Skip to main content

Jatayu: The Winged Warrior

Image by Gemini AI


Jatayu is a vulture in Valmiki Ramayana. The choice of a vulture for a very noble mission on behalf of Rama is powerful poetic and moral decision. Vultures are scavengers, associated with death and decay. Yet Valmiki assigns to it one of the noblest tasks of sacrificing itself in defence of Sita. Your true worth lies in what you do, in your character, and not in your caste or even species. [In some versions, Jatayu is an eagle.]

Jatayu is given a noble funeral after his death. Rama treats Jatayu like a noble kshatriya who sacrificed his life fighting for dharma against an evil force like Ravana. “You are blessed, O Jatayu!” Rama tells the dying bird. “Even in your last moments, you upheld dharma. You fought to save a woman in distress. Your sacrifice will not go in vain.”

Jatayu sacrificed himself to save Sita from Ravana. He flew up into the clouds to stop Ravana’s flight with Sita. Jatayu was a friend of Dasharatha, Rama’s father. Now Rama calls him equal to his father: “Pitrusamah mama.” Rama calls him his kin, his elder brother, and a martyr for dharma.

When Jatayu is dead, Rama personally performs his cremation, saying: “Let your soul rise to the highest realms, O noble one. You are free of this world, and you have earned a place among the righteous.” Later, in the Mahabharata, Yudhishthira says, “Birth does not determine a person’s caste; it is by actions (karma) that one’s true status is known.” Jatayu may be a bird of an inferior category; but by karma he has achieved nobility.

Jatayu’s fight with Ravana takes place in the sky. His wings are cut off by Ravana and he plummets to the earth. He clings on to life painfully for Rama’s arrival just to tell him where to look for Sita. He breathes his last lying in the lap of Rama, a divine incarnation, with a sense of fulfilment. His mission is accomplished; his life has acquired a new dimension. He is no more a mean vulture.

On the other hand, Ravana is Brahmin by birth. Learned and powerful too. Jatayu is not even fit to be anywhere near the Varna system by birth. But his karma makes him far nobler than the Brahmin Ravana. Your actions determine whether you are really a Brahmin or a rakshasa.

You can be a royal Kshatriya like Kaikeyi, but by karma be nothing more than an ignoble manipulator driven by fear, ambition, and egotism. Unlike Ravana, however, Kaikeyi redeems herself later.

Jatayu might have said: Janma na jayate shreshtah, karma hi paramam phalam: It is not by birth that one becomes noble; it is by righteous action.

Characters such as Jatayu and Hanuman make me wonder whether Valmiki was subverting the caste system of the time. 


PS. I’m participating in #BlogchatterA2Z. This series looks at the Ramayana from various angles.

Tomorrow: Karma versus Fatalism

Previous Posts in this series:

Ayodhya: Kingdom of Sorrows

Bharata: The Ascetic King

Chitrakoot: The Antithesis of Ayodhya

Dharma and Destiny

Exile and the Kingdom

Friendship in Kishkindha

Golden Deer: Illusions

Hanuman: Zenith of Devotion

Ikshvaku: Mythos versus Logos

Comments

  1. Loved the story and your insightful thoughts on Jatayu👍

    ReplyDelete
  2. Absolutely! It is by a person's deeds their caliber as human beings is determined! Not by any system of caste or creed. And possibly Valmiki was trying to disrupt th

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It is indeed very true that it is by their deeds a person's caliber is determined. Not by some imagined caste system. Fight for what is right in the face of impossible odds. And as you say Valmiki might have been trying to disrupt the prevalent Varna system of those days

      Delete
    2. Both these comments - the anonymous one and my friend Jai's - remind me of O V Vijayan, renowned Malayalam novelist. In 'Generations' (novel),Vijayan explored the worth of Brahminhood by making a low caste person learn Sanskrit and scriptures and do whatever a Brahmin could do. The Ezhava character became a Brahmin by knowledge. But he remained discontented. He learnt that it is not Brahminhood that makes life worthwhile. It is one's qualities.

      Delete
  3. Such a beautiful post, almost an ode to the brave Jatayu! Mayuri

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hari OM
    Oh yes, dear Jatayu... I can never read this (or watch it played) without a tear. One of my favourite characters. For all the brief time he is in the tale, we come to love the mighty bird for his deeds and the lesson of actions speaking loudest. YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
  5. "Jatayu was a friend of Dasharatha, Rama’s father. Now Rama calls him equal to his father: “Pitrusamah mama.” I didn't know this fact. The way you gave this beautiful ode to Jatayu, it's incredible. May more people know about Jatayu and his great sacrifices. - Swarnali Nath

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Our epics have characters that move across time. Some of the characters from Ramayana appear in Mahabharata too.

