Nāga–Nāgabhāryā Saṃvāda: Varṇa-Dharma, Gṛhastha-Discipline, and Mokṣa-Self-Inquiry
Mahābhārata 12.347
त्रीन् पिण्डान् न्यस्य वै पृथ्व्यां पूर्व दत्त्वा कुशानिति । कथं तु पिण्डसंज्ञां ते पितरो लेभिरे पुरा
trīn piṇḍān nyasya vai pṛthivyāṃ pūrvaṃ dattvā kuśān iti | kathaṃ tu piṇḍasaṃjñāṃ te pitaro lebhire purā ||
Nārada said: “After first spreading kuśa grass upon the earth and then placing three piṇḍa offerings there for the Fathers, one performs their worship. What is the reason for this practice? And in ancient times, how did the Pitṛs come to be known by the name ‘Piṇḍa’?”
नारद उवाच
The verse frames a dharmic inquiry into the rationale behind Śrāddha procedure—why kuśa is laid down and why three piṇḍa offerings are placed for the ancestors—emphasizing that ritual acts should be grounded in understood tradition (vidhi) and remembered origins, not performed mechanically.
Nārada asks for an explanation of an established ancestral rite: first placing kuśa grass on the ground, then setting three piṇḍas for the Pitṛs and worshipping them. He specifically seeks the ancient origin of the Pitṛs being associated with the term ‘piṇḍa’ and the reason the rite uses three offerings.