The source material recounts an incident where Baba and a traveler encounter a snake about to eat a frog. As described in Chapter 47, Baba intervenes not with force, but with words. He addresses the snake as 'Veerabhadrappa' and the frog as 'Basappa,' revealing they were enemies in a past life. He admonishes them, saying, 'You too have come into the snake species, yet the bone-deep enmity remains; At least now, feel some shame, give up the enmity, and stay peaceful.' Upon hearing this, the snake immediately flees into the water, and the frog, saved from the mouth of death, hides in the bushes, leaving the traveler completely astonished.
Can you explain the story of the snake and the frog and what Baba taught through that encounter?
📖 Chapter 47