![]() No weapon will cut him and no weariness will affect him. Whenever he thinks of it he will see everything that takes place in the day and in the night in open, and in secret. He will tell you everything about the battle. He shall have such a divine inward eye." Vyasa continued. Then Vyasa called Sanjaya to him and said "Sanjaya shall see all the events of the battle directly. He did not like to go to the battle-field and see for himself the events of the battle. Dhritarashtra heard about the preparations on either side for the battle. When the armies of the Kauravas and the Pandavas pitched their camps on either side of the battlefield, Veda Vyasa came to Hastinapura and saw Dhritarashtra. ![]() Sanjaya was able to do this because of the boon granted by Vyasa. Sanjaya was telling Dhritarashtra every thing that was taking place in the battle-field without leaving even the smallest events in the order of their occurrence. Sanjaya was a disciple of sage Krishna Dwaipayana Veda Vyasa and was immensely devoted to his master, King Dhritarashtra. Sanjaya, equal to sage was born from the portions of Rishi Gavalgana (Adi Parva, Chapter 68, Verse 93), and was Dhritarashtra's advisor and charioteer. In Mahabharata-an epic poem of war between the Pandavas and the Kauravas-the blind king Dhritarashtra is the father of the principals of the Kaurava side. ![]() ![]() Sanjaya (Sanskrit: संजय, meaning "victory") or Sanjaya Gavalgani is a character from the epic Mahabharata. ![]()
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