Monday, June 1, 2026

Alexander in Darius's Tent:

 Alexander in Darius's Tent: 

After the battle of Issus, Alexander entered the luxurious camp of Darius. Plutarch recounts that when he saw the golden basins, perfumed rooms, and magnificent pavilion, he turned to his companions and said: "Well, this, I take it, is royalty."

Darius had left behind his mother, wife, and children. Hearing their lamentations (they believed Darius slain), Alexander sent Leonnatus with a message: "Darius is living... this is all that Alexander has." He allowed them to retain their rank and title of queens, adding he had not made war out of personal enmity. Plutarch adds that Darius's wife was "far the most beautiful of all princesses," yet Alexander, "esteeming it more kingly to govern himself than to conquer his enemies," did not touch her. He would later write to Parmenion that he had "not so much as seen or desired to see" her.

**The Letter to Darius:** Darius sent ambassadors asking for his family's return and offering alliance. Alexander responded with a blistering letter: "Your forefathers came into Macedonia and did us harm... I, having been appointed leader of the Greeks... have crossed into Asia. As I am lord of all Asia, come to me... send to me as the King of Asia, and do not address me as an equal. Otherwise I shall conduct myself toward you as an evil doer."

**Damascus Captured:** Parmenion seized Damascus, capturing 2,600 talents in coined money, 500 talents of silver, 30,000 men, and, as a letter from Parmenion marveled: "flute-girls of the king, three hundred twenty and nine... cooks, two hundred seventy and seven... makers of cheese, thirteen... strainers of wine, seventy."

**Tyre's Defiance:** From Marathus, Alexander proceeded to Byblus and Sidon, which surrendered. But Tyre refused. The city, on a rocky island half a mile from shore, had withstood Assyrian sieges for decades and Nebuchadnezzar for thirteen years. When Alexander sought to enter to worship Hercules (Melkart), Tyre replied it would admit neither Macedonian nor Persian. The capture of Tyre would disable the Persian fleet, throw Cyprus into Alexander's hands, and secure his rear. "It was determined, therefore, cost what it might, to take this city by force."

Sunday, May 31, 2026

The Siege of Tyre

 

The Siege of Tyre

(Blockage of Tyre)

Tyre was a wealthy, powerful city built on a small island about half a mile from the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. Its high walls rose straight out of the water, and its strong navy protected its busy trade. The Tyrians wanted to stay neutral and keep trading with everyone.

When Alexander arrived, he knew he couldn’t leave such a strong enemy behind him. The Tyrians sent him a gold crown and friendly messages, but they refused to let him enter their city. Alexander decided to attack.

His bold plan was to build a **causeway** (a wide road) from the mainland to the island, using stones and ruins from the old city of Tyre. His soldiers worked enthusiastically, cutting down cedar trees from Lebanon to use as piles (support beams). The Tyrians fought back with darts, stones, and arrows from their walls and ships.

One day, the Tyrians sent a **fire ship**—a galley filled with pitch, tar, and dry wood—toward Alexander’s wooden towers and engines. The ship set everything on fire, destroying months of work. Then a storm came and washed away large parts of the causeway.

But Alexander did not give up. He rebuilt the causeway, wider and stronger. He collected his own fleet from nearby Sidon. He used **battering rams** (heavy beams to smash walls) and stone-throwing machines. He even chained ships together to make fighting platforms.

After **seven months** of fighting, Alexander’s army finally broke through the southern wall. The soldiers stormed the city, killing and destroying everything in their way. Alexander then acted cruelly: he executed many people and reportedly crucified 2,000 survivors. This shows that success was making him proud and harsh.

Around this time, King Darius sent a second peace offer. He offered a huge ransom for his family, all land west of the Euphrates River, and his daughter in marriage. Alexander refused arrogantly. When his old general Parmenio said, “I would accept if I were Alexander,” Alexander replied, “So would I if I were Parmenio.”

One small story shows Alexander still had courage. One night on a mountain, his elderly teacher Lysimachus couldn’t keep up. Alexander stayed with him, killed two enemy guards, took their firewood, and made a warm campfire for the night.

The siege of Tyre is remembered as one of Alexander’s greatest military achievements, but it also marks the beginning of his loss of kindness and mercy.

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Alexander Defeats Darius (Persian King)

 

Alexander Defeats Darius

At first, the Persian King Darius thought Alexander was just a foolish boy. He told his generals to capture him. But after Alexander conquered all of Asia Minor, Darius realised he was wrong.

Darius gathered a huge, fancy army. He had soldiers from many nations, including Greek mercenaries. One Greek advisor, Charidemus, warned him that his gold and purple robes were useless against Alexander’s tough, disciplined soldiers. Darius got angry and executed him.

