Indra’s Penance at the Great River and Aditi’s Solar Vow for Vishnu’s Descent
महानदी यत्र सुरर्षिकन्या जलापदेशाद्धिमशैलमेत्य चक्रे जगत्पापविनष्टिमग्र्यां संदर्शनप्राशनमञ्जनेन
mahānadī yatra surarṣikanyā jalāpadeśāddhimaśailametya cakre jagatpāpavinaṣṭimagryāṃ saṃdarśanaprāśanamañjanena
There is the Mahānadī, where the daughter of a divine seer, having come to the Himālaya under the pretext of seeking water, brought about an excellent destruction of the world’s sins—through (the river’s) mere sight, drinking, and bathing.
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Three classic tīrtha-acts are named: darśana (seeing the sacred water), prāśana (drinking), and mañjana (bathing). The verse frames them as intrinsically sin-destroying at Mahānadī.
She functions as an etiological figure explaining the river’s exceptional pāpa-haraṇa power. Even without her personal name in this excerpt, the Purāṇic pattern is clear: a celestial-sage lineage and a journey to Himālaya confer sanctity and cosmic efficacy on the river.
Himālaya is a paradigmatic source-region for sacred waters and tapas. Mentioning dhimaśaila situates Mahānadī within a sanctified Himalayan cosmography, strengthening its authority as a purifier.