Bhīma–Duryodhana Gadāyuddha Saṃkalpa
Resolve for the Mace Duel
यद्येकस्तु न हन्तव्यो बहुभिर्धर्म एव तु । तदाभिमन्युं बहवो निजघ्नुस्त्वन्मते कथम्
yady ekas tu na hantavyo bahubhir dharma eva tu | tadābhimanyuṃ bahavo nijaghnus tvanmate kathaṃ ||
Yudhiṣṭhira said: “If it is truly dharma that many should not strike down a single warrior, then how—by your own judgment—did many fighters together slay Abhimanyu? You speak of the highest attainment, Indra’s world, for heroes who fight justly; yet this deed seems to violate the very rule of fair combat.”
युधिछिर उवाच
The verse probes the consistency of dharma in warfare: if righteous combat forbids many attacking one, then the collective killing of Abhimanyu becomes an ethical breach. It highlights the tension between proclaimed ideals of just war and actions driven by expediency.
Yudhiṣṭhira challenges the opposing side’s moral reasoning, pointing to Abhimanyu’s death—caused by multiple warriors together—as evidence that their conduct contradicted accepted rules of fair battle, even while they claim heavenly reward for righteous fighters.