Sudāmā Brāhmaṇa Receives Kṛṣṇa’s Mercy
The Gift of Flat Rice
इति तच्चिन्तयन्नन्त: प्राप्तो निजगृहान्तिकम् । सूर्यानलेन्दुसङ्काशैर्विमानै: सर्वतो वृतम् ॥ २१ ॥ विचित्रोपवनोद्यानै: कूजद्द्विजकुलाकुलै: । प्रोत्फुल्लकमुदाम्भोजकह्लारोत्पलवारिभि: ॥ २२ ॥ जुष्टं स्वलङ्कृतै: पुम्भि: स्त्रीभिश्च हरिणाक्षिभि: । किमिदं कस्य वा स्थानं कथं तदिदमित्यभूत् ॥ २३ ॥
iti tac cintayann antaḥ prāpto niya-gṛhāntikam sūryānalendu-saṅkāśair vimānaiḥ sarvato vṛtam
So in Gedanken versunken, gelangte Sudāmā an den Ort seines Hauses. Doch dieser Platz war nun ringsum von hoch aufragenden himmlischen Palästen umgeben, die leuchteten wie der vereinte Glanz von Sonne, Feuer und Mond. Prächtige Höfe und Gärten, erfüllt vom Gurren der Vögel, und Teiche mit blühenden Kumuda-, Ambhoja-, Kahlāra- und Utpala-Lotos schmückten ihn. Fein gekleidete Männer und rehaugige Frauen standen zum Dienst bereit. Sudāmā staunte: „Was ist das? Wessen Ort ist dies? Wie ist all dies geschehen?“
Śrīla Śrīdhara Svāmī gives the sequence of the brāhmaṇa’s thoughts: First, seeing a great, unfamiliar effulgence, he thought, “What is this?” Then, noting the palaces, he asked himself, “Whose place is this?” And recognizing it as his own, he wondered, “How has it become so transformed?”
These verses show Sudāmā returning home and finding his poor dwelling transformed into a celestial-like estate—an outward sign of Śrī Kṛṣṇa’s quiet, affectionate mercy toward His devotee.
Sudāmā expected his former poverty, but he saw vimānas, gardens, lotus-filled waters, and richly adorned people; he could not recognize the place and wondered how such a transformation had occurred.
Serve God and devotees without bargaining; the Bhagavatam highlights that sincere devotion is valued above wealth, and when needed, grace can change one’s circumstances in unexpected ways.