Tīrtha-yātrā: Phalaśruti and Sacred Geography from Lohitya to Prayāga
Pulastya’s Instruction
ततो नैमिषकुण्जं च समासाद्य कुरूद्धह | ऋषय : किल राजेन्द्र नैमिषेयास्तपस्विन:,कुरुश्रेष्ठ! तत्पश्चात् नैमिषकुठ्जकी यात्रा करे। राजेन्द्र! कहते हैं, नैमिषारण्यके निवासी तपस्वी ऋषि पहले कभी तीर्थयात्राके प्रसंगसे कुरुक्षेत्रमें गये थे। भरतश्रेष्ठ] उसी समय उन्होंने सरस्वतीकुंजका निर्माण किया था (वही नैमिषकुंज कहलाता है)
tato naimiṣakuñjaṃ ca samāsādya kurūddhaha | ṛṣayaḥ kila rājendra naimiṣeyās tapasvinaḥ ||
Then, O scorcher of the Kurus, having reached the grove called Naimiṣakuñja, (he said:) O king, it is said that the ascetic sages of Naimiṣāraṇya once came to Kurukṣetra on a pilgrimage. In that very context they established a sacred grove on the Sarasvatī—hence it came to be known as Naimiṣakuñja.
घुलस्त्य उवाच
Sacred places gain and retain sanctity through the tapas and conduct of righteous sages; pilgrimage is portrayed as a dharmic act that connects communities to remembered holy geography and reinforces ethical tradition.
The speaker describes arriving at Naimiṣakuñja and reports a tradition: ascetic sages from Naimiṣāraṇya once visited Kurukṣetra on pilgrimage and established a sacred grove on the Sarasvatī, which became known as Naimiṣakuñja.