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Shloka 32

Adhyāya 64: Dāna-prakāra—Suvarṇa, Pānīya-dāna, Ghṛta-dāna, and Upakaraṇa-dāna

Utility Gifts

अरक्षितारं हर्तारें विलोप्तारमनायकम्‌ | तं वै राजकलिं हन्यु: प्रजा: सन्नह निर्धणम्‌,जो प्रजाकी रक्षा नहीं करता, केवल उसके धनको लूटता-खसोटता रहता है, तथा जिसके पास कोई नेतृत्व करनेवाला मन्त्री नहीं है, वह राजा नहीं, कलियुग है। समस्त प्रजाको चाहिये कि ऐसे निर्दयी राजाको बाँधकर मार डाले

arakṣitāraṁ hartāraṁ viloptāram anāyakam | taṁ vai rāja-kaliṁ hanyuḥ prajāḥ sannaha nirdhanam ||

Bhishma said: The ruler who does not protect, who instead seizes and plunders, and who is without proper guidance or leadership—such a one is not truly a king but a ‘Kali’ in royal form. The people, having armed themselves, should bind and slay that cruel, impoverishing oppressor.

{'arakṣitāram''one who does not protect (the subjects)', 'hartāram': 'one who takes away
{'arakṣitāram':
a robber/seizer', 'viloptāram''a plunderer
a robber/seizer', 'viloptāram':
one who despoils', 'anāyakam''without a leader/guide
one who despoils', 'anāyakam':
lacking proper leadership (or counsellorship)', 'rāja-kalim''‘Kali’ as a king
lacking proper leadership (or counsellorship)', 'rāja-kalim':
a king who embodies the evils of Kali', 'hanyuḥ''they should kill/slay', 'prajāḥ': 'the subjects
a king who embodies the evils of Kali', 'hanyuḥ':
the people', 'sannaha''having armed/arrayed themselves
the people', 'sannaha':
prepared for action', 'nirdhanam''impoverishing
prepared for action', 'nirdhanam':
making (the people) without wealth (alsopoor)'}
making (the people) without wealth (also:

भीष्म उवाच

B
Bhishma
P
prajāḥ (the subjects/people)
R
rājā (king)
K
Kali (as a principle/personification)

Educational Q&A

A king’s primary dharma is protection and just governance. A ruler who exploits rather than protects forfeits legitimacy; Bhishma frames such a tyrant as ‘Kali’ itself, implying that removing him becomes a duty to restore dharma.

In Bhishma’s instruction on rajadharma, he describes the marks of a predatory, leaderless ruler—one who plunders the people—and states that the subjects, once organized and armed, may bind and execute such a king as a corrective act against tyranny.