Āśauca, Daśāha Piṇḍa-Rites, Vṛṣotsarga, Sāpiṇḍīkaraṇa, and the Yama-mārga
Path to Yama
यद्वा यस्मिन्दिने दानं तस्मिंस्तद्दिनसंख्यया / दशाहे ऽञ्जलयः पक्षिन्पञ्चाशदन्तिमे
yadvā yasmindine dānaṃ tasmiṃstaddinasaṃkhyayā / daśāhe 'ñjalayaḥ pakṣinpañcāśadantime
Oder auch, o Vogel (Garuda): An welchem Tag eine heilige Gabe (dāna) dargebracht wird, eben dieser Tag ist nach seiner Zahl zu zählen; im Zehn-Tage-Ritus gibt es täglich Añjali‑Darbringungen (Handvoll‑Opfer), und am letzten Tag werden es fünfzig.
Lord Vishnu
Ritual Type: Ekoddishta
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: Within the ten-day (daśāha) post-death period; counts keyed to the specific day of giving.
Concept: Ritual acts (dana/udaka-anjali) are time-indexed; the day of giving determines the count and sequence within the ten-day observance.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-kanda as purifier: disciplined action and sankalpa align the mind toward sattva and remembrance of dharma.
Application: Keep a day-by-day ledger of offerings during the ten-day period; ensure the final day’s prescribed total (fifty) is completed without omission.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana, Pretakalpa: dashaha-vidhi and udaka/anjali counting in the shraddha sequence (adjacent verses 2.5.21–2.5.27)
This verse states that the merit and procedure follow the specific day on which the dāna is performed; the ritual count is aligned with that day-number within the ten-day observance.
In the Preta Kanda context, structured ten-day rites and offerings are described as supports for the departed’s transitional state; the verse specifies the regulated sequence and quantity of añjali offerings culminating on the final day.
If performing post-death observances, keep the ritual sequence consistent with the correct day-count and complete the prescribed daily offerings, treating dāna as disciplined, timely support rather than a random act.