Mahabharata 1:XCIV (p.200) And Bharata begat upon his three wives nine sons in all.But none of them were like their father and so Bharata was not at all pleased with them. 3 Hindu Mothers Kill Their Nine Children: Laws of Manu X:105 Agigarta,who suffered hunger,approached in order to slay (his own) son ,and was not tainted by sin, since he (only) sought a remedy against famishing. It’s not a sin to slay your son if you’re hungry: Wake them from sleep to find that they are childless. Atharva Veda 10:1:17 As wind the trees, so smite and overthrow them:leave not cow,horse,or man of them surviving Return,O Krity,unto those who made thee.Wake them from sleep to find that they are childless.
Rig Veda 7:CIV:11 May he be swept away, himself and children: may all the three earths press him down beneath them.May his fair glory, O ye Gods, be blighted, who in the day or night would fain destroy us.Ītharva Veda 10:1:17 As wind the trees, so smite and overthrow them:leave not cow,horse,or man of them surviving Return,O Krityā,unto those who made thee. Hindus shamelessly pray for death of enemies children: So, Atharvan is the name of an ancient sage who ‘brought down fire from heaven’ and started the sacrificial rites here. May the four directions of space bow down to me, and the six broad (regions) carry ghee. Kma has slain those that are my enemies, a broad space has he furnished me to thrive in. Devoid of vigour, Without sap let them all be they shall not live a single day11. It is a compilation of 730 hymns separated into 20 books. The Atharvaveda's language differs from Vedic Sanskrit in that it preserves pre-Vedic Indo-European archaisms. Atharva Veda 10:5:36 With this I here invest the power and splendour, the life of that man and his vital breathing,the son of such a sire and such a woman, here do I overthrow and cast him downward. The Atharvaveda has been called by several other names : Atharvanaveda - The word ‘ Atharvan ,’ is derived from ‘athar,’ which is an obsolete word for fire. Slay thou, O Kma, those that are my enemies, hurl them down into blind darkness. The Atharva Veda is the 'knowledge bank of atharvas, or ordinary life procedures.' The work is the fourth Veda, but it was just recently included in Hinduism's Vedic scriptures.