Narmadā–Tīrtha-Māhātmya: Sequence of Sacred Fords and Their Fruits
स्नातमात्रो नरस्तत्र रुद्रलोके महीयते / पितॄणां तर्पणं कृत्वा मुच्यते ऽसावॄणत्रयात्
snātamātro narastatra rudraloke mahīyate / pitṝṇāṃ tarpaṇaṃ kṛtvā mucyate 'sāvṝṇatrayāt
مَن اغتسل هناك مجرّدَ اغتسالٍ يُكْرَم في عالمِ رودرا (Rudra-loka). وإذا أدّى طَرْپَنَة (tarpaṇa)، أي سكبَ الماء قُربانًا للآباء، تحرّر من الدَّيْنِ الثلاثيّ.
Sūta (narrating the Kurma Purana discourse of tīrtha-māhātmya and dharma to the assembled sages)
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Indirectly: it frames liberation as beginning with purification (tīrtha-snana) and dharma (pitṛ-tarpaṇa), which remove binding obligations (ṛṇa-traya) that obscure steady self-knowledge.
Not a meditation technique per se, but a preparatory discipline: ritual purity through sacred bathing and pitṛ-tarpaṇa, aligning with the Kurma Purana’s dharma-based foundations that support higher yogic steadiness.
By presenting Rudra-loka as a meritorious goal attained through dharmic acts endorsed within a Vaishnava Purana, it reflects the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava harmony: devotion and duty lead to divine grace across sectarian forms.