Welcome to the historic first audio recording of the unabridged Ramayana. The Ramayana has been described as the original epic quest–comparable to the Bible, Star Wars, and Romeo and Juliet all rolled into one! Revered today by more than one billion people world-wide as the most sacred of stories, the Ramayana not only has its roots as the national treasure of India and Southeast Asia, but has emerged as one of the great classics in world literature. Now for the first time, the complete unabridged Ramayana is available in its original form–as an oral tradition–for Western listeners to enjoy.
The Ramayana is the story of the enlightened hero–Rama–whose divine purpose was to purify the world of ignorance and negativity. Cognized by the illustrious sage Valmiki, the Ramayana was composed in Sanskrit, the language of the Vedic civilization of ancient India. The date of composition of the Ramayana cannot be fixed, since for thousands of years, in the tradition of Vedic knowledge, Vedic literature was handed down orally singer to singer, generation after generation. Reading Rama’s epic tale is powerful, but listening to it as part of this original oral tradition yields even deeper experiences.
Of the many different aspects or branches of Vedic literature, the Ramayana belongs to the Itihasa branch, which also contains another great epic, the Mahabharata. The Ramayana was written in poetry of unsurpassed dramatic power and richness and contains over 24 thousand couplet verses, or slokas, making it one of the longest epic poems ever written (after the Mahabharata).
The translation chosen for this recording is the Srimad Valmiki Ramayanam, by renowned Indian journalist, N. Raghunathan (Vighneswara Publishing House, India). His translation is a literal translation, not a paraphrase, and with his direct and simple style, using rhythmic prose, rather than poetic meter (which often does not translate well), he has captured the essence of the original. His translation has also adapted beautifully from the written to spoken word.