Udyoga-parva Adhyāya 71 — Kṣatra-dharma Counsel, Public Legitimacy, and Mobilization
नात:ः पापीयसीं काज्चिदवस्थां शम्बरो<ब्रवीत् । यत्र नैवाद्य न प्रातर्भोजनं प्रतिदृश्यते
nātaḥ pāpīyasīṃ kācid avasthāṃ śambaro ’bravīt | yatra naivādya na prātar-bhojanaṃ pratidṛśyate ||
قال يودهيشثيرا: «لقد صرّح شَمْبَرا بأنه لا حالَ أشقى من هذه: أن لا يُرى طعامٌ لليوم، ولا حتى وجبةُ الصباح للغد. فما وراء مثل هذا الفقر لا توجد حالةٌ تجلب ألماً أعظم.»
युधिछिर उवाच
The verse highlights hunger and food-insecurity as the most crushing form of suffering, implying an ethical duty for rulers and society to prevent such deprivation and to treat relief of poverty as a primary dharmic concern.
Yudhiṣṭhira cites a saying attributed to Śambara to emphasize the severity of destitution—specifically the despair of not seeing food for today or even tomorrow morning—within a broader discussion of conduct, governance, and the human costs surrounding the impending conflict.