| Canto 1: Creation | Chapter 14: The Disappearance of Lord Krishna |
Bhaktivedanta VedaBase: Śrīmad Bhāgavatam 1.14.31
sushenaś cārudeshnaś ca
saputrā rishabhādayah
SYNONYMS
sushenah — Sushena; cārudeshnah — Cārudeshna; ca — and; sāmbah — Sāmba; jāmbavatī-sutah — the son of Jāmbavatī; anye — others; ca — also; kārshni — the sons of Lord Krishna; pravarāh — all chieftains; sa-putrāh — along with their sons; rishabha — Rishabha; ādayah — etc.
TRANSLATION
Are all the chieftain sons of Lord Krishna, such as Sushena, Cārudeshna, Sāmba the son of Jāmbavatī, and Rishabha, along with their sons, all doing well?
PURPORT
As already mentioned, Lord Krishna married 16,108 wives, and each of them had ten sons. Therefore 16,108 x 10 161,080 sons. They all grew up, and each of them had as many sons as their father, and the whole aggregate was something near 1,610,800 family members of the Lord. The Lord is the father of all living beings, who are countless in number; therefore only a few of them are called to associate with the Lord in His transcendental pastimes as the Lord of Dvārakā on this earth. It is not astonishing that the Lord maintained a visible family consisting of so many members. It is better to refrain from comparing the Lord's position to ours, and it becomes a simple truth as soon as we understand at least a partial calculation of the Lord's transcendental position. King Yudhishthira, while inquiring about the Lord's sons and grandsons at Dvārakā, mentioned only the chieftains amongst them, for it was impossible for him to remember all the names of the Lord's family members.
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His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupāda, Founder Ācārya of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness