Udyoga Parva, Adhyaya 31 — Yudhiṣṭhira’s Instructions to Sañjaya
Peace Appeal and Five-Village Proposal
अनाप्तानां संग्रहात् त्वं नरेन्द्र तथा>5प्तानां निग्रहाच्चैव राजन | भूमिं स्फीतां दुर्बलत्वादनन्ता- मशक्तरस्त्वं रक्षितुं कौरवेय
anāptānāṁ saṁgrahāt tvaṁ narendra tathāptānāṁ nigrahāc caiva rājan | bhūmiṁ sphītāṁ durbalatvād anantām aśaktarās tvaṁ rakṣituṁ kauraveya ||
Sañjaya said: “O king, because you gather to yourself those who are not truly loyal, and because you restrain and estrange those who are devoted and capable, you have become too weak to protect this vast and flourishing realm. O son of the Kuru line, you are no longer able to safeguard it.”
संजय उवाच
A ruler weakens his own sovereignty by promoting the unworthy and suppressing the worthy. Sound kingship (rājadharma) requires discerning reliable allies, honoring competent supporters, and thereby maintaining the strength needed to protect a prosperous realm.
Sañjaya addresses the Kuru ruler, criticizing his political judgment: he has gathered unreliable people and restrained loyal, capable ones. As a result, despite possessing a vast and prosperous kingdom, he has become too weak to protect it—an admonition set against the mounting crisis that leads toward war.