Tīrtha-yātrā: Phalaśruti and Sacred Geography from Lohitya to Prayāga
Pulastya’s Instruction
तीर्थयात्रां पुरस्कृत्य कुरुक्षेत्र गता: पुरा । ततः कुञ्ज: सरस्वत्या: कृतो भरतसत्तम,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)
ghūlastya uvāca | tīrthayātrāṃ puraskṛtya kurukṣetraṃ gatāḥ purā | tataḥ kuñjaḥ sarasvatyāḥ kṛto bharatasattama kuruśreṣṭha | tatpaścāt naimiṣakuñjakī yātrā kare | rājendra kathayanti naimiṣāraṇyake nivāsinaḥ tapasvino ṛṣayaḥ pūrvaṃ kadācit tīrthayātrāprasangena kurukṣetreṃ gatāḥ | bharataśreṣṭha tasmin kāle te sarasvatīkuñjasya nirmāṇaṃ kṛtavantaḥ (sa eva naimiṣakuñja iti khyātaḥ) |
Ghūlastya said: “Long ago, setting out on a pilgrimage, the ascetic sages who dwelt in Naimiṣāraṇya went to Kurukṣetra. O best of the Bharatas, O foremost of the Kurus, it was then that they established a sacred grove on the Sarasvatī. Thereafter one should undertake the pilgrimage to that Naimiṣa-grove. O king, it is said that this very Sarasvatī-grove, created by those tapasvin sages at that time, came to be known as ‘Naimiṣakuñja.’”
घुलस्त्य उवाच
The passage underscores dharma through tīrthayātrā: sacred travel is not merely movement but a disciplined, tradition-bearing act that connects communities of sages and preserves holy sites. Establishing and remembering tīrthas (like the Sarasvatī-grove) is presented as a meritorious cultural duty that sustains spiritual geography for later seekers.
The speaker recounts an old tradition: sages from Naimiṣāraṇya once went on pilgrimage to Kurukṣetra and, during that journey, established a grove on the Sarasvatī. That grove became known as Naimiṣakuñja, and the text recommends undertaking a pilgrimage to it thereafter.