जाता ये गोत्रजाः केचिदपुत्रा मरणं गताः । ते यांति परमां तृप्तिममृतेन यथा सुराः । विप्रपादोदकक्लिन्ना यावत्तिष्ठति मेदिनी । तावत्पुष्करपात्रेषु पिबन्ति पितरो जलम्
jātā ye gotrajāḥ kecidaputrā maraṇaṃ gatāḥ | te yāṃti paramāṃ tṛptimamṛtena yathā surāḥ | viprapādodakaklinnā yāvattiṣṭhati medinī | tāvatpuṣkarapātreṣu pibanti pitaro jalam
Diejenigen, die im selben Geschlecht geboren wurden, aber kinderlos starben—manche solche Verwandte—gelangen zur höchsten Sättigung, wie die Götter durch Amṛta. Solange die Erde besteht, trinken die Ahnen Wasser aus Lotosgefäßen, benetzt vom Wasser, das die Füße eines Brāhmaṇa gewaschen hat.
Bhartṛyajña
Scene: A śrāddha setting: a brāhmaṇa seated on kuśa, a householder pours water at the brāhmaṇa’s feet; the collected pādodaka becomes a luminous stream rising to the pitṛ-loka where ancestors drink from lotus-cups, appearing soothed and radiant.
Śrāddha compassionately reaches even neglected or childless departed kin; sacred offerings and purity can grant them profound satisfaction.
The teaching occurs within the Hāṭakeśvara-kṣetra Māhātmya; this verse highlights the metaphysical effect of viprapādodaka rather than a named bathing spot.
It extols viprapādodaka as a powerful sanctifier in śrāddha, describing how ancestors are sustained by it for as long as the earth remains.