Pushkara is a character in the ancient Indian epic Mahabharata, known primarily as the younger brother of King Nala of the Nishadha kingdom. He features prominently in the Nala-Damayanti episode, where, influenced by the demon Kali, he challenges Nala to a rigged game of dice, defeats him, and usurps the throne, leading to Nala's exile and trials.[1] This narrative explores themes of fate, vice, and redemption, with Pushkara's actions driving much of the plot's conflict and resolution.[2]
Family and Background
Parentage
Pushkara was the younger son of King Virasena, the ruler of the Nishadha kingdom, as depicted in the Mahabharata.[3] Virasena's reign laid the foundation for his sons' roles within the kingdom. He shared this lineage with his elder brother Nala, who succeeded their father as king.[3]
Relationship with Nala
Pushkara was the younger brother of King Nala, both being sons of Virasena, the ruler of the Nishadha kingdom.[4][3]Prior to the central conflict, their relationship reflected the dynamics of royal siblings in ancient Indian kingdoms, with Nala, as the elder and reigning monarch, holding authority over Pushkara in his role as subordinate prince. Nala governed Nishadha with virtue and skill, while Pushkara supported the family's royal duties under his brother's leadership. This arrangement underscored a bond of mutual dependence within their shared heritage.[4]
Role in the Nala-Damayanti Episode
Involvement in the Conspiracy
Pushkara's involvement in the conspiracy against his brother Nala was orchestrated by Kali, the personified embodiment of strife and the impending Kali Yuga, who harbored a deep grudge against Nala for aiding the gods in securing Damayanti as his wife during her swayamvara ceremony.[5] This resentment stemmed from Nala's role as the gods' envoy, where he was tasked with conveying their marriage proposals to Damayanti but ultimately won her hand himself, thwarting divine expectations.[6]Kali, accompanied by Dvapara—the personification of the Dvapara Yuga who later manifested as the favorable die Vrisha—plotted Nala's downfall over a prolonged period, biding their time in the kingdom of Nishadha.[7]Twelve years after Nala's marriage to Damayanti, Kali identified an opportunity to possess Nala when the king, after performing his ablutions, neglected to wash his feet before evening prayers, creating a ritual flaw that allowed entry.[7] Once inside Nala, Kali induced an uncontrollable obsession with gambling, compelling him toward self-destruction.[7] Kali then approached Pushkara directly, urging him to challenge Nala to a game of dice with assurances of victory and the promise of acquiring the Nishadha kingdom.[7] Dvapara supported this scheme by enabling Pushkara's success in the game through rigged mechanics.[7]Pushkara's acceptance of Kali's proposition was driven primarily by jealousy toward Nala's prosperous rule and favored status as king, transforming latent familial rivalry into active antagonism.[7] As Nala's younger brother, Pushkara had long observed his sibling's virtues and successes, including his union with the renowned Damayanti, which fueled envious aspirations for power.[7] This collaboration marked the culmination of Kali's long-nursed vendetta, setting the stage for the ensuing crisis without Pushkara initially recognizing the full extent of the divine manipulation.[6]
The First Dice Game
In the episode of the Mahabharata's Vana Parva, Pushkara, the younger brother of King Nala of Nishadha, challenged Nala to a game of dice, acting as the instigator while playing by the established rules of the contest.[8] Possessed by the malevolent spirit Kali, Nala's judgment was severely impaired, leading him to accept the challenge despite his initial reluctance and allowing Pushkara to gain an unfair advantage through Nala's clouded state of mind.[8]The game unfolded over several months, with Nala progressively staking and losing his vast wealth, including gold, silver, chariots with their horses, and fine garments, as he became increasingly addicted to the play.[8] Pushkara, benefiting from Nala's possession-induced errors, continued to win without overt cheating, systematically stripping Nala of his treasures until nothing remained but the kingdom itself, which Nala then wagered and lost.[8] In a final desperate move, Nala staked his wife, Queen Damayanti, and lost her as well, leaving him utterly defeated in the match.[8]Throughout the game, Damayanti repeatedly implored Nala to cease gambling, highlighting the distress it caused the kingdom and reminding him of his duties as a ruler, but he responded only with silence, entranced by the dice.[8] The citizens of Nishadha, along with ministers and elders, also approached Nala in grief, pleading for him to stop the destructive play that was ruining the realm, yet their entreaties fell on deaf ears as Nala, under Kali's influence, persisted without acknowledgment.[8] This collective anguish underscored the immediate social fallout of the contest, as the once-prosperous Nishadha watched its king unravel.[8]
