Harihara Revelation and the Tirtha-Glorification of Saptasarasvata in Kurukshetra
इत्युक्ता वासुदेवेन देवाः केशवमब्रुवन् विधानं तप्तकृच्छ्रस्य कथ्यतां मधुसूदन यस्मिश्चिर्णे कायशुद्धिर्भवते सार्वकालिकी
ityuktā vāsudevena devāḥ keśavamabruvan vidhānaṃ taptakṛcchrasya kathyatāṃ madhusūdana yasmiścirṇe kāyaśuddhirbhavate sārvakālikī
বাসুদেবের এ কথা শুনে দেবতারা কেশবকে বললেন—হে মধুসূদন, তপ্তকৃচ্ছ্রের বিধান বলুন, যার আচরণে দেহশুদ্ধি সর্বকালের জন্য স্থায়ী হয়।
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Taptakṛcchra is a recognized expiatory regimen (kṛcchra) characterized by austerity and regulated consumption, often involving warm/hot intake and progressive restriction. It is used to counteract impurity or transgression through disciplined bodily restraint.
The phrase indicates a purification whose merit/endurance is not fleeting—suggesting a prāyaścitta considered especially potent or complete, suitable for removing deep or recurring impurity rather than only immediate ritual blemish.
Tīrtha-māhātmyas frequently pair geography with practice: sacred places promise fruit, but the Purāṇa also prescribes vows, japa, and expiations that qualify the pilgrim. Here, the narrative pauses to codify a portable discipline (kṛcchra) that complements pilgrimage-based purification.