Ritadhvaja’s Aid to Galava and Andhaka’s Infatuation with Gauri
आदाय वज्रं बलवान् मघवानिव गणेश्वरः
ādāya vajraṃ balavān maghavāniva gaṇeśvaraḥ
Gaṇeśvara yang perkasa mengangkat vajra, tampak laksana Maghavān (Indra).
{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The vajra is paradigmatically Indra’s weapon. By stating that Gaṇeśvara takes up a vajra and resembles Maghavān, the text heightens his martial stature and frames him with Indra-like sovereignty in battle.
Not necessarily. Purāṇas frequently use ‘vajra’ generically for a thunderbolt-like weapon and employ Indra as a benchmark for heroic comparison. Literal ownership depends on surrounding verses not included here.
It is a poetic upamā that signals: (1) overwhelming power, (2) a celestial standard of kingship/command, and (3) the legitimacy of the defender’s force against the attackers.