When Krishna Emptied Gokul: The Wolves of His Pores and the Lesson of the Land The Harivamsa and Its Place in the Sacred Tradition The Harivamsa, meaning the lineage of Hari, is one of the most important texts of the Vaishnava tradition. Appended to the Mahabharata as a supplement, it fills in the stories of Krishna's birth, childhood, and early life that the great epic leaves largely untold. While the Srimad Bhagavata Purana became the more popular and widely venerated account of Krishna's life in later centuries, the Harivamsa holds an older stratum of the tradition and preserves accounts that were later either retold differently or left aside entirely. Among these is a remarkable episode involving wolves born from the very skin pores of Krishna, through which the Lord orchestrated the departure of the Gokul community to a new home in Vrindavana. The Desolation of Gokul In the Harivamsa account, it is Krishna himself who observes what has become of the land around Gokul. ...