Avimukta-Māhātmya — Vyāsa in Vārāṇasī and Śiva’s Secret Teaching of Liberation
कृत्वा वै नैष्ठिकीं दीक्षामविमुक्ते वसन्ति ये / तेषां तत्परमं ज्ञानं ददाम्यन्ते परं पदम्
kṛtvā vai naiṣṭhikīṃ dīkṣāmavimukte vasanti ye / teṣāṃ tatparamaṃ jñānaṃ dadāmyante paraṃ padam
Diejenigen, die, nachdem sie die standhafte Einweihung (naiṣṭhikī) vollzogen haben, in Avimukta wohnen—ihnen verleihe Ich jenes höchste Wissen; und am Ende (des Lebens) gewähre Ich den höchsten Stand.
Lord Kurma (Vishnu) speaking as the supreme teacher within the Kurma Purana’s Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis, praising Avimukta and the vow-based path to liberation
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
It presents liberation as arising from “supreme knowledge” (parama-jñāna) granted by the Lord, culminating in the “highest state” (paraṃ padam)—a mokṣa-oriented vision where true knowledge, not mere ritual, is decisive.
The verse emphasizes naiṣṭhikī dīkṣā—steadfast, lifelong disciplined initiation—paired with residence in the sacred kṣetra (Avimukta). This aligns with Kurma Purana’s vow-centered sādhanā: regulated conduct, devotion, and contemplative pursuit of liberating jñāna.
By centering Avimukta (traditionally linked with Śiva) while having the Lord (Vishnu/Kūrma) promise liberating knowledge and the supreme goal, the text models a non-sectarian synthesis: the sacred Śaiva kṣetra and the Vaiṣṇava Lord’s grace converge in one mokṣa-teaching.