Brāhmaṇya-प्रश्नः — The Inquiry into Attaining Brāhmaṇya
Mataṅga–Gardabhī Itihāsa
एकमासं निराहार: स पश्यति हि देवता: । जहाँ उत्तर दिशामें भागीरथी गंगा गिरती हैं और वहाँ उनका स्रोत तीन भागोंमें विभक्त हो जाता है
ekamāsaṃ nirāhāraḥ sa paśyati hi devatāḥ | yatra uttaradiśi bhāgīrathī gaṅgā patati tatra ca tasyāḥ srotaḥ tribhāgena vibhajyate, tat bhagavataḥ maheśvarasya tristhāna-nāma tīrtham | yo manuṣyaḥ ekamāsaṃ nirāhāraḥ san tatra snātvā devatānāṃ pratyakṣa-darśanaṃ labhate |
«Quien permanece sin alimento durante un mes contempla de veras a los dioses. En la región del norte, donde desciende la Bhāgīrathī Gaṅgā y su corriente se divide en tres brazos, se halla el tīrtha llamado Tristhāna, perteneciente al Señor Maheśvara. Quien ayuna un mes y se baña allí obtiene visión directa de las deidades.»
अजड्रिय उवाच
The verse teaches that disciplined austerity (a month-long fast) combined with reverent pilgrimage and ritual bathing at a Śiva-associated tīrtha is said to yield extraordinary spiritual fruit—direct perception of the divine—highlighting the Mahābhārata’s emphasis on tapas, tīrtha-sevā, and faith as dharmic means to inner purification.
Ajadriya describes the greatness of a specific sacred place: where the Bhāgīrathī Gaṅgā descends in the north and splits into three channels. He identifies it as Maheśvara’s Tristhāna tīrtha and states the promised result for a pilgrim who fasts for a month and bathes there—vision of the gods.