Vasudeva Meets Nanda; Pūtanā’s Fall; Viṣṇu-Rakṣā (Protective Hymn) in Gokula
वसतां गोकुले तेषां पूतना बालघातिनी सुप्तं कृष्णम् उपादाय रात्रौ तस्मै ददौ स्तनम्
vasatāṃ gokule teṣāṃ pūtanā bālaghātinī suptaṃ kṛṣṇam upādāya rātrau tasmai dadau stanam
Enquanto viviam em Gokula, Pūtanā—assassina de crianças—veio à noite, tomou Kṛṣṇa adormecido e lhe ofereceu o seio.
Sage Parāśara (narrating to Maitreya)
It dramatizes hostile devotion turned into a divine encounter: even a murderous act becomes the occasion for Kṛṣṇa’s supreme protection and the revelation that no poison or death can overpower the Lord.
Parāśara presents Pūtanā as a nocturnal, child-killing threat entering Gokula, emphasizing the vulnerability of the infant form—yet implicitly underscoring that the Lord’s avatāra remains sovereign over all dangers.
Kṛṣṇa’s infancy is not weakness but līlā: the Supreme Being descends among devotees, and even when approached with deceit, his divinity prevails, safeguarding dharma and revealing his unmatched lordship.