The Hundred Brothers' Executioner
Why Bhima—Not Arjuna—Was Vyasa's Instrument of Last Resort In the Mahabharata, every one of Dhritarashtra's hundred sons was killed by Bhima alone—not Arjuna, not Nakula, not any other Pandava. This is not a casual detail but a profound philosophical statement. Vyasa uses Bhima's solitary, brutal vengeance to argue that some evils cannot be answered by chivalry or rule-bound warfare. Bhima drinks blood, breaks thighs, and fights outside kshatriya codes—yet he is never condemned. The epic suggests that visceral love, when violated, must become visceral rage. Refusing that rage is not virtue but impotence. Bhima carries the stain of his acts but never pretends otherwise. His truthfulness, not his purity, is his dharma. The Mahabharata offers no comfort—only the unbearable question: what would you have done? The mace is wet, the hands are stained, No clean god watches from above. For those who loved, the rule is plain: Some sins are the only shape of love. A Dis...