The Greatness of Kāśī (Kāśī-māhātmya) and Avimukta’s Liberative Power
क्षेत्रेऽस्मिन्निवसंति ये सुकृतिनो भक्ता हरौ वा हरे पश्यंतोऽन्वहमादरेण शुचयः संतः समाः शंभुना । ते मर्त्यां भयदुःखपापरहिताः संशुद्धकर्मक्रिया भित्वा संभवबंधजालगहनं विंदंति मोक्षं परम् ॥ १७ ॥
kṣetre'sminnivasaṃti ye sukṛtino bhaktā harau vā hare paśyaṃto'nvahamādareṇa śucayaḥ saṃtaḥ samāḥ śaṃbhunā | te martyāṃ bhayaduḥkhapāparahitāḥ saṃśuddhakarmakriyā bhitvā saṃbhavabaṃdhajālagahanaṃ viṃdaṃti mokṣaṃ param || 17 ||
Those meritorious devotees who dwell in this sacred kṣetra—devoted to Hari (Viṣṇu)—pure and saintly, beholding Him day after day with reverence (and deemed equal in sanctity even by Śambhu), become free from fear, sorrow, and sin while still in mortal life. Their rites and conduct are purified; and, breaking through the dense thicket of bonds born of repeated becoming, they attain the supreme mokṣa.
Narada (teaching within a Tirtha-Mahatmya discourse in Uttara-Bhaga)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhakti
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It teaches that living in a holy kṣetra with steady devotion and daily reverent darśana of Hari purifies one’s life, removes fear-sorrow-sin, and ultimately cuts through the bondage of repeated birth, culminating in supreme mokṣa.
Bhakti here is expressed as continuous, reverent daily beholding of Hari while maintaining purity and saintly conduct; this sustained devotion is presented as powerful enough to purify karma and break saṁsāric bondage.
The verse emphasizes karma-kriyā (disciplined ritual action and conduct) becoming saṁśuddha (purified) through devotion and kṣetra-vāsa; it points to correct practice and inner purity rather than technical Vedāṅga details like Vyākaraṇa or Jyotiṣa.