Bhagavad Gita Chapter 1, Verse 16
अनन्तविजयं राजा कुन्तीपुत्रो युधिष्ठिरः | नकुलः सहदेवश्च सुघोषमणिपुष्पकौ ||
anantavijayaṁ rājā kuntī-putro yudhiṣṭhiraḥ nakulaḥ sahadevaś ca sughoṣa-maṇipuṣpakau
King Yudhishthira, the son of Kunti, blew Anantavijaya; Nakula and Sahadeva blew Sughosha and Manipushpaka.
Yudhishthira, called 'raja' (king), blows 'Anantavijaya' — infinite victory. Not today's victory, but eternal triumph. When you align with dharma, you may not win immediately, but dharma wins infinitely, always. Nakula and Sahadeva blow 'Sughosha' (sweet sound) and 'Manipushpaka' (jewel-bracelet). The twins are not ranked any lower — they are unique. The verse names each warrior's conch without hierarchy. Krishna's is not 'better' than Nakula's. Each one matters. We create hierarchies everywhere, but the Gita rejects this. Every genuine contribution counts.