The Bhagavata Podcast
The Bhagavata Podcast invites listeners on an engaging journey through the Bhagavata Purana, more commonly known as the Srimad Bhagavatam. Each episode features conversations between scholars, many of whom are also practitioners, as they reflect on and analyze a chapter of this text together. The podcast offers a unique blend of academic rigor and personal insight, providing fresh perspectives that illuminate the beauty and uniqueness of the Bhagavatam.
In each episode, host Dr. Måns Broo, an esteemed scholar and Gaudiya Vaishnava practitioner, invites expert guests to reflect on a chapter of the Bhagavata Purana. Following a linear progression through the text, the discussions explore the philosophical, theological, and literary dimensions of the Bhagavatam, offering both traditional insights and modern academic interpretations. This thoughtful approach enables listeners to journey through the Bhagavata Purana chapter by chapter, uncovering the intricate teachings of this work.
The Bhagavata Podcast is an initiative supported by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies, furthering the mission of connecting living traditions with academic exploration.
The Bhagavata Podcast
1.18 A King, a Curse, and a Seven-Day Deadline | Bhagavata Podcast with Manjari Devi Dasi
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A great king, exhausted and thirsty, makes an impulsive mistake. A young brahmin boy responds with a curse: die within seven days. What unfolds from that moment is the reason the entire Bhagavatam exists.
Canto 1, Chapter 18 is the hinge on which the Bhagavatam turns. In this episode, host Bhrigupada Dasa (Dr. Mans Broo, Senior Lecturer at Åbo Akademi University and Senior Research Fellow at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies) reads it with Manjari Devi Dasi, PhD, of Bhaktivedanta College in Budapest, who spent six years translating Prabhupada's books into Hungarian. Manjari Devi Dasi brings both scholarly precision and lived practice to a chapter that raises some of the hardest questions in the text: Why would Krishna protect Parikshit as an unborn child and then arrange his death as a king? What does it mean for a devotee's mistake to be "the Lord's arrangement"? And what separates a curse from ordinary speech?
The conversation covers a lot of ground. The chapter's unusual structure, which leaps forward to Parikshit's death and then circles back in what Manjari Devi Dasi calls "temporal oscillation," is examined as a deliberate narrative strategy. The famous verse Tulayama lavenapi, on the superiority of the devotee's association over even the Lord's direct presence, becomes an occasion for a close reading alongside Baladeva Vidyabhushana's commentary and a brief detour into J.L. Austin's philosophy of performative speech. The contrast between the boy Sringi's rash curse and his father Shamika's grief-stricken wisdom gives the chapter its moral tension, and the episode closes with Prabhupada's argument for trained, selfless leadership, read in light of Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Thakur's counter-claim that individual spiritual elevation matters more than any political arrangement.
The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.