Why are we asked to read the scriptures, Puranas and Itihasas? Because they offer us
solace when we are in distress. Often, we complain that our burdens in life are too difficult to bear. We ask ourselves why it isthat we alone suffer so much. We are full of self-pity and think that we are being unduly troubled, while everyone else in the
world is happy. It is at times like these that reading our scared literature helps us, for it lessens our pain. We come across people
who have suffered much more. Our problems seem small compared to theirs, said D. Gnanasundaram, in a discourse, and gave the examples of Sita and the Saivite saint Thirunavukkarasar to drive home the point.
Sita was the pampered daughter of a King, and was married to Rama, the darling of His father and of all the people of Ayodhya.
And yet, when Rama was banished, Sita willingly accompanied Him, although He told Her to stay behind. To Her, life in thepalace would be unbearable if Rama went away. But although She could brook no separation from Rama, and for this reason accompanied Him to the forest, separation
was what She had to face. She was taken away by Ravana, imprisoned, taunted and teased.
Ravana employed every means possible to make Her comply with his wishes. She had to put up with all this, while waiting for Rama to save Her. Compared to the problems She faced, what are our problems? We fuss over
even trivial issues. Sita’s life is an example of the patience we need in life.
Thirunavukkarasar incurred the displeasure of the King, who ordered the saint to come to meet him. But the saint refused and said he was nobody’s slave. Simply because he lived in a certain geographical territory, it did not mean he had to pay homage to the king of the region. The king, angered by Thirunavukkarasar’s response, ordered various forms of torture to be inflicted upon him. The saint was given poisoned food, was
thrown into a lime kiln, was tied to a rock and cast into the sea. But the saint never lost faith in Lord Siva and was saved in everyinstance. Compared to the saint’s travails, what are our problems? Thus reading sacred
literature keeps us from self-pity.
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