Adhyaya 51 — Yaksha Injunctions: Graha-Children and Female Spirits Causing Domestic and Ritual Disruptions
कुर्वोत तीर्थदेवौकश्चैत्यपर्वतसानुषु । नदीसङ्गमखातेषु स्त्रपनं तत्प्रशान्यते ॥
kurvota tīrthadevaukaś caityaparvatasānuṣu | nadīsaṅgamakhāteṣu strāpanaṃ tatpraśānyate ||
Durch Baden und rituelle Waschungen an heiligen Furten, in den Wohnstätten der Götter, an Schreinen, an Berghängen sowie an Flusszusammenflüssen und heiligen Teichen wird jene (Plage) besänftigt.
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Purification is presented as both physical and moral: one seeks sacred space and disciplined practice to restore balance, emphasizing humility and reliance on dharmic order.
This is ancillary dharma/vidhi material embedded in Purāṇic teaching, not one of the five core lakṣaṇas; it functions as ācāra (conduct/ritual).
Confluences and high places symbolize junctions of energies; bathing signifies dissolving impurity (mala) and resetting one’s internal ‘flow’ to match sacred currents.