Sukeshi’s Inquiry into Dharma: The Seven Dvipas and the Twenty-One Hells
चचः क्रुद्धूः शतमखः कुलिशं भ्राम्य पाणिना चिक्षेप दैत्यराजाय तं ददर्श तथान्धकः
cacaḥ kruddhūḥ śatamakhaḥ kuliśaṃ bhrāmya pāṇinā cikṣepa daityarājāya taṃ dadarśa tathāndhakaḥ
Then Śatamakha (Indra), enraged, whirled the thunderbolt (vajra/kuliśa) in his hand and hurled it at the king of the daityas; Andhaka saw it coming.
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Divine authority responds decisively when governance is threatened; the vajra represents punitive power meant to restore order, ideally exercised from duty rather than rage.
Carita/Vamśānucarita narrative: a battle-episode within the ongoing accounts of divine and anti-divine lineages and their conflicts.
The vajra (kuliśa) signifies indra-śakti: the concentrated force of dharmic sovereignty. Andhaka ‘seeing’ it emphasizes the moment of moral reckoning before consequence.