The evening prayers had ended, and the gurukul courtyard smelled of the last of the incense sticks. The children sat cross-legged around their guru, waiting, the way they always did, for someone brave enough to ask the first question.
It was Nachiketa's grandson, a boy no older than ten, who finally spoke.
"Guruji, when I close my eyes, who is it that sees the darkness? When I speak, who moves my tongue? There must be someone behind all of this. Who is it?"
The guru did not answer right away. He picked up a dry straw from the ground beside him and turned it over in his fingers before setting it down.
"That," he said, "is the very question the gods themselves once asked. Would you like to hear what happened to them?"
The children leaned forward.
"Long, long ago," the guru began, "there was a great battle between the gods and the demons. It went on for many seasons, and finally the gods were victorious."
"They celebrated on the field of battle, banging their drums and shouting, 'We have won! Look at our strength! The demons could not stand against us!'"
"But their victory had not come from their own strength alone. It had come from something behind them, something they had forgotten to thank."
"Brahman — the truth behind all things — decided the gods needed a lesson in humility. So Brahman appeared before them in a strange, glowing form, one they did not recognise."
"Agni, the god of fire, stepped forward first, puffed up with pride. 'Who are you, to stand in our midst?' he demanded. 'I am Agni. There is nothing in this world I cannot burn to ash.'"
"Brahman said nothing. Instead, this being placed a single dry straw on the ground before him and said, 'Burn this, then.'"
"Agni laughed and summoned every bit of his fire. He roared, he blazed, he scorched the air around him. But the straw did not so much as curl at the edges. Agni's flame grew smaller and smaller until he stepped back, confused and silent, and returned to the other gods without a word."
"Next came Vayu, the god of wind, certain he would succeed where fire had failed. 'I am Vayu. I can lift mountains and empty oceans. Watch me clear this straw from the earth.'"
"He blew with the full force of every storm he had ever made. Trees elsewhere bent nearly to breaking. But the straw stayed exactly where it was, still as a stone."
"Vayu, too, went back to the others, saying nothing."
"Finally Indra, king of the gods, walked forward himself, certain that a king would not be humbled the way his servants had been. But the moment Indra arrived, the strange glowing being vanished."
"In its place stood a woman of extraordinary radiance — Uma, daughter of the mountains."
"'Devi,' Indra asked her, 'who was that, standing here a moment ago?'"
"Uma looked at him gently. 'That was Brahman. The very power that let you win your battle. Not your strength, Indra. Not Agni's fire or Vayu's wind. All of it borrowed, all of it Brahman's.'"
"Indra stood very still. Then, for the first time since the war had ended, he bowed his head — not to another god, but to the truth itself."
The guru looked around at the children's faces, catching the firelight.
"That same power," he said quietly, "is what lets your eyes see this fire tonight. It is what lets your ears hear my voice. It cannot be seen, cannot be held, cannot be burned by any flame or carried off by any wind. And yet without it, nothing else in you would work at all."
Nachiketa's grandson looked down at the straw still lying near the guru's feet.
"So it was never really about the fire and the wind, was it?"
"No," said the guru, smiling. "It never is."
Source Note: This story is inspired by the traditional account found in the Kena Upanishad. The narration and dialogue are an original storytelling style, not a scriptural quotation.
A. Multiple Choice Questions (5 questions, 4 options each)
B. True or False (5 statements)
C. Short Answer Questions (5 questions)
D. Long Answer Questions (3 questions) (Simplify for ages 8–10 by focusing on the story events; use as-is for ages 11–14 for deeper meaning.)
E. Vocabulary Activity (5 words matched to meanings)
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