Darius’s army marched with incredible pomp. They carried sacred fire on silver altars and had a white horse for the sun god. There were 15,000 “Kinsmen” and 10,000 “Immortals” dressed in gold. The king himself sat in a jeweled chariot, wearing a purple vest and a golden sword. Strangely, Darius brought his mother, wife, children, and many treasures with him. He left the treasures in Damascus.

The two armies unknowingly passed each other. Darius went north to Issus after Alexander had left. When Alexander learned the Persians were behind him, he decided to attack immediately. At midnight, he led his army through a mountain pass. From a hill, he saw the thousands of Persian campfires below. He offered a sacrifice by torchlight.

At dawn, Alexander attacked. By sunset, the huge Persian army was broken and fleeing. Darius escaped on horseback, but he left his family behind. Alexander captured the Persian camp. He treated the queen and the king’s mother kindly, sending his teacher Leonnatus to comfort them. When Alexander visited them with his friend Hephaestion, the ladies mistook Hephaestion for the king. Alexander just laughed and said, “He is Alexander too.”

Alexander then sent soldiers to take the treasures from Damascus. Darius later offered peace and a ransom for his family. Alexander refused. He wrote back that he was now the king of Asia, and Darius must address him as his ruler.

After the battle, Alexander captured some Greek envoys who had plotted against him. He freed the Thebans (because he had destroyed their city) but treated the others as traitor. Then he marched on to the great city of Tyre.

Shoorpanakha and Shakuni

 

Shoorpanakha and Shakuni

Shoorpanakha and Shakuni are often referred to the margins of the Ramayana and the Mahabharata, remembered as little more than catalysts for catastrophe. Yet their actions—Shoorpanakha precipitating Ravana’s fall, Shakuni engineering the annihilation of the Kaurava dynasty—reveal a devastating effectiveness that few heroes can claim. That they are uniformly painted as evil speaks not to their nature, but to the silence imposed upon their view.

In Hindu mythology, no figure is purely light or shadow. Shoorpanakha’s apparent crime is merely desiring Rama, a married man. Instead of a gentle refusal, she is mocked, passed to Lakshmana, and her nose severed before she is sent back to her brother’s kingdom. Some versions whisper that she already loathed Ravana for killing her husband and simply seized upon Rama’s cruelty as a means of revenge. Is she a demoness, or a wronged woman, betrayed by her brother and toyed with by the very paragon of virtue?

Shakuni’s story is no less layered. Imprisoned alongside his family by Dhritarashtra, he watches his father die, extracting a promise: his bones would become dice, rolled to shatter the Kaurava line. Those dice bleed into the game of chauras, where Yudhishthira loses everything, setting the stage for the bloodshed of Kurukshetra. Shakuni, too, is an avenger of his kin, and of his sister Gandhari, forced into marriage with a blind king despite her own sight.

Both figures are instrumental yet mentioned only in passing. Powerful, relentless, and invariably condemned—they remind us that every epic’s villain may simply be the one whose wound we never bothered to hear.

Shoorpanakha and Shakuni-a poem

 She came with longing, not with sword— 

a woman wronged, her plea absurd. 

They mocked her love, then marked her face; 

Her brother’s fall grew from that grace. 

 He shaped his grief into a pair 

of dice—cold bone, a prisoner’s prayer. 

The blind king’s game, the loaded throw— 

A dynasty reaped what they would sow. 

 

Neither pure evil, nor light— 

just vengeance sharpened out of spite. 

Yet epics turn their page in haste, 

and leave the wounded to the waste. 

 What if the villain tells the truth? 

An aging wound, a stolen youth. 

In every war that scripture sings, 

the loosened thorn still draws the kings.

Friday, May 29, 2026

Kali: The Incarnation of Fierce Grace

 Kali: The Incarnation of Fierce Grace

A woman is not one thing, but a universe in herself—an encapsulation of strength, tolerance, calmness, and divinity, along with countless other qualities that lie deep within her being. As mindsets have evolved with the changing generations, women have stepped boldly into every imaginable field, proving time and again that they can be just as visionary, resilient, and productive as anyone else. They have risen with sacred stories of their own making, and in doing so, they have inspired millions.

Among these stories, one figure stands as the undiluted force of feminine power: Goddess Kali. According to mythology, she is the most powerful and formidable female warrior ever conceived. Revered as the Mother Goddess, she does not rule from a distance but fiercely worships her own children, loving them with an intensity that mirrors her wrath. She is at once a gentle mother and a fearsome warrior, her tenderness as boundless as her fury.

