Chapter 1: The Birth

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"They found her where?"

Rama looks up from his dessert blearily to where Bharata is frowning at their King Father. It is a sweet spring morning, and their family is gathered around the table breaking their fast. Beside his drooping self, Lakshmana bounces restlessly.

"I want the curd," he whines.

Mother Kaikeyi answers her son as she passes the dish over. "She was buried in the earth, and King Janaka found her under the plough."

"How was she not mowed down? Do people stare at the ground as they plough? Why did the oxen not trample her? How did she survive in the heat? Who put her- "

"Bharata," Mother Kaikeyi frowns at him. "One question at a time. Someone must have left her there – a god, perhaps, or some poor peasant who did not have money to feed a child. How she survived the heat and the yoke and the oxen I do not know. A miracle, clearly, and proof that the child is blessed."

"I hope Janaka raises her as his own," Mother Sumitra says, waving her hand vaguely in the air, "since he found her and everything."

"Found who?" Rama asks at last, finally interested in the conversation.

"A baby," Shatrughan grouses. He is five summers old and has formed many opinions on babies ever since Shanta didi brought Rahul over; not one of them is complimentary. "I do not understand what the fuss is all about. Surely, it is as ugly and dirty as all others."

Mother Koushalya laughs. "You know, a mere couple of years ago, you were a baby yourself."

"Ew."

"Now, now," Father chides him. "Mithila is suffering from terrible droughts. Mayhaps the child will bring them good luck."

"That is an awful lot of hope to pin on a babe," Mother Sumitra remarks, cynical as ever.

There is a blessed silence as everyone contemplates this. Mithila falling out of Indra's favour is old news; over the past years many messengers have come and gone from Ayodhya's royal court, and many carts have rolled between the two kingdoms, bearing grains that would never be enough. Mithila had enough fertile lands to feed herself, but her people were more inclined towards knowledge and learning, and rarely took up tools to divert rivers or dig canals. The seasonal monsoons watered most of their lands; without it the crops had withered and burnt in their fields, and the hard earth cracked open to gaping maws unsuitable for any agricultural endeavor. That a mere girl, however divine-born she might have been, could cure such a calamity...

"In any case," Mother Koushalya says primly, giving their father A Look, "let us hope King Janaka will take her for the blessing she is. Daughters are not to be forsaken."

Father sighs. "Dear, please..." he murmurs, then quails under his wife's glare. Daughters are a sore subject between Ayodhya's King and her eldest Queen.

"Do we know what her name is?" Rama asks, and Mother Kaikeyi smirks at his unsubtle attempt to steer the conversation away.

Dasharatha latches onto the distraction with both hands. "Whose name? The girl's?"

Rama nods.

"They named her after the furrow she was found in."

"Oh?"

"Mhmm," Dasharatha smiles. "She is called Sita."




Notes:

References used in this chapter-

1. Shanta is, in most versions, Dasharatha's oldest child, a daughter borne of Kaushalya. She is given to King Rompada of Anga, and later weds Sage Rishyashringa, who performs the yagya so Dasharatha might have sons. She also has a son named Rahul.

2. Our protagonist's name, as per the most accepted etymology of the word, comes from the Sanskrit word Sita, which means furrow. Now this obviously makes sense, given that Sita was found from a furrow on the earth, made from Janak's plough. What is more interesting is that we have evidence of at least one other Sita from the Rigveda (perhaps more than one) who is a fertility goddess, and with the advent of the Tridevas and Tridevis lost her popularity to the Ramayana's Sita. Maybe Janaka named his daughter after a goddess, maybe he named her after the furrow. Who knows?


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