The Mahabharata (Sanskrit: Mahābhārata, महाभारत) is one of the two major Hindu epic poems (along with the Ramayana), belonging to the smriti category and a major work of Indian literature. In Hinduism, it is called the fifth Veda.
The Mahabharata consists of 18 books called Parvas, which are each composed of 100 Upa-Parvas, or parts. The first book, Adiparva, consists of 19 parts and is also known as the “Book of the Beginning.”
The first book, or Adiparva, contains a very interesting story about the birth of a demigod, a hero named Karna.
Karna’s mother, Kunti, being an unmarried maiden and still a virgin, was visited by the “Sun God”, resulting in their son, Karna.
Karna, like his divine parent, “shines like his father,” proving his supernatural, extraterrestrial origins. Born of a “God” father and an earthling mother, he was one of the demigods many of whom were begotten on Earth by aliens.
Continuing this theme, Kunti, fearing disgrace and negative public opinion due to the illegitimate child she had conceived while unmarried, placed the newborn in a basket and floated it down the Ganges River.
The basket containing the newborn was retrieved by Adhirata and Radha and then raised by his adoptive parents.
Because of his extraordinary abilities, Karna was appointed king of Anga (Bihar-Bengal).
Three important aspects of this story, similar to accounts from other religions, come to mind:
1. Karna was the son of an extraterrestrial being and an earthly woman – this is a classic example of extraterrestrial beings, in most religions called Gods, having sexual relations with earthlings. The resemblance to the children of “angels” or “sons of God” is too obvious to ignore.
2. Karna “shines like his father” – in this case, one doesn’t have to look far; another prime example is Noah, son of Lamech, great-grandson of Enoch. After birth, Noah “shines like the sons of heaven,” having fair skin, light hair, and blue eyes.
3. Like many other “demigods” known from probably all the world’s religions, Karna also possessed extraordinary abilities, which were used by “heroes” throughout the ancient world.
It can be assumed that Karna was the descendant of a being from another world, another planet, who came to Earth with his companions to accelerate the development of the beings inhabiting it.
It can also be assumed that the similarity between the story of Karna’s birth and life and the story of Moses is all too close, allowing for the possibility of interpreting that Karna may have been the prototype for the later story of Moses’ birth.
Of course, this is my personal speculation, but no one guarantees that this did not actually happen.
See also:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kunti
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karna