Dhruva (ध्रुव), is a devotee of the god Vishnu according to Hindu
mythology, who got blessed to attain the position of the polar star, also
known as Dhruva in Sanskrit. Dhruva was the son of Uttānapāda. His tale is
recorded in the Vishnu Purana and the Bhagavata Purana.

Dhruva was born a son of the King Uttānapāda (the son of Svayambhuva Manu)
and his wife Suniti (or Sunrita, the daughter of Dharma). The king also had
another son Uttama, born to his second queen Suruchi, who was the preferred
object of his affection. Once, when Dhruva was but a child of five years of
age, the two princes playfully raced towards their father's lap. But, the
headstrong Suruchi chided Dhruva and insulted him for trying to woo the
attention of his father, when he did not deserve it because "he was not
born to her." She further mocked at his plight, by asking him to redeem
himself by seeking Vishnu's blessings.

Suniti consoled the distraught child, by asking him to take Suruchi's words
seriously and to observe penance in meditation of the Lord. She bid him
farewell as he set out on a lonely journey to the forest. Dhruva was
determined to seek for himself his rightful place, and noticing this
resolve, the divine sage Narada appeared before him and tried to desist him
from assuming a severe austerity upon himself at such a tender age. But,
Dhruva's fierce determination knew no bounds, and the astonished sage
guided him towards his goal by teaching him the rituals and mantras. The
one mantra which Narada taught and which was effectively used by Dhruva was
Om Namo Bhagavate Vasudevaya. Vishnu Purana also mentions this mantra.
Having been advised, Dhruva started his penance, and went without food and
water for six months, his mind fixed on the Lord. The austerity of his
penance shook the heavens and the Lord appeared before him, but the child
would not open his eyes because he was still merged in his inner vision of
Vishnu's form described to him by Narada. Lord Vishnu had to adopt a
strategy of causing that inner vision to disappear. Immediately Dhruva
opened his eyes, and, seeing outside what he had been seeing all along in
his mental vision, prostrated himself before the Lord. But he could not
utter a single word. The Lord touched his right cheek by his divine conch
and that sparked off his speech. Out poured forth a beautiful poem of
praise of the Lord in 12 powerful verses, which together are called
Dhruva-stuti.

Vishnu Purana gives a slightly different account here. When Vishnu was
pleased with Dhruva's tapasya and asked him to ask for a varadāna (grant of
wishes), Dhruva said that he (being an uneducated child) did not know how
to sing the praise of Lord Vishnu, and therefore asked the varadāna of a
knowledge of stuti (hymn in the praise of Vishnu). Other persons would have
asked for worldly or heavenly pleasures, or for moksha at most, but Dhruva
had no personal desire. Renunciation of all desires is regarded to be
essential for eternal peace in Hinduism: this is the meaning of
Dhruva-pada. That was the reason why the Saptarshis decided to give Dhruva
the most revered seat of a Star.

Having spent a long time in the Lord's remembrance he even forgot the
objective of his penance, and only asked for a life in memory of the Lord.
Pleased by his penance and by his stuti, Vishnu granted his wish and
further decreed that the lad would attain Dhruvapada - the state where he
would become a celestial body which would not even be touched by the Maha
Pralaya, or the final cataclysm.

Dhruva returned to his kingdom, to be warmly received by his family, and
attained the crown at the age of six. He ruled for many decades in a fair
and just manner.

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