Virāṭa-parva Adhyāya 22 — Draupadī’s Abduction Attempt and Bhīma’s Suppression of the Kīcakas
फिर द्रौपदीका क्रोध शान्त करनेके लिये उन्होंने दोनों हाथोंसे उसका गला पकड़कर बड़े वेगसे दबाया ।।
atha taṁ bhagnasarvāṅgaṁ vyāviddhanayanāmbaram | ākramya ca kaṭīdeśe jānunā kīcakādhamam | apīḍayat bāhubhyāṁ paśum āramam ārayat ||
Vaiśampāyana said: When Kīcaka’s body had been shattered, his eyes rolling and his garments torn in the struggle, Bhīma seized that vile Kīcaka, pinned him down at the waist with his knee, and with both arms crushed his throat. Thus he struck him down like a beast.
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The passage highlights the dharmic duty to protect the oppressed and to stop ongoing adharma (Kīcaka’s predation). It also raises an ethical tension: force is portrayed as justified when used to end grave wrongdoing and safeguard honor, yet it remains a severe remedy tied to responsibility and context.
After Kīcaka assaults and threatens Draupadī during the Pandavas’ incognito stay in Virāṭa’s court, Bhīma confronts him and kills him in close combat—pinning him with a knee and crushing his throat—thereby ending Kīcaka’s tyranny and protecting Draupadī.