Two Boons of Dhritarashtra Were Enough: How Draupadi's Wisdom Outshone the Entire Kuru Court In Mahabharata The Kuru assembly had witnessed something unprecedented and shameful. Draupadi, the queen of Indraprastha, wife of the five Pandavas, daughter of King Drupada, and a woman of unimpeachable dignity, had been dragged into the court by her hair while in a state of distress. Dushasana had humiliated her publicly. Karna had hurled cutting insults at her. Duryodhana had gestured obscenely, inviting her to sit upon his thigh. The elders — Bhishma, Drona, Kripa — had sat in silence, paralyzed by their own entanglements of loyalty and debt. The Pandavas, bound by the result of a rigged dice game, sat with their heads bowed, their weapons and kingdom already surrendered, their very persons reduced to the property of their cousin. And yet, in that dark assembly, one figure stood tall — not a warrior, not a king, not a statesman — but a woman who had been wronged more deeply than anyon...