.
Ravana said, he had learnt these lessons through bitter
experience. Greed arises from attachment to the senses and catering to them.
Put them in their proper place; they are windows for knowledge, not channels of
contamination.
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