Krishna the Divine Thief: When Stealing Becomes a Sacred Act - Makhan Chor, Chit Chor: The Liberating Thefts of Krishna In the village of Vrindavan, no larder was safe. Butter disappeared from pots hanging high from the ceiling, carefully placed by the gopis to keep it out of reach. Yet somehow, the little dark-skinned boy with the peacock feather always found a way in — climbing on his friends' shoulders, breaking the pots with stones, feeding the contents to monkeys, and laughing when caught. This is Krishna, the Makhan Chor, the butter thief. And this is one of the most celebrated images in all of Hinduism. What makes this so extraordinary is not the theft itself but the response it drew. The gopis complained to Yashoda, his mother, with faces that could not hide their delight. They came back again and again to report his mischief, because being robbed by Krishna was the closest they could get to him. The Bhagavata Purana, which documents Krishna's childhood in rich devoti...