Balarama and the Demon Pralamba: The Cowherd Who Could Not Be Fooled The forests and meadows of Vrindavana were not merely a backdrop for the childhood of Krishna and Balarama — they were a living arena of divine play, known in the Bhagavata tradition as lila. The two brothers, sons of Vasudeva and Rohini, grew up among the cowherds of Nanda's village, tending cattle, playing in the dust, and competing with their companions in games that seemed ordinary on the surface but carried the weight of cosmic significance beneath. Among their favourite pastimes were competitive team games in the pastures. Krishna would lead one group of boys and Balarama the other. The stakes were playful but earnest — the losing side had to carry the winners on their shoulders from the fields to the riverbank. It was in the middle of one such game that a great event unfolded, one that the Bhagavata Purana records as a demonstration of Balarama's divine power and vigilance. A Stranger Among the Cowherd...