Rub Bish took off his glove and threw it using his mind at Gange. Gange, with super speed, dodged it. These powers were unknown to Gange. Unfortunately, it was then when Rub used his unmatched strength, the strength of a thousand elephants to clobber Gange. Gange was hit with one especially devastating blow and his body shut off as he fell in slow motion to the floor.
Amma, what happened?
Gange, you are alive!
Forty minutes later, people brought the downtrodden Gange to the food market of Varanasi once again, where his mother saw her downtrodden and defeated son, and held him in her lap. The locals left River alone to grieve her fallen son and all went in their homes to give her privacy.
WHY?
RUBBISH
When River saw him, she instantly fell to her knees in despair and her tears opened like a floodgate. Her tears were ceaceless, and she up cried with Gange in her arms until the sun came up. River's tears were like streams of water, creating a new long stream of water that went on for miles.
The Ganges River
The locals went to sleep and allowed her to grieve, but when they woke up, a shocking turn of events occurred. Gange was awake! River and her tears healed Gange and his wounds, and helped him awake once it was morning. River woke up in the morning with a breathing Gange and as soon as he woke up, she hugged him like she was seeing a ghost. Now that Gange survived, he and his mother recieved the 20 lakhs, too.
Along with the comfortability of Gange's family that was guaranteed, the water stream that was created by River with her tears had a spiritual charm and healing abilities for those who bathed and stayed in it for lengthy periods of time. As for the notorious Rub Bish, society put together his name to define where people put their trash.
The long stream of water came to be called Gange's River, or Gange's mother, to honor and remember this historic moment in Varanasi history. As time went on in storytelling, the apostrophe of the name was lost, and the healing powers of the river dwindled with each use, but the story lived on. Thus, the Ganges River, stretching off from lands of India all the way to Nepal, all coming from the humble story of a mother and son struggling in the town of Varanasi.