Preta-bhāva: Causes, Remedies, and the Rationale of Post-death Rites
Question-Catalogue
शृकृष्ण उवाच / शृणु दानं प्रवक्ष्यामि सर्वाशु भविनाशनम् / सन्तप्तहाटकमयं घटकं विधाय ब्रह्मेशकेशवयुतं सह लोकपालैः / क्षीराज्यपूर्णविविरं प्रणिपत्य भक्त्या विप्राय देहि तव दानशतैः किमन्यैः
śṛkṛṣṇa uvāca / śṛṇu dānaṃ pravakṣyāmi sarvāśu bhavināśanam / santaptahāṭakamayaṃ ghaṭakaṃ vidhāya brahmeśakeśavayutaṃ saha lokapālaiḥ / kṣīrājyapūrṇaviviraṃ praṇipatya bhaktyā viprāya dehi tava dānaśataiḥ kimanyaiḥ
শ্ৰীকৃষ্ণ ক’লে—শুনা, মই এনে দান ক’ম যি অতি শীঘ্ৰে সকলো ভয় নাশ কৰে। তাপ দি শুদ্ধ কৰা সোণৰ এটা ঘট সাজি তাত ব্ৰহ্মা, ঈশ (শিৱ) আৰু কেশৱ (বিষ্ণু)ক লোকপালসকলৰ সৈতে অলংকৃত কৰা; তাৰ ভিতৰ দুধ আৰু ঘিঁউৰে ভৰাই, ভক্তিভৰে প্ৰণাম কৰি ব্ৰাহ্মণক দান দিয়া—তেতিয়া আন শত দানৰ কি প্ৰয়োজন?
Śrī Kṛṣṇa (identified in the verse as śrīkṛṣṇa)
Afterlife Stage: Pretayoni
Beneficiary: Pitr
Concept: Specific, devotionally performed dāna—properly crafted, consecrated, and given to a worthy recipient—can swiftly remove fear and adverse post-mortem conditions.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-yoga purified by bhakti; efficacy depends on śraddhā, right recipient (pātra), and intention, aligning action with dharma.
Application: If following tradition: commission/prepare the prescribed golden vessel with iconography, fill with kṣīra and ghṛta, bow with devotion, and donate to a qualified brāhmaṇa; otherwise, emulate the principle—high-integrity giving with reverence and purity.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: ritual-instruction setting
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: dāna-mahātmyas and preta-śānti dānas in Pretakalpa/śrāddha-related chapters; Garuda Purana: discussions of pātra (worthy recipient) and bhakti as multiplier of merit
This verse presents a specific ritual charity—offering a gold vessel associated with major deities and filled with milk and ghee—as a highly efficacious dāna said to quickly remove fear and confer strong spiritual merit, surpassing many lesser donations.
In the Preta Kanda, dāna is repeatedly taught as a support for the deceased and the family’s ritual duty; here, Kṛṣṇa emphasizes a potent form of charity that counters fear (bhaya), a common theme in post-death passages dealing with uncertainty, rites, and the soul’s welfare.
Prioritize sincere, dharmic giving with devotion—especially supporting qualified priests/learned brāhmaṇas and ritual needs—rather than focusing on quantity; the verse highlights intention (bhakti) and meaningful, tradition-aligned charity.