The Description of Kāśī (Kāśī-māhātmya): Avimukta, Kapālamocana, and Śiva’s Purification
नापि दानं द्विजश्रेष्ठ मुक्त्वैकं देहपातनम् । मृत्युं प्रात्युं नरः कामं कृतकृत्यो भवेद्ध्रुवन् ॥ ६७ ॥
nāpi dānaṃ dvijaśreṣṭha muktvaikaṃ dehapātanam | mṛtyuṃ prātyuṃ naraḥ kāmaṃ kṛtakṛtyo bhaveddhruvan || 67 ||
হে দ্বিজশ্রেষ্ঠ, এই এক দেহত্যাগের তুল্য কোনো দান নেই। যে মানুষ এমন মৃত্যু কামনা করে, সে নিশ্চয়ই কৃতকৃত্য হয়।
Narada (teaching a dvija in the Uttara-Bhaga tirtha-mahatmya context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta (peace)
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It elevates dehapātana—consciously meeting death in a sanctified, dharmic manner (typically connected with a tirtha and right intention)—as a supreme act whose fruit surpasses ordinary charity, marking life as spiritually “completed” (kṛtakṛtya).
While Bhakti is not named explicitly here, the idea aligns with surrender at life’s end: offering oneself (the body and final moment) to the sacred—an ultimate form of dedication that complements Vishnu-bhakti-oriented tirtha practice in the Uttara-Bhaga.
No specific Vedanga (like Vyākaraṇa, Jyotiṣa, or Kalpa) is taught directly; the practical takeaway is dharma-oriented ritual sensibility—prioritizing intention, sacred context (tirtha), and disciplined conduct at antya-kāla over mere material dāna.