      Delete
  6. Those on top have a vested interest in staying on top, no matter how ignoble they are. Birth does not determine worth, yet most cultures have some version of holding onto the opposite.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I wish people gave more emphasis on one's Karma rather than the caste system or religion divisions . The world would be a much better place. Once again, your reflective post about Jatayu makes us think as to what exactly keeps us away from striving to do better deeds. The usage of the Sanskrit verse adds more depth to it. Kudos to you, Sir for making the effort to learn a new language!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. There are a lot of words common to Sanskrit and Malayalam. So it's not all that hard for a Malayali to learn Sanskrit.

      Delete
  8. That's interesting. I haven't thought about that. It seems like Jatayu achieved moksha. Elders say even uttering Rama on deathbed gives you Moksha, the Jatayu migth have been fortunate.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Good Karma gives one the final deliverance. So, of course, Jatayu must have got his moksha.

      Delete
  9. Jatayu is a character who captures the interest of everyone, including children. Such expressions of love are found throughout our literature. You mentioned Hanuman already—there’s also Guha’s devotion to Rama, Kannappan’s to Shiva, Meera's to Krishna, and Andal’s to Rangamannar. Please keep up your wonderful writing, Sir. All the best!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, friend, for accompanying me on this epic journey.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Adventures of Toto as a comic strip

  'The Adventures of Toto' is an amusing story by Ruskin Bond. It is prescribed as a lesson in CBSE's English course for class 9. Maggie asked her students to do a project on some of the lessons and Femi George's work is what I would like to present here. Femi converted the story into a beautiful comic strip. Her work will speak for itself and let me present it below.  Femi George Student of Carmel Public School, Vazhakulam, Kerala Similar post: The Little Girl

Two Nuns and two questions

The nuns kept in custody  Two Catholic nuns were arrested on 25 July 2025 at Durg railway station for allegedly trafficking tribal women from Narayanpur in Chhattisgarh to Agra in UP. Today’s newspapers in Kerala have expressed their contempt of the act more vehemently than I had expected. It seems secularism has hope yet in this country. For those who are not aware of the incident, two nuns were arrested because some criminals of a depraved organisation called Bajrang Dal in Chhattisgarh chose to conclude that the nuns were committing the crime of human-trafficking. Since that charge wouldn’t stick, because the women confessed that they were going voluntarily to take up jobs with the help of the nuns in order to raise their families from miserable poverty in a country that claims to be a $5-tillion-economy, another charge was fabricated that the nuns had indulged in religious conversion. Now let us look at certain facts. Though I keep questioning the Christian churches for...

Missing Women of Dharmasthala

The entrance to the temple Dharmasthala:  The Shadows Behind the Sanctum Ananya Bhatt, a young medical student from Manipal, visited the Dharmasthala Temple and she never returned to her hostel. She vanished without a trace. That was in 2003. Her mother, Sujata Bhatt, a stenographer working with the CBI, rushed to the temple town in search of her daughter. Some residents told her that they had seen Ananya walking with the temple officials. The local police refused to help in any way. Soon Sujata was abducted by three men, assaulted, and rendered unconscious. She woke up months later in a hospital in Bangalore (Bengaluru). Now more than two decades later, she is back in the temple premises to find her daughter’s remains and perform her last rites. Because a former sanitation worker of the temple came to the local court a few days back with a human skeleton and the confession that he had buried countless schoolgirls in uniform and other young women in the temple premises. This ma...

Capital Punishment is not Revenge

Govindachamy when Kerala High Court confirmed his death sentence The Bible suggests that it is better for one man to die if that death helps others to live better [ John 11: 50 ]. Forgive me for applying that to a criminal today, though Jesus made that statement in a benign theological context. A notorious and hardcore criminal has escaped prison in Kerala. Fourteen years ago he assaulted a young girl who was travelling all alone in a late evening train, going back home from her workplace. The girl jumped out of the running train to save herself from this beast. But he jumped after her and raped her. The postmortem report suggested that he raped her twice, the second being when she had already fallen unconscious. And then he killed her hitting her head with a stone. Do you think that creature is human? I wrote about this back then: A Drop of Tear For You, Soumya . The people of Kerala demanded capital punishment for this creature, the brute called Govindachamy. He is inhu...

Gods, Guns and Missionaries

Book Review Title: Gods, Guns and Missionaries: The Making of the Modern Hindu Identity Author: Manu S Pillai Publisher: Penguin Random House India, 2024 Pages: 564 (about half of which consists of Notes) There never was any monolithic religion called Hinduism. Different parts of India practised Hinduism in its own ways, with its own gods and rituals and festivals. Some of these were even mutually opposed. For example, Vamana who is a revered incarnation of Vishnu in North India becomes a villain in Kerala’s Onam legends. What has become of this protean religion of infinite variety and diversity today in the hands of its ‘missionary’ political leaders? Manu S Pillai’s book ends with V D Savarkar’s contributions to the religion with a subtle hint that it is his legacy that is driving the present version of the religion in the name of Hindutva. The last lines of the book, leaving aside the Epilogue titled ‘What is Hinduism?’, are telltale. “Life did not give Savarkar all he...