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 history — the construction of the bridge across the ocean to
Lanka, built by the Vanara army under the leadership of Nala, the son of
Vishwakarma. To build this bridge, the Vanaras carried massive boulders and
mountain peaks from the Himalayan ranges southward, moving at divine speed and
strength.
As the bridge neared completion, not all the peaks were
needed. The Vanaras, their mission accomplished, set down the remaining
fragments across the length of India. According to the living folk traditions
rooted deeply in the religious life of the people, these dropped peaks became
the hills and small mountains that one finds scattered between the Himalayas
and the southern coasts — a sacred topography born of devotion and divine
purpose.
The Skanda Purana, in various regional recensions,
acknowledges this connection between Ramayana geography and the hills of
central and northern India. The sacred hills are not incidental to the
landscape — they are witnesses and participants in the great drama of dharma.
Govardhan's Longing — A Mountain That Wanted to See Rama
Among the peaks being carried southward, Govardhan too was
taken up by the Vanaras. His heart — for in Sanatana Dharma, all of creation is
sentient, all matter carries consciousness — burned with a singular desire: to
behold Rama, the very form of sat-chit-ananda who had incarnated to restore
righteousness to the earth.
The Srimad Bhagavatam affirms this understanding of
creation's consciousness when it describes how rivers, mountains, trees, and
even the earth herself rejoice at the presence of the divine:
"Nandayamasa sa girin vanamsca tad
darsanabhilashatah" — the mountains and forests, longing for his sight,
were filled with joy.
But Govardhan's longing went unfulfilled. By the time the
bridge was complete and Rama's army marched forward, Govardhan had been set
down. Rama did not come to him. The distance was too great. The moment had
passed.
Yet Rama, ever compassionate, ever aware of the heart of
every being in creation — for is he not the Antaryami, the inner witness of
all — turned to the grieving mountain and made a promise. "In my next
incarnation," Rama is said to have assured Govardhan, "we will meet.
I will come to you, and I will lift you with my own hands."
The Promise Fulfilled — Krishna Lifts Govardhan
Yugas passed. The Treta Yuga gave way to Dvapara. Bhagavan
Vishnu descended again, this time as Krishna, in the land of Vraja — and not
incidentally, in the very region where Govardhan had been set down.
The Srimad Bhagavatam, in the tenth canto, narrates the
famous Govardhan Lila. When Indra, proud of his sovereignty over the rains,
was wrathful that the Vrajavasis had chosen to worship Govardhan over him, he
unleashed a catastrophic deluge upon Vrindavana. And it was then that Krishna,
the young cowherd, lifted the entire Govardhan hill on the tip of his little
finger and held it aloft for seven days as an umbrella to shelter every living
being beneath it — cows, calves, men, women, and children.
The Bhagavatam records Krishna's own words before lifting
the hill:
"Annad bhavanti bhutani parjanyad anna sambhavah — tam
aham sharanam yami govardhana mahagireh" — The living beings are sustained
by grain, grain is born of rain, and therefore let us worship this great
mountain Govardhan, the source of grass and water for our cows and sustenance
for all.
What the scripture preserves as theology, the folk tradition
preserves as intimacy: Krishna lifts Govardhan not merely to protect the
Vrajavasis from Indra's rain, but because a promise made in the Treta Yuga must
be kept. The mountain wanted to be held by the divine. Across the vast expanse
of time, that longing was answered.
The Theology of the Promise — Dharma Across Yugas
This narrative carries within it one of the deepest
teachings of Sanatana Dharma — that the divine never forgets a sincere longing.
The Bhagavad Gita affirms this principle with absolute certainty when Krishna
says:
"Na me bhaktah pranasyati" — My devotee is never
lost. (Bhagavad Gita 9.31)
Govardhan's longing was precisely this — the bhakti of a
mountain for its Lord. And just as the Gita promises, that devotion bore fruit,
though it took an entire yuga to do so. The story thus teaches that time is not
an obstacle to divine grace. A sincere longing placed before the divine will be
answered — even if the answer comes in a different lifetime, in a different
form, under a different name.
The story also reveals the nature of divine incarnation.
Rama and Krishna are not two separate beings but one consciousness, one
Paramatma, appearing in different forms across different ages. The promise of
Rama is kept by Krishna because they are, in essence, one. As the Vishnu
Sahasranama affirms — "Ekah Naikah" — the one who is one and yet
many.
Govardhan in Daily Worship — Annakut and Living Devotion
The memory of the Govardhan Lila is kept alive every year
through the festival of Annakuta, celebrated on the day after Diwali. Devotees
prepare hundreds of food items — a symbolic mountain of offerings — and place
them before Govardhan or before Krishna as Govardhandhari, the lifter of
Govardhan. Temples across Vrindavana, Nathdwara, and the entire Braj region
celebrate this festival with immense devotion.
In Nathdwara in Rajasthan, the Vallabha Sampradaya enshrines
Srinathji — a form of Krishna specifically depicted in the act of lifting
Govardhan, his left arm raised, the hill resting upon it. Devotees of this
tradition see every darshan of Shrinathji as beholding the exact moment when a
divine promise spanning two yugas was fulfilled.
The circumambulation of Govardhan — the Govardhan Parikrama
— is considered one of the most meritorious acts of pilgrimage. Devotees walk
the approximately 23-kilometre path around the hill barefoot, touching its
earth, its rocks, and its dust with reverence, knowing they walk around the
very body that was once cradled in the hands of Bhagavan himself.
The Symbolism Within the Story
At a deeper level, the lifting of Govardhan is a symbol of
dharmic protection. When the forces of arrogance — represented by Indra's pride
— unleash destruction, it is the divine who intervenes, sheltering the faithful
beneath the firmament of grace. Govardhan becomes the cosmic umbrella — a
shelter not made of wood or cloth but of living stone, held aloft by divine
will.
The finger upon which Krishna balanced the hill is itself
symbolic. In yogic understanding, the fingers represent different energies.
That the entire mountain rested on a single finger of Krishna, without effort,
without strain, points to the effortlessness of divine power — what the
tradition calls aishvarya, the supreme sovereignty that operates not through
effort but through being.
Modern Day Relevance — The Mountain That Teaches Patience
In a world driven by immediate results, the story of
Govardhan teaches something radical: that sincere longing, rooted in genuine
love for the divine, is never wasted. Time may pass, circumstances may change,
names and forms may differ — but the intelligence of the cosmos does not lose a
single prayer offered in earnest.
The hills of India are not mere geological formations. They are, in the understanding of Sanatana Dharma, sentient participants in the great unfolding of divine play. To walk in this land is to walk through a living scripture. And in Govardhan, the devotee finds the most tender truth of all — that even a mountain can love, and that love, when it reaches the divine, is always, eventually, held.