Bhagavān’s Avatāras, Their Protections (Poṣaṇa), and the Limits of Knowing Him
गोपैर्मखे प्रतिहते व्रजविप्लवाय देवेऽभिवर्षति पशून् कृपया रिरक्षु: । धर्तोच्छिलीन्ध्रमिव सप्तदिनानि सप्त- वर्षो महीध्रमनघैककरे सलीलम् ॥ ३२ ॥
gopair makhe pratihate vraja-viplavāya deve ’bhivarṣati paśūn kṛpayā rirakṣuḥ dhartocchilīndhram iva sapta-dināni sapta- varṣo mahīdhram anaghaika-kare salīlam
Lorsque les vachers de Vṛndāvana, sur l’ordre de Kṛṣṇa, cessèrent d’offrir le sacrifice à Indra, le roi céleste déversa des pluies diluviennes durant sept jours, menaçant d’emporter Vraja. Par miséricorde sans cause envers les habitants et les bêtes, le Seigneur Śrī Kṛṣṇa, âgé de sept ans seulement, soutint la colline Govardhana d’une seule main, tel un dais, pendant sept jours.
Children play with an umbrella generally known as a frog’s umbrella, and Lord Kṛṣṇa, when He was only seven years old, could snatch the great hill known as the Govardhana Parvata at Vṛndāvana and hold it for seven days continuously with one hand, just to protect the animals and the inhabitants of Vṛndāvana from the wrath of Indra, the heavenly King, who had been denied sacrificial offerings by the inhabitants of Vrajabhūmi.
This verse states that when Indra flooded Vraja, the Lord compassionately protected the cows and the residents by lifting a mountain with one hand and holding it up for seven days, as a playful pastime.
Because the cowherds’ sacrifice was obstructed, Indra became angered and rained to bring devastation upon Vraja; the Lord intervened to protect His devotees.
The takeaway is to take shelter of the Lord with faith during crises, trusting divine protection rather than fearfully depending on unstable external powers.