Ascension and Rule over Nishadha
Following his victory in the rigged dice game against his brother Nala, Pushkara seized control of the Nishadha kingdom, proclaiming himself the new king and taking possession of the throne along with all royal wealth and possessions.[9] This abrupt transition left Nala stripped of his authority, with Pushkara assuming unchallenged rule over the realm.[8]In the immediate aftermath, Pushkara enforced harsh policies toward the defeated couple, exiling Nala and Damayanti from the capital city. Clad only in single garments after staking and losing everything, including their fine attire, they were compelled to depart for the forest, initially lingering on the city's outskirts for three nights amid public indifference.[9] Pushkara further decreed that any subject showing aid or attention to the exiles—such as providing food, shelter, or sympathy—would face immediate execution, effectively isolating Nala and Damayanti and preventing any support from the populace out of fear.[9]During his rule over Nishadha while Nala was in exile, Pushkara harbored a desire for Damayanti.[10] However, bound by ancient customs prohibiting marriage to a living elder brother's wife, he refrained from wedding her, as Damayanti chose to accompany Nala in exile.[9] This restraint underscored the limits of his authority, even as his rule oppressed the former royal family.[9]
Resolution and Aftermath
Nala's Return and Rematch
Following his period of exile in the forest, where he had endured hardships after losing his kingdom to Pushkara, Nala assumed the disguise of Vahuka, a skilled charioteer, and entered the service of King Rituparna of Ayodhya. Observing Rituparna's remarkable proficiency in calculating numbers and manipulating dice—demonstrated by his precise count of leaves and fruits on a vibhitaka tree—Nala recognized an opportunity to regain what he had lost. He proposed an exchange of expertise: in return for Rituparna imparting the secrets of dice play, Nala would teach the king the art of horse training and management, a knowledge in which Nala excelled. Rituparna consented, and Nala thus mastered the intricate science of dice, freeing himself from the influence of Kali that had plagued his previous game.Armed with this knowledge, Nala departed for Vidarbha, the homeland of his wife Damayanti. Unaware of Nala's survival, Damayanti had, after years of searching, announced a second svayamvara to select a new consort, strategically intending it to compel any witnesses to her husband's fate to reveal themselves. Arriving in Vidarbha, Nala participated in the assembly disguised as Vahuka. Damayanti, through perceptive questioning and riddles, discerned his true identity, leading to their emotional reunion in the presence of her father, King Bhima, and the court, marking the end of their prolonged separation in the fourth year since Nala's defeat.[11]Reunited and restored in confidence, Nala turned his attention to reclaiming his throne. After the reunion, Nala returned to Nishadha and boldly challenged his brother to a rematch at dice, proposing stakes of his reclaimed wealth and Damayanti against Pushkara's kingdom. Unfazed and overconfident, Pushkara accepted, expecting another easy victory. In the ensuing game, Nala's advanced mastery enabled him to triumph decisively in a single throw, reclaiming the kingdom without losing Damayanti and ending Pushkara's tenure as ruler.[12]
Forgiveness and Exile
Following his victory in the rematch against Pushkara, Nala demonstrated profound mercy by sparing his brother's life and refraining from any vengeful retribution, despite the profound betrayal that had led to the loss of his kingdom and years of exile.[13] This act of forgiveness underscored Nala's commitment to dharma, restoring the fraternal bonds strained by the dice game orchestrated by Kali, and allowing Pushkara to submit without humiliation or execution.[13]In a gesture of reconciliation, Nala comforted Pushkara, expressing continued affection and granting him a portion of the kingdom along with followers and resources to sustain his rule, thereby ensuring no further harm or pursuit would befall him.[13] Pushkara, humbled by the defeat and Nala's clemency, departed joyfully for his own city, effectively exiled from the core territories of Nishadha as a measured punishment that preserved his dignity while ending his influence over the realm.[13] This resolution highlighted the epic's emphasis on righteous forbearance over retribution.With Pushkara's departure, Nala and Damayanti were fully restored to the throne of Nishadha, where they were joyously welcomed by the citizens who celebrated the return of their virtuous rulers and the dawn of renewed prosperity.[13] The couple's ascension marked the complete termination of Pushkara's sway, allowing the kingdom to flourish under Nala's just governance and symbolizing the triumph of familial harmony and moral integrity.[13]
