For a long time I wanted to ask this question and i thought u will be the best person to ask. In today world with all the crime, wars, killing etc. why were we even created at the first place? If we were not be created then there would be no adharam no bad things?
I know this might be silly question but being a 19 year , while watching all of the shit going around the world, this question pops up in my head.
Many people often ask that why did Parabrahman give rise to the universe and our planet. Was Parabrahman not satisfied with the Transcendental world? I'm giving a kevaladvaita pov here. In the transcendent, there's only sat-chit-ananda, being, consciousness and bliss. Since Parabrahman came from the unmanifested state to the manifested state, material world came too. The maya (illusory potential) and the material world with jivatmas going through births and deaths, heaven and hell, and karmic cycle also came with the manifested world. Why would Parabrahman not stay in the state of bliss? Why manifest into the materialistic world?
The truth is, I don't know why. Even in the Rigveda, in the Nasadiya Sukta, the hymn that ponders upon the very question of our existence, it says
इ॒यं विसृ॑ष्टि॒र्यत॑ आब॒भूव॒ यदि॑ वा द॒धे यदि॑ वा॒ न । यो अ॒स्याध्य॑क्षः पर॒मे व्यो॑म॒न्त्सो अ॒ङ्ग वे॑द॒ यदि॑ वा॒ न वेद॑ ॥७॥
Whence all creation had its origin, the creator, whether he fashioned it or whether he did not, the creator, who surveys it all from highest heaven, he knows — or maybe even he does not know.
Maybe it was just a spontaneous manifestation of Parabrahman. Maybe it was intentional. Ishvara doesn't meddle in worldly affairs, Ishvara just oversees that cosmic balance is upheld. That neither chaos nor order take over one another. Ishvara does observe what is happening in the material world, but allows the nature take its course, allows humans their free will. One day, Ishvara can decide on dissolution. We humans can only strive to live by Dharma artha kama and moksha.
You are young, yet you're thinking about these deep, existential questions. This is just a glimpse of astika Hindu metaphysics.