kamsa in A Sentence

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    Kamsa put his brother-in-law and sister in prison.

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    2

    Bar Kamsa tries to make peace.

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    Kamsa's advisor and minister said,“How can you do this?

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    4

    O Kamsa…” he begged,“… please don't kill your sister.

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    5

    When King Kamsa tried to kill her she flew back to the heavens.

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    Kamsa was so greedy and cunning that he not even spared his father Ugrasena;

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    7

    Kamsa entered the cell where his sister and her husband lived for the past nine years.

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    8

    Kamsa, troubled by the fear of his possible death, lost his appetite and slept poorly at night.

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    9

    She appealed to her brother,"O Kamsa, my brother- my eighth child is a girl, and not the son that the Oracle warned you about?

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    10

    Then he was warned by a voice hidden in the sky that"Kamsa, the sister you are loving so much will one day cause your death.

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    11

    This warning proved true because throughout his childhood, Krishna fought Kamsa's demons, along with all the other demons and jealous and misguided demigods who approached him.

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    12

    When Kamsa tries to kill the newborn, the exchanged baby appears as the Hindu goddess Durga, warning him that his death has arrived in his kingdom, and then disappears,

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    13

    But it so happened that as soon as Kamsa took the reins of the wedding chariot, a divine voice thundered from the sky,” Evil Kamsa, you don't know it.

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    14

    However, out of ambition and upon the advice of his personal confidantes, Banasura and Narakasura, Kamsa decided to overthrow his father and install himself as the King of Mathura.

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    15

    When Kamsa tries to kill the newborn, the exchanged baby appears as the Hindu goddess Durga, warning him that his death has arrived in his kingdom, and then disappears, according to the legends in the Puranas.

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    16

    In Chapter 1 of 10th book of the Bhagavata Purana, Vasudeva, the father of Krishna, exhorts Kamsa to refrain from killing his wife, Devaki, the mother of Krishna, by stating that death is certain for those who are born and when the body returns to the five elements, the soul leaves the body and helplessly obtains another form in accordance with the laws of karma, citing passages from Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, IV: 4:3.

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