The Ramayana Beyond What We Know: The Infinite Story of Rama - Why Every Ramayana Ever Told Is Only a Fragment of the Whole
A Story That Has No Single Author and No Single Form
Most people who have grown up with the Ramayana assume they
know the story. Whether through Valmiki's Sanskrit verses, the Ramcharitmanas
of Tulsidas, televised serials, or regional folk performances, the tale of
Rama, Sita, Lakshmana, and Hanuman feels familiar, even complete. But according
to Hindu scriptural tradition, this sense of completeness is itself an
illusion. The Ramayana as we know it is not the Ramayana in its entirety. It is
a fragment — a sacred, luminous fragment — of something far vaster than any
single human mind can contain.
The Cosmic Scale of the Narration
Hindu tradition preserves a remarkable hierarchy of Ramayana
tellings, each one larger than the next, ascending toward the infinite. At the
human level, Valmiki composes what is widely regarded as the Adi Kavya, the
first poem, consisting of 24,000 verses. This is the version most scholars
study, the one that gave Sanskrit literature its first formal epic structure.
Yet even this monumental work is dwarfed by what came before and above it.
Hanuman, the devoted servant of Rama, is said to have
composed a version of 60,000 verses, sometimes called the Hanumad Ramayana.
This version, composed out of pure devotion, is believed to be so perfect and
so complete that when Valmiki encountered it inscribed on stone, he wept — not
from jealousy, but from the recognition that no human composition could surpass
it. According to the tradition, Hanuman himself cast the stones into the ocean,
not wanting his version to overshadow Valmiki's work, which was meant for the
benefit of ordinary human beings.
Above even Hanuman's telling is the version that Shiva
narrates to Shakti — a composition of one hundred thousand verses. This is
sometimes referred to in Shaiva-Shakta traditions as the source from which all
smaller tellings ultimately derive. Shiva, as the supreme witness of all of
cosmic time, holds the complete telling. What reaches human ears is always a
distilled, reduced version, suited to limited human capacity.
Why a Story of This Scale Exists
This layered structure is not poetic exaggeration. In Hindu
philosophy, the life of Rama is not merely a historical narrative. It is a
cosmic event that recurs across time cycles, across Yugas and Kalpas. The Yoga
Vasishta, one of the most profound philosophical texts associated with Rama's
story, opens with the young Rama returning from a pilgrimage deeply
disenchanted with the world. His teacher Vasishtha then proceeds to instruct
him across thousands of verses on the nature of consciousness, reality, liberation,
and the self. This framing tells us something essential: Rama's life is not
simply an adventure. It is a vehicle for the highest philosophical teaching.
The Adhyatma Ramayana, embedded within the Brahmanda Purana,
takes this even further. Here, Rama is explicitly identified with Brahman, the
absolute reality, and every character and event in the story carries a deeper
metaphysical meaning. Sita is not merely a queen abducted by a demon king. She
represents the individual soul, the jivatma, temporarily separated from its
source. Ravana represents the ego, the ten-headed tyrant of the senses. Lanka
is the body. The war is the inner war of sadhana. Rama's victory is moksha.
The Living Tradition of Endless Retellings
Across India and Southeast Asia, the Ramayana has never been
one fixed text. It lives in over three hundred distinct versions across
different languages, regions, cultures, and time periods. Kamban's Tamil
Ramayana, the Krittivasi Ramayana in Bengali, the Ranganatha Ramayana in
Telugu, and countless Jain, Buddhist, and tribal versions each illuminate a
different facet of the same jewel. None of them contradict the sacred core.
Each one reveals something the others do not.
This is precisely why the tradition insists that what any
one person knows is incomplete. The story of Rama is not a fixed document to be
memorized. It is a living current of dharmic truth that takes different forms
depending on who is receiving it and what they need to understand.
The Philosophy of an Inexhaustible Scripture
In the Valmiki Ramayana, Narada describes Rama to Valmiki at
the very beginning, in what is known as the Sankshepa Ramayana, the condensed
Ramayana, as the embodiment of all virtues. This is the seed from which the
entire tree grows. The tradition holds that wherever the name of Rama is spoken
sincerely, the full power of the complete Ramayana is present. The name itself,
Ram, is considered by many traditions within Hinduism to be the essence of the
Vedas and all scripture.
Tulsidas writes in the Ramcharitmanas that the glory of
Rama's name is greater than Rama himself in his personal form, because the name
is accessible to everyone in every age, without restriction.
What This Means for the Seeker Today
For a modern reader or devotee, the incompleteness of the
Ramayana is not a cause for frustration. It is an invitation. It means the
story can never be exhausted, that every time one returns to it — through
recitation, reading, hearing, or contemplation — something new is revealed. The
Ramayana is not a text to be finished. It is a relationship to be deepened.
The incompleteness also carries a humbling philosophical
message. Human knowledge, no matter how vast, is always partial. Valmiki, one
of the greatest poets in history, composed 24,000 verses and acknowledged that
Hanuman had composed more. Hanuman composed 60,000 and dissolved his work in
the ocean in an act of selfless devotion. Shiva holds a hundred thousand. And
even that may not be the final word.
In an age that prizes certainty, completeness, and finality,
the Ramayana tradition quietly teaches something different: that the deepest
truths are infinite, that devotion is more important than mastery, and that the
willingness to remain a student before the sacred is itself a form of wisdom.
The Ramayana we know is a doorway. What lies beyond it is boundless.