Etymology and Symbolism
Name Origin
The name Pushkara derives from the Sanskrit term Puṣkara (पुष्कर), which carries multiple connotations rooted in ancient linguistic traditions, primarily denoting a "blue lotus" (Nymphaea caerulea or Nelumbium speciosum) or a "nourisher."[1] This etymology stems from the verbal root puṣ (to nourish or prosper) combined with kara (doer or maker), as outlined in the Uṇādi-sūtra (4.4), a classical grammatical text that derives nouns from roots, emphasizing themes of sustenance and growth.[1] In botanical and poetic contexts, Puṣkara evokes the elegance and vitality of the lotus flower, a symbol of purity emerging from water, while the "nourisher" aspect highlights provision or abundance, as seen in references to water bodies or fertile elements.[14][15]In Vedic literature, Puṣkara appears with early attestations that underscore its connection to natural and sacred elements, potentially influencing its adoption as a personal name in epic narratives. The Atharvaveda (one of the four Vedas, composed circa 1200–1000 BCE) describes Puṣkara as the blue lotus, praising its sweet perfume and associating it with ritualistic and medicinal uses, such as in charms for prosperity or healing.[1] Similarly, the Ṛgveda (the oldest Vedic text, circa 1500–1200 BCE) employs Puṣkara to refer to a spoon or ladle used in sacrificial rites, linking it to vessels that "nourish" through offerings, though this sense is distinct from the floral meaning.[1] These Vedic usages portray Puṣkara as tied to sacred waters and lotuses—recurrent motifs in Hindu cosmology—suggesting that the character's naming in the Mahābhārata may draw from this tradition to evoke prosperity or ritual purity.[1]Spelling and pronunciation variations of Puṣkara occur across Sanskrit manuscripts and transliterations, reflecting phonetic evolutions in regional scripts and oral traditions. Common forms include Puṣkara (with the visarga or aspirated 'h' in Devanāgari), Pushkar, and Puskara, as documented in classical dictionaries and epic commentaries; for instance, the Mahābhārata critical edition standardizes Puṣkara, while some Puranic texts simplify to Pushkar.[1] In regional retellings of the Mahābhārata, such as those in South Indian languages (e.g., Tamil or Telugu adaptations), the name is often rendered as Pushkara or localized phonetically to fit Dravidian sounds, maintaining the core Sanskrit root but adapting for vernacular recitation.[1] This homonym also connects briefly to the sacred site of Pushkar in Rajasthan, a pilgrimage center named after the "blue lotus" legend in Puranic lore, though the character's etymology remains independent.[1]
Symbolic Role in the Epic
In the Nala-Damayanti episode of the Mahabharata, Pushkara serves as a symbolic embodiment of greed and jealousy, vices that Kali exploits to orchestrate familial betrayal and societal disruption.[8]Kali, representing moral corruption, possesses Nala through a lapse in ritual purity and then incites Pushkara—Nala's brother—by promising him victory in a dice game and control over the Nishadha kingdom, thereby fueling Pushkara's unchecked ambition to usurp his sibling's position.[8] This manipulation underscores gambling not merely as a pastime but as a catastrophic vice that erodes wealth, status, and relationships, leading Nala to lose his entire realm in a frenzy of play that lasts months and induces madness.[8]Pushkara's role starkly contrasts with Nala's inherent virtues of dharma, truthfulness, and just rule, highlighting how ambition devoid of ethical restraint can invert fraternal bonds into instruments of ruin.[16] While Nala embodies the ideal king skilled in righteousness and prosperity, Pushkara's actions, driven by Kali's whispers, illustrate the perils of envy within the family, transforming a potential ally into an antagonist who banishes his brother to exile.[4] This opposition serves to emphasize the epic's exploration of how external vices prey on internal weaknesses, amplifying the consequences of unchecked desire.On a broader level, Pushkara's narrative arc imparts moral lessons against the perils of dice games, portraying them as gateways to irreversible downfall that affect not just individuals but entire kingdoms.[4] The episode, recounted by the sage Brihadashwa to the grieving Yudhishthira during his forest exile, parallels the Pandava king's own catastrophic gambling loss, offering solace by demonstrating that even paragons like Nala can succumb to such vices yet reclaim their fortunes through perseverance and virtue.[4] Thus, Pushkara's symbolism reinforces the Mahabharata's cautionary framework, warning that gambling, abetted by figures of malice like Kali, perpetuates cycles of betrayal and suffering unless countered by dharma.[16]