Chapter 1 · Verse 1

spoken by Dhritarashtra
Essence

The person asking the question is already too attached to the answer to see clearly.

The Gita opens not on a battlefield but inside the mind of a blind king. Dhritarashtra, unable to see the war himself, asks his minister Sanjaya to describe what is happening at Kurukshetra — the field where his sons and the Pandavas are about to fight.


dhṛtarāṣṭra uvāca | dharmakṣetre kurukṣetre samavetā yuyutsavaḥ | māmakāḥ pāṇḍavāś caiva kim akurvata sañjaya ||


धृतराष्ट्र उवाच । धर्मक्षेत्रे कुरुक्षेत्रे समवेता युयुत्सवः । मामकाः पाण्डवाश्चैव किमकुर्वत सञ्जय ॥
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1.Plain meaning

Dhritarashtra said: O Sanjaya, what did my sons and the sons of Pandu do when they gathered on the sacred field of Kurukshetra, eager for battle?

2.Line by line

dharmakṣetre kurukṣetre

"The field of dharma"
Kurukshetra is a real geographical place, but it is also immediately named something larger: a dharmakshetra, a field of dharma. This is not decorative language. It sets up the entire Gita's central question: what is the right thing to do when everything is unclear and the stakes are enormous? The word dharma here does not mean 'religion.' It means something closer to: the way things actually hold together, the principle of right action, what each thing is meant to do. That the battlefield is also called the field of dharma signals that whatever happens here will force that question to the surface.

samavetā yuyutsavaḥ

"Gathered, eager to fight"
Both sides are assembled and ready. The word yuyutsavaḥ means they desire battle. They have shown up. This is important because the Gita does not open with reluctance. The reluctance comes later, with Arjuna. At this moment, the armies are committed. The crisis has not yet broken open.

māmakāḥ pāṇḍavāś caiva

"Mine and theirs"
Notice how Dhritarashtra immediately splits the world into 'my sons' and 'the Pandavas.' He does not say 'the Kurus and the Pandavas.' He says 'mine' and 'them.' This is the first psychological signal in the entire text. A man in power, blinded by attachment to his own side, is asking about a conflict his own favoritism helped create. The Gita is already diagnosing something: the person asking the question is not neutral. His lens is warped by ownership and bias.

kim akurvata

"What did they do?"
This is the opening question of the Gita: what did they do? On the surface, it is a military intelligence question. Underneath, it is the question the whole text will spend 18 chapters answering in a far deeper way: what does a person do when facing an impossible situation? The Gita answers not with tactics but with clarity about the self, about action, about how to function without falling apart.

sañjaya

"Sanjaya" (the name)
Dhritarashtra addresses his minister Sanjaya, whose name literally means 'completely victorious' or 'one who has conquered completely.' Sanjaya has been granted divine sight by the sage Vyasa, so he can see and hear everything happening at the battlefield as if he were present. He is the relay, the witness, the reporter. This framing device is significant: the entire Gita reaches us through the eyes of someone with perfect clarity, being reported to someone who is blind. That contrast is not accidental.

3.What is really happening

A.The question comes from a compromised narrator

The first voice we hear in the Gita belongs to a blind king who has already chosen sides. He calls his sons 'mine' before he even asks what happened. This is not a neutral observer seeking truth. It is a man whose attachment to outcomes has already distorted his perception. The Gita begins by showing us what biased inquiry looks like.

B.Physical blindness as a metaphor for inner blindness

Dhritarashtra cannot see the battle. He needs someone else to describe reality to him. But his deeper blindness is the one that caused the war: his refusal to see his sons clearly, his inability to act from fairness rather than favoritism. The Gita opens on this image deliberately.

C.The battlefield is named a moral field from the very first line

By calling Kurukshetra a dharmakshetra, the text announces its real subject immediately. This is not a war story. It is an investigation into how a human being finds and acts on right understanding under extreme pressure. The geography is real; the stakes are psychological and ethical.

D.The crisis has not yet arrived for the protagonist

Arjuna has not yet broken down. The armies are assembled and eager. We are in the last moment before the collapse. The Gita is structured so that we have to wait: the teaching only becomes necessary when someone is genuinely unable to act. That moment is coming.

4.Modern parallel

A company founder is about to make a decision that will reshape the entire organization. Before the meeting, they ask their most trusted advisor: 'What are our people doing? What is the other side doing?' But notice how they frame it: 'our people' versus 'them.' The bias is already built into the question. They are not asking for an honest read of the situation. They are asking for intelligence that confirms a picture they have already decided on. The advisor has full information. The founder is, in a meaningful sense, blind to anything that contradicts what they want to see.

Today's world · 2026

We live in an era of curated information feeds that show each person a version of events pre-filtered to match what they already believe. Dhritarashtra asking Sanjaya for a battlefield report while calling his side 'mine' is exactly what happens when someone outsources their perception to a trusted source but frames every question with a built-in conclusion.

The Gita's first line is a portrait of confirmation bias. The blind king does not ask 'what is true?' He asks 'what happened to my sons and those other people?' That framing ensures he will hear only what he is prepared to hear.

In 2026, this is every executive, parent, or leader who surrounds themselves with advisors but has already decided. The real problem is not lack of information. It is the attachment that colors every question before it is even asked.

What comes next

Verse 1.2 shifts to Sanjaya's voice as he begins to describe what Duryodhana observed when he saw the Pandava army arrayed in battle formation, setting up the first real tension on the field. When ready, say: "1.2"