The Battle at Mandara: Vinayaka, Nandin, and Skanda Rout the Daitya Hosts
विनायकस्य तत्कुम्भे परिघं वज्रभूषणम् शतधा त्वगमद् ब्रह्मन् मेरोः कूट इवाशनिः
vināyakasya tatkumbhe parighaṃ vajrabhūṣaṇam śatadhā tvagamad brahman meroḥ kūṭa ivāśaniḥ
لكن حين وقع الپَريغه، الصلب كالفَجْرَة (الفَجْرَة/الفَجْرَة: الفَجْرَة=الفَجْرَة؟) على «كُمْبْها» فيناياكا، تفتّت إلى مئة قطعة، يا أيها البراهمن، كالصاعقة إذا أصابت قمة جبل ميرو.
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Meru functions as the cosmic axis and emblem of immovability; comparing the shattering blow to lightning on Meru’s peak underscores that the weapon breaks, not the divine body—Gaṇeśa is portrayed as unshaken like Meru.
It can mean ‘vajra-like’ (adamantine/hard) or ‘reinforced/adorned with vajra-like fittings’ (metal studs/plates). Either way, the verse stresses that even a thunderbolt-hard weapon cannot harm Vināyaka.
Yes, but it is cosmic geography rather than terrestrial tīrtha-topography. Meru is a mythic landmark used to anchor the narrative in Purāṇic cosmological imagination, unlike the text’s many river- and tīrtha-based descriptions elsewhere.