अलोभोपाख्यानम् — शुनःसख-यातुधानी-संवादः
The Allegory of Non-Greed: Śunaḥsakha and the Yātudhānī
भरतनन्दन! सोमके कहनेसे वे पितरोंसहित देवता मैरुपर्वतके शिखरपर विराजमान ब्रह्माजीके पास गये ।।
bharatanandana! somakena ukte te pitaraiḥ saha devāḥ meruparvataśikhare virājamānaṃ brahmāṇaṃ samupajagmuḥ. pitarā ūcuḥ—nivāpānnena bhagavan bhṛśaṃ pīḍyāmahe vayam; prasādaṃ kuru no deva, śreyo naḥ saṃvidhīyatām.
Dijo Bhishma: «¡Oh descendiente de Bharata! A petición de Soma, los dioses—junto con los Pitṛs—fueron a Brahmā, que estaba sentado en la cima del monte Meru. Los Pitṛs dijeron: “Oh Señor Bienaventurado, estamos gravemente afligidos por consumir sin cesar las ofrendas del śrāddha (nivāpa). Muéstranos tu favor, oh divino, y dispone para nosotros lo que sea verdaderamente benéfico.”»
भीष्म उवाच
Even sacred rites like śrāddha must be aligned with genuine welfare (śreyas). The verse frames ritual not as mechanical consumption but as something overseen by divine order and responsive to the well-being of those it is meant to benefit—hence the Pitṛs seek Brahmā’s guidance for a truly beneficial arrangement.
Prompted by Somaka’s request, the gods and the ancestral Pitṛs go to Brahmā on Mount Meru. The Pitṛs report that constant intake of śrāddha offerings (nivāpa) is causing them distress and ask Brahmā to show grace and establish a better, welfare-producing solution.