Dietary Rules & Purification — Dietary Rules, Purification (Śauca), and the Duties of the Householder and Forest-Dweller
यद् यदिष्टतमं किञ्चिद् यच्चास्य दयितं गृहे तत्तद् गुणवते देयं तदेवाक्षयमिच्छता
yad yadiṣṭatamaṃ kiñcid yaccāsya dayitaṃ gṛhe tattad guṇavate deyaṃ tadevākṣayamicchatā
كلُّ ما هو أحبُّ الأشياء إلى المرء وأشدُّها رغبةً لديه، وكلُّ ما هو عزيزٌ عليه في بيته—فمن يبتغي ثوابًا غيرَ فانٍ (أكشايا) فليهبْ ذلك بعينه لِمَن هو أهلٌ للفضل والاستحقاق.
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True charity is measured by sacrifice: giving what one values most. Directing such gifts to a guṇavat (morally qualified recipient) is said to yield akṣaya (inexhaustible) merit.
Primarily aligns with Ācāra/Dharma instruction within Purāṇic teaching; secondarily supports Vamśānucarita contexts by defining kingly and household virtue, though no genealogy is explicit here.
The ‘dearest possession’ symbolizes ego-attachment; relinquishing it indicates inner non-possessiveness (aparigraha-like restraint), transforming material giving into spiritual purification.