How did Krishna gain strength to kill the mighty Kamsa?
In India, Krishna has a special place. Rather a special place as Jagadh Guru, Krishna as a child has touched many souls for generations. A general outlook is that Krishna is divine Brahman. He is omnipotent, omnipresent. It might be the destiny or the prophecy became true here, Krishna killed Kamsa. Kamsa was not weak. He was a toxic personality with demonic powers. An ordinary human cannot compete him.
Krishna was U12 when he killed Kamsa. So little to kill someone mighty coupled with a demonic persona. But he did. Situations transformed Krishna to gain powers to kill the demon. Kamsa himself showed ways to Krishna. Kamsa had various powers. Each power was dissipated from him in the form of each Asura. Losses of energy to Kamsa and gain for Krishna.
A glance at Krishna's childhood will give a head spinning list of demons Krishna encountered before the battle with Kamsa. But each situation Krishna was put in, made him more stronger and made him ready for the D-day.
Margazhi: Day 6. -
புள்ளும் சிலம்பின காண்
Godha Devi aka Andal gives a brief notes about two of the demons he encountered very early.
"பேய்முலை நஞ்சுண்டு
கள்ளச் சகடம் கலக்கழியக் காலோச்சி"
The verses speak about Puthana and Sakatasuran.
In India, Krishna has a special place. Rather a special place as Jagadh Guru, Krishna as a child has touched many souls for generations. A general outlook is that Krishna is divine Brahman. He is omnipotent, omnipresent. It might be the destiny or the prophecy became true here, Krishna killed Kamsa. Kamsa was not weak. He was a toxic personality with demonic powers. An ordinary human cannot compete him.
Krishna was U12 when he killed Kamsa. So little to kill someone mighty coupled with a demonic persona. But he did. Situations transformed Krishna to gain powers to kill the demon. Kamsa himself showed ways to Krishna. Kamsa had various powers. Each power was dissipated from him in the form of each Asura. Losses of energy to Kamsa and gain for Krishna.
A glance at Krishna's childhood will give a head spinning list of demons Krishna encountered before the battle with Kamsa. But each situation Krishna was put in, made him more stronger and made him ready for the D-day.
Margazhi: Day 6. -
புள்ளும் சிலம்பின காண்
Godha Devi aka Andal gives a brief notes about two of the demons he encountered very early.
"பேய்முலை நஞ்சுண்டு
கள்ளச் சகடம் கலக்கழியக் காலோச்சி"
The verses speak about Puthana and Sakatasuran.
With an example of Puthana.
Kamsa was cruel to kill many little ones, same as Krishna's age to avoid doubts so that Krishna doesn't find an escape route. In the mission he employed Puthana first. She was the one who was capable of feeding poisonous milk. The poison was nothing but the instantly lethal 'Halala'.
The second book in Krishna Coriolis by Ashok K Banker is 'Dance of Govinda'. The series clearly gives a detailed analysis of the Journey of Krishna, containing many untold stories from Purana. It states that Kamsa too drank milk of Puthana and survived. He sent Puthana to kill the little one. Krishna sucked her life out along with poison and the tale states that he was less active over a period due to the effect of 'Halala'. Thus 'Halala' became the antibody when Kamsa attacked Krishna.
Similarly, Kamsa sent many asuras in other words prepared Krishna mentally and physically, eventually Krishna acquired the mighty power to kill the mighty Kamsa. On a global sense, Krishna is Leeladar when seen as child. All such samharas are leelas. When Krishna is looked upon as a Guru, all events of his life fell on place to complete the jigsaw puzzle. All enemies encountered by him were making him stronger practically for the D-day, as Kamsa was the main picture of all the trailer Asuras he sent.
Krishna - The Jagadh Guru, teaches the lesson that situations tests and leaves a lesson making one stronger. Thus the wisdom acquired never leaves and helps at the vital time.