Ahiṃsā as Threefold Restraint (Mind–Speech–Action) and the Ethics of Consumption
फल वा मूलकं हृत्वा अपूपं वा पिपीलिका: । चोरयित्वा च निष्पावं जायते हलगोलक:
phalaṁ vā mūlakaṁ hṛtvā apūpaṁ vā pipīlikāḥ | corayitvā ca niṣpāvaṁ jāyate halagolakaḥ ||
ফল, মূলক (মূলা) বা অপূপ (পিঠা/পুয়া) চুৰি কৰিলে মানুহ পিপীলিকা—পিঁপড়া—ৰূপে জন্ম লয়। আৰু নিষ্পাৱ (এবিধ ডাল/বীন) চুৰি কৰিলে সি হলগোলক নামৰ কীট হৈ জন্ম লাভ কৰে।
युधिछिर उवाच
Even seemingly minor theft violates dharma and carries karmic consequences; the text warns that stealing small items can lead to degrading rebirths, reinforcing the ethical principle of asteya (non-stealing).
In a didactic exchange within the Anuśāsana Parva, Yudhiṣṭhira states specific karmic results for stealing particular foods, using vivid examples (rebirth as an ant or as a halagolaka creature) to emphasize moral accountability.