Shiva’s Wedding Procession to Kailasa and the Marriage of Girija (Kali)
धन्यो ऽयं पर्वतश्रेष्ठः श्लाघ्यः पूज्यश्च दैवतैः धूतपापस्तथा जातो भवतां पादपङ्कजैः
dhanyo 'yaṃ parvataśreṣṭhaḥ ślāghyaḥ pūjyaśca daivataiḥ dhūtapāpastathā jāto bhavatāṃ pādapaṅkajaiḥ
طوبى لهذا الجبل، خيرِ الجبال: محمودٌ ومُستحقٌّ للعبادة حتى عند الآلهة؛ إذ بفضل أقدامكم اللوتسية صار مطهَّرًا وقد غُسلت خطاياه.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Contact with the divine (symbolized by the deity’s ‘lotus-feet’) purifies; sacredness is not merely inherent in geography but is intensified by association with realized/divine presence, encouraging reverence toward sanctified places and humility before the holy.
Most consistent with Vamśānucarita / Ācāra-dharma adjunct material typical of Purāṇas—specifically tīrtha-māhātmya (praise of holy places), which often appears alongside genealogical/narrative strata even if not one of the five strict headings.
The ‘lotus-feet’ symbolize the grounding of transcendence into the world: when the divine ‘steps’ upon a place, the ordinary becomes a locus of liberation (kṣetra-śakti). The mountain’s elevation mirrors spiritual ascent, while purification (dhūta-pāpa) indicates inner cleansing through devotion.