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Ramayana in Jataka

Updated on: 17 January,2022 03:19 PM IST  |  Mumbai
Devdutt Pattanaik |

Be that as it may, it is always fascinating to explore Jataka tales that remind us of the Ramayana

Ramayana in Jataka

Illustration/Devdutt Pattanaik

Devdutt PattanaikThe Ramayana story reveals the Vedic world that thrived in the Gangetic plains between 1,000 CE and 500 CE, though the story itself came to be written between 200 BCE and 200 CE. Buddhist Jataka tales also written at the same time tell stories that are curiously similar to the plots of the Ramayana. Scholars debate whether the Jataka tales influence Ramayana or the other way around. Such debates will never conclude as the debate is fuelled with political subtexts, and the tension between followers of Hindutva and Navayana ideologies. Be that as it may, it is always fascinating to explore Jataka tales that remind us of the Ramayana.


In the Dashrath Jataka, a king had three queens and four sons. He feared that his ambitious second queen planned to kill his eldest prince, i.e., his firstborn by his first queen. So, he ordered the eldest prince to go to the forest and not return to the palace for 12 years. Astrologers had foretold the king’s death 12 years later. So the eldest prince would be back in time to claim his birthright. The eldest son promised to do as his father commanded. Unfortunately, the king died nine years later. The second queen declared her son king in the absence of the eldest son. But the younger prince refused to be an opportunist like his mother. Such an action would display lack of integrity and destroy royal reputation forever, he argued. The younger prince then went to the forest and asked the eldest prince to return and claim his throne. But the eldest prince said he would return only three years later, after spending 12 years in the forest, as he had promised his father. It was a question of royal integrity and reputation. So, for three years, the younger prince ruled as regent, placing the eldest prince’s footwear on the throne, awaiting the return of the rightful king.


In the Sambula Jataka, a prince develops a terrible skin disease and so, has to leave the city and go to the forest. His wife accompanies him to take care of him. One day, a demon sees the pretty wife and abducts her. She is distressed not as much by her abduction as by the thought that there would be no one to take care of her husband. This wifely love so impresses Indra that he descends from the heavens, fights the demon and liberates the wife so that she can return to her husband. The husband meanwhile is angry with her and asks her for the reason for her disappearance. He refuses to believe the story of the demon and Indra and accused her of adultery. If I am true, says the wife, may my husband be cured of his skin disease. Instantly, the prince is cured of his condition. Pleased, he returns to the city with his wife. There he becomes king and surrounded by royal pleasures forgets all about his faithful wife, until he is admonished by his elders to respect the wife who had always stood by his side. 


Finally, in Sama Jataka, we hear of a king who accidentally shoots the only child of a blind couple. While in the Ramayana, the blind couple curse King Dashrath, in the Jataka, the parents forgive the king and as a result of their compassion, their son comes back to life and they regain their eyesight.

Devdutt Pattanaik writes and lectures on the relevance of mythology in modern times. Reach him at devdutt.pattanaik@mid-day.com

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