Prahlada's Instructions to Bali — Prahlada’s Instructions to Bali on Vishnu Worship, Monthly Gifts, and Building Hari’s Temple
फाल्गुने व्रीहयो मुद्गा वस्त्रकृष्णाजिनादिकम् गोविन्दप्रीणनार्थाय दातव्यं पुरुषर्षभैः
phālgune vrīhayo mudgā vastrakṛṣṇājinādikam govindaprīṇanārthāya dātavyaṃ puruṣarṣabhaiḥ
In the month of Phālguna, rice and green gram (mudga), along with garments, black antelope-skin and the like, should be given by the best of men, for the purpose of pleasing Govinda.
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Purāṇic month-by-month dāna lists typically align seasonal availability and ritual suitability with devotional intent. In Phālguna, staple grains and pulses symbolize sustenance and completion of the annual cycle, offered as a practical and meritorious gift to support dharmic life while being dedicated to Govinda’s pleasure.
Kṛṣṇājina is a classical Vedic emblem of austerity and disciplined study (often linked with brahmacarya and ritual seating). In a dāna context it represents supporting sacred learning and restraint; the Purāṇic framing redirects that merit toward pleasing Viṣṇu (Govinda).
No. Although the Vāmana Purāṇa is strongly geographical elsewhere, this unit functions as a dharma-instruction passage: merit is generated through month-specific gifts rather than through named sacred places.