Was the Mahabharata real or just a story?

posted in: Area2, English, Proximo 0

The Mahabharata is real and it is our history. There is much real-life evidence to support this claim.

The color of the soil in Kurukshetra is still red, which is mentioned in the epic as being due to the blood of millions of soldiers who died in the war.
Traces of nuclear energy have been found at the site of the war, which was not present in any other country at that time.
J. Robert Oppenheimer, the scientist who developed the atomic bomb, was inspired by the Bhagavad Gita. He quoted the Gita when he said, “I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds.”
Reading about the destructive weapons used in the Mahabharata led Oppenheimer to believe that it was possible to create such weapons, and he was successful in developing the atomic bomb.
Evidence of vitrification has also been found, which is what happens when a stone is melted by extreme heat and then cooled, causing it to become glass-like.
Scientists have discovered the ancient city of Dwarka, which matches the description of the city in the Mahabharata.
Many people believe that Ashvathama, a Kaurava warrior, is still alive and has been seen near Asirgarh Fort. He is also said to have helped a Brahman in the south to write the Mahabharata, and there is another theory that he taught Prithviraj Chauhan the art of shooting arrows without making a sound.
Places mentioned in the Mahabharata, such as Gandhar, Chedi, Hastinapur, Indraprastha, Dwarka, Magadha, Mathura, Gokul, Vrindavan, and Yemen, still exist and have other physical evidence to support the epic’s account of them.

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