Mahabharata Podcast – Details, episodes & analysis
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Mahabharata Podcast
Lawrence Manzo
Frequency: 1 episode/8d. Total Eps: 100

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🇨🇦 Canada - hinduism
06/08/2025#3🇬🇧 Great Britain - hinduism
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06/08/2025#67🇨🇦 Canada - hinduism
05/08/2025#76🇬🇧 Great Britain - hinduism
05/08/2025#18🇩🇪 Germany - hinduism
05/08/2025#25🇺🇸 USA - hinduism
05/08/2025#22🇫🇷 France - hinduism
05/08/2025#66
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Episode 100 - Summing up
jeudi 12 avril 2012 • Duration
I talk about the three layers of religious philosophy in the epic-- Vedic Sacrifice, Karma Yoga, and Bhakti. I propose that Karma Yoga was an innovation introduced by the Mahabharata, and I believe Bhakti was inspired by the epic, and subsequently the epic was modified to include that religion. That would explain Krishna's promotion from country cousin to Top God...
Next, I discussed some of the characters in the story-- reviewing their actions and whether they were fairly rated "good guys" or "bad guys" by the epic, and by modern listeners in general.
Finally, I compare the epic with other literature, and compare the religious philosophy of the epic with other works and other religions. I hope no one gets overly offended! Please write in my blog and let me have it if I did. I apologize in advance!
Episode 99 - Epilogue 2: The Snake Sacrifice
mercredi 28 mars 2012 • Duration
So now we have re-visited the beginning at our leisure, and now you know the circumstances in which the Mahabharata was first publicly recited. The burnt snake guts must have still been warm when Vyasa's disciple Vaishampayana began the tale.
So that's all for a while. I am working on a commentary for episode 100-- reviewing the story and considering what was included and what was left out. Please visit this blog (http://mahabharatapodcast.com) and leave comments, or questions, or any requests for what I should include in my final summing up of the epic!
Thanks, Lawrence
Episode 90 - The Final Teachings, part 2
mardi 7 février 2012 • Duration
Episode 89 - The Final Teachings, part 1
mercredi 1 février 2012 • Duration
Episode 88 - The Book of Peace
jeudi 12 janvier 2012 • Duration
These teachings are exceptionally difficult to convey in the form of a podcast, mostly because they are so boring. There are very few stories, and most of the stories revolve around conversations in which one character instructs the other on good behavior. I have tried to extract the more interesting details from the book, and I included the most interesting of the stories. Hopefully this is enough to convey the nature of this part of the epic, which makes up nearly a third of the entire text!
Episode 87 - Rama's Famous Genocide
mercredi 28 décembre 2011 • Duration
Along the way, Krishna tells the story of Battleaxe Rama, who wiped out the race of Kshatriyas 21 times in succession.
The podcast may be taking something of a hiatus after this episode. We are now entering the section of the Mahabharata that is dedicated to Bhisma's teaching on Dharma. This constitutes nearly one-third of the entire text, and from what I've seen so far, is extremely legalistic and detailed. This means I will need to pour over a lot of text to extract enough information to make a full episode. That may take a while.
On the positive side, once we are through this section of Bhisma's teachings, we are almost at the end of the story!
Thanks for sticking with me on this long journey. I'll be sure to keep you posted as things develop. Just keep watching this blog!
Episode 86 - To be (king), or not to be...
mercredi 21 décembre 2011 • Duration
No one else agrees with the new king however, and his brothers, Krishna, and the Rishis all take turns trying to convince him that the best use of his life would be to take up the crown and rule, according to his dharma.
They never quite seem to convince him, but Krishna and Narada at least manage to distract him with a story of a boy who crapped gold nuggets (Suvarnashthivin). Also, Yuddistira has learned to always obey Krishna, and Krishna is adamant that he take up the throne and rule.
Episode 85 - Remembering Karna
mercredi 14 décembre 2011 • Duration
The brothers spend a month outside in the city walls as a sort of penance, and are joined by the great sages of the ancient world. Narada comforts the brothers by telling stories of Karna's past. The sage argues that Karna's life & circumstances were custom-designed to spark this war and ensure its completion.
We finally learn of Karna's tutelage under Rama Jamadagnya (Parasurama), and we get the story of how he was cursed for killing a Brahmin's cow.
Episode 84 - The Book of the Women
mercredi 7 décembre 2011 • Duration
Ashwatthaman heads of to Vyasa's ashram, Krpa goes home to Hastinapur, and Krtavarman also heads for home.
The procession later meets up with the Pandavas, fresh from Ashwatthaman's downfall, and together they proceed to the battlefield. Following the great cremation, a memorial is conducted on the banks of the Ganga. Kunti joins in and tells her sons to honor their fallen brother-- this is the first time the Pandavas were told they had a brother!
Episode 83 - Daksha's Sacrifice
mardi 29 novembre 2011 • Duration
The Rishis step in and order Arjun to put his guns away, but Ashwatthaman cannot retract this weapon once it is unleashed, so instead, he turns it loose on the wombs of the Pandava women, making them sterile and killing their one remaining heir-- Uttara's unborn son Parikshit.
Fortunately, Krishna revives the kid, but there shall be no more Pandava offspring after this.
To help explain how Ashwatthaman was able to pull off this massacre single-handedly, Krishna tells a few stories about Shiva, and just how temperamental and dangerous he can be. In fact, Shiva really comes off as more of a force of nature than a Saddhu living in the hills.
My guess is, that if we understood the physics of Time, we might realize that Shiva stands in for one of the main functions of time, which is change. The other aspects of time are novelty (Brahma), and the moment of Now, which I believe is represented by Vishnu.