Svargārohaṇa-parva Adhyāya 2 — Yudhiṣṭhira’s Inquiry for His Kin and the Vision of a Punitive Realm
“वह तो यहाँ अत्यन्त सम्मानित होकर महेन्द्रके समान राजलक्ष्मीसे सम्पन्न हुआ है। इधर यह किस कर्मका फल है कि मेरे सगे-सम्बन्धी नरकमें पड़े हुए हैं? ।।
sa tu iha atyanta-sammānito mahendra-samaḥ rāja-lakṣmyā sampannaḥ | iha ca idaṃ kasya karmaṇaḥ phalaṃ yat mama saga-sambandhino narake patitāḥ || sarva-dharma-vidaḥ śūrāḥ satyāgama-parāyaṇāḥ | kṣatra-dharma-ratāḥ santaḥ yajvