The Vow Across Lifetimes — Govardhan, the Vanaras, and the Divine Promise of Rama fulfilled by Krishna Among the many hills and hillocks that dot the vast Indian subcontinent, from the plains of Mathura to the Deccan plateaus, there lies a quiet but profound spiritual geography. To most, these hills appear as ordinary formations of rock and earth. But within the living tradition of Sanatana Dharma, they carry memory — memory that stretches across yugas, across lifetimes, and across the very arc of divine incarnation. One such memory belongs to Govardhan, the sacred hill of Vrindavana, beloved of devotees, immortalized in the Srimad Bhagavatam, and lifted by the young Krishna on the little finger of his hand. Its story, however, begins not in Vrindavana but in an older age — the Treta Yuga, when Bhagavan Vishnu walked the earth as Rama, son of Dasharatha. The Vanaras, the Bridge, and the Fallen Peaks The Ramayana narrates one of the most extraordinary feats in all of sacred histor...