Adhyāya 119: Vyāsa–Kīṭa-saṃvāda
Tapas-bala and karmic ascent across yoni
कि पुनर्हन्यमानानां तरसा जीवितार्थिनाम् | अरोगाणामपापानां पापैर्मासोपजीविभि:
ki punar hanyamānānāṁ tarasā jīvitārthinām | arogāṇām apāpānāṁ pāpair māṁsopajīvibhiḥ ||
Bhishma dijo: «¿Cuánto mayor, entonces, ha de surgir el temor en aquellos que son muertos por la fuerza—criaturas que anhelan vivir, sanas e inocentes—cuando son dominadas y abatidas por hombres pecaminosos que se ganan la vida con la carne? Por ello, el sabio y virtuoso debe considerar a todos los seres iguales a sí mismo y obrar por su bienestar».
भीष्म उवाच
Bhishma underscores empathy and non-violence: a wise person should see all beings as oneself and recognize that forcibly killing innocent, healthy creatures—especially by those who profit from flesh—is a grave ethical wrong that naturally generates fear and suffering.
In Anushasana Parva, Bhishma instructs Yudhishthira on dharma. Here he argues from the reality of death-fear: if even learned people fear death, then innocent beings who are violently killed by meat-dependent sinners will fear all the more—supporting a broader exhortation toward compassion and restraint from harm.