Several traditions describe how Kali came into being. In one version, the warrior goddess Durga—armed with ten weapons, riding a lion into battle—fought the buffalo demon Mahishasura. So immense was Durga’s wrath that it burst forth from her forehead in the form of Kali. Born black as the void, the new goddess went wild, devouring every demon in her path and stringing their severed heads into a garland she wore around her neck. Her bloodlust soon turned against any wrongdoer, and neither gods nor mortals could calm her. It was Shiva, the supreme consciousness, who intervened—by lying down directly in her path. The moment Kali realised she was standing on her own lord, her fury subsided, and peace was restored. This tale explains why Kali is often associated with battlefields and cremation grounds—places of destruction, but also of transformation.

Another version tells of Parvati shedding her dark skin, which then became Kali. Thus, one of Kali’s names is *Kaushika* (the Sheath), while Parvati remained as *Gauri* (the Fair One). This story emphasizes Kali’s blackness—not as a color of evil, but as a symbol of eternal darkness, the primordial womb from which all creation emerges and into which all destruction returns. She is the power that both annihilates and births anew.

In a world that often fears the fierce, Kali reminds us that true strength is not polite—it is wild, compassionate, and unapologetically real. To honour her is to honour the dark, powerful, loving chaos within every woman.

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Poetic stanzas inspired by Goddess Kali and the spirit of womanhood.

**I.** 

She is not one thing, but a wild, deep sea— 

strength and stillness, divinity and glee. 

A gentle mother, a flame that fights; 

love that burns as hot as her nights.

**II.** 

From Durga's brow, dark as the womb, 

She burst—a sword, a sacred tomb. 

Demons fell, their heads a chain; 

The world trembled at her reign.

**III.** 

Then Shiva lay beneath her feet— 

The storm dissolved, the heart grew sweet. 

In cremation grounds, she smiles alone: 

When all things end, all seeds are sown.

**IV.** 

She shed her skin, and night was born— 

Kaushika veiled yet never torn. 

Black as the void that births the star, 

She is what we fear, and what we are.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

 Here’s a simple continuation of the story: How Tarkasura was killed.


The gods knew that Tarakasur could only be defeated by the son of Lord Shiva. But Shiva was still deep in meditation and had no interest in the world. So, the gods came up with a plan.

They asked Kamadeva, the god of love, to awaken feelings of love in Shiva’s heart. Kamadeva shot his magical arrow at Shiva while he was meditating. For a moment, Shiva opened his eyes—but he became angry at being disturbed. In his rage, he burned Kamadeva to ashes. However, this act slowly brought Shiva’s attention back to the world.

Meanwhile, Goddess Parvati, who was the rebirth of Sati, began to pray and perform deep penance to win Shiva’s love. Her devotion and patience impressed Shiva. In time, he accepted her, and they were married.

Soon after, they had a son named Kartikeya (also known as Murugan or Skanda). He was brave, wise, and born for a special purpose—to defeat Tarakasur.

As Kartikeya grew up, he became a powerful warrior. The gods made him the commander of their army. When the time came, Kartikeya faced Tarakasur in a fierce battle. The demon was very strong, but Kartikeya fought with courage and skill.

Finally, using his divine weapon, Kartikeya defeated and killed Tarakasur. Peace was restored, and the gods and sages were safe once again.


Would you like a shorter version or one with simpler words for younger students?

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Tarakasur-a demon

 

Tarakasur

Tarakasur was a powerful and dangerous demon in Hindu mythology. He was the son of Vajranka, who had prayed deeply to Lord Brahma for a child strong enough to defeat Indra, the king of the gods. Brahma granted his wish, and Tarakasura was born.

As Tarakasur grew up, he wanted to become even more powerful. He performed severe penance to please Lord Brahma. After many years, Brahma appeared before him and offered him a boon. Tarakasur asked to be immortal, but Brahma explained that no one could escape death. Instead, he allowed Tarakasur to choose a special condition for his death.

Tarakasur thought carefully and made a clever request. He asked that only the son of Lord Shiva could kill him. Brahma granted this wish. Tarakasur felt confident because Lord Shiva was deep in meditation after the loss of his wife, Sati, and had no intention of remarrying. This made Tarakasur believe he could never be defeated.

With this powerful boon, Tarakasur became arrogant and cruel. He began attacking the gods and destroying the peaceful homes of sages. The Devatas and Rishis were frightened and helpless. They went to Lord Brahma and asked for help.

But Brahma reminded them that only Shiva’s son could defeat Tarakasur. Now, the gods faced a difficult challenge—they needed to find a way to bring Lord Shiva out of his deep meditation so that a son could be born and restore peace to the world.