Sabhā Parva, Adhyāya 68 — Pāṇḍavānāṃ Vanavāsa-prasthānaḥ; Duḥśāsana-nindā; Pāṇḍava-pratijñāḥ
यो वैप्रश्न॑ न विब्रूयाद् वितथं चैव निर्दिशेत् । के वै तस्य परे लोकास्तन्ममाचक्ष्व पृच्छत:
yo vai praśnaṁ na vibrūyād vitathaṁ caiva nirdiśet | ke vai tasya pare lokās tan mamācakṣva pṛcchataḥ ||
قال برهلادا: «أسأل: من سُئل فلم يُجب أصلًا، أو تعمّد أن يدلّ على الباطل، فأيُّ عوالم ينالها في الدار الآخرة؟ أخبرني بذلك، فإني أسألك.»
प्रह्माद उवाच
The verse highlights the ethical duty of truthful and responsible speech: refusing to answer a legitimate question or giving a knowingly false reply is treated as a moral fault with consequences that extend to one’s posthumous destiny.
Prahlāda, in a dialogic setting, poses a pointed question about moral accountability: he asks what otherworldly realms await a person who evades a question or answers deceitfully, requesting the interlocutor to explain the karmic outcome.