βVyasa Veda, son of the noted Maharishi Parashara, is a central figure of devotion in most Hindu traditions. He is considered the author of the famous Hindu epic poem βMahabharataβ which can be taken as a kind of autobiography of Vyasa, narrating his personal story and the fratricidal war between his grandsons, the Pandavas and the Kauravas. In Sanskrit Vyasa means divider, the divider of the Vedas of our age is Krsna Dvaipayana, the son of Parasara Muni and Satyavati Devi. He is the literary Avatar of Lord Krshna in the age of Kali-yuga. He classified the Vedas into four, Rig, Yajur, Sama and Atharvana and taught them to four great Rishis (sages/poets) β Sumantu, Vaisampayana, Jaimini and Paila respectivelyβ