अहिंसा-प्रधान धर्मविचारः
Ahiṃsā as the Superior Dharma: Practical and Scriptural Reasoning
ततो हिमवतो मूर्थ्नि यत्र देवा: समीजिरे
tato himavato mūrdhni yatra devāḥ samījire, rājendra! tadanantaraṃ himālaya-parvatake śikhara-par yatra pūrvaṃ devatābhiḥ yajñaḥ kṛtaḥ, tasmin sthāne sā paramā śubha-lakṣaṇā kanyā ekaṃ nikharva-varṣa-avadhiṃ aṅguṣṭha-bale tiṣṭhantī sthitā. evaṃ yatnaṃ kṛtvā sā pitāmahaṃ brahmāṇaṃ santoṣayāmāsa.
Bhishma said: “Then, O king, upon the summit of Himavat—at the very place where the gods had once assembled and performed sacrifice—there that maiden of supremely auspicious marks stood balanced on the strength of her thumb for the span of a nikharva years. By such sustained effort and austerity, she succeeded in pleasing the Grandsire Brahmā.”
पितामह उवाच
The passage emphasizes that unwavering discipline (yatna) and sustained austerity (tapas), undertaken in a sacred and purposeful manner, can purify intent and win divine approval—suggesting that inner resolve and ethical self-mastery are central to dharma.
Bhishma describes how an auspicious maiden goes to the summit of Himavat, a place sanctified by an earlier divine sacrifice, and performs an extreme penance—standing on her thumb for an immense span of years—thereby pleasing Brahmā.