Sanatsujāta–Dhṛtarāṣṭra Saṃvāda: Brahmacarya and the Formless Brahman
Udyoga Parva 44
धर्मश्न॒ सत्यं च तपो दमश्न अमात्सरयय द्वीस्तितिक्षानसूया । दान॑ श्रुतं चैव धृति: क्षमा च महाव्रता द्वादश ब्राह्मणस्य
dharmaś ca satyaṃ ca tapo damaś ca amātsaryaṃ hrīs titikṣā anasūyā | dānaṃ śrutaṃ caiva dhṛtiḥ kṣamā ca mahāvratā dvādaśa brāhmaṇasya ||
Sanatsujāta sprach: „Dharma und Wahrhaftigkeit, Askese und Selbstbeherrschung; Freiheit von Neid, Bescheidenheit, Duldsamkeit und die Weigerung, Fehler zu suchen; Freigebigkeit, heilige Gelehrsamkeit, Standhaftigkeit und Vergebung — diese zwölf sind die großen Gelübde, die einen Brāhmaṇa kennzeichnen.“
सनत्युजात उवाच
A brāhmaṇa is defined not merely by birth or ritual, but by twelve great ethical disciplines: righteousness, truth, austerity, self-restraint, non-envy, modesty, forbearance, non-fault-finding, generosity, scriptural learning, steadfastness, and forgiveness.
In Udyoga Parva, as the crisis of war approaches, Sanatsujāta delivers moral and spiritual instruction, emphasizing inner virtues and disciplined character as the foundation of true nobility and right conduct.