Podcast details
The story of Holi
The divine protects the sincere devotee, fulfilling cosmic law beyond mortal conditions.
A king sought immortality through austerity. Denied this, he demanded a boon: to not die inside or outside, by day or night, by human, animal, weapon, or element. It was granted. He returned to his kingdom, forbade all worship of God, and punished believers. He encountered an old potter woman praying because her kittens were trapped in a kiln. He vowed to burn her if they died. After 48 hours, the kittens were found alive, unharmed. The king, confused, spared her. The king had a son, Prahlāda, a devoted child who chanted God's name constantly. The king tried repeatedly to kill him: by crocodiles, wild elephants, and a mountain. The child survived each time through divine grace. The king then ordered Prahlāda to embrace a red-hot iron pillar or be killed. As Prahlāda approached, he saw ants walking on the hot pillar and gained confidence. He hugged the pillar, and it broke. From it emerged Narasiṃha, a half-man, half-lion form. At twilight, at the threshold of the house, Narasiṃha placed the king on his lap and killed him with his claws, thus fulfilling every condition of the boon.
"My God." "Better to die in the fire than be killed by such a devil."
Filming location: Sydney, Australia
This text is transcribed and grammar corrected by AI. If in doubt what was actually said in the recording, use the transcript to double click the desired cue. This will position the recording in most cases just before the sentence is uttered.
The text contains hyperlinks in bold to three authoritative books on yoga, written by humans, to clarify the context of the lecture:
- Yoga in Daily Life - The System
Paramhans Swami Maheshwarananda. Ibera Verlag, Vienna, 2000. ISBN 978-3-85052-000-3 - The Hidden Power in Humans - Chakras and Kundalini
Paramhans Swami Maheshwarananda. Ibera Verlag, Vienna, 2004. ISBN 978-3-85052-197-0 - Lila Amrit - The Divine Life of Sri Mahaprabhuji
Paramhans Swami Madhavananda. Int. Sri Deep Madhavananda Ashram Fellowship, Vienna, 1998. ISBN 3-85052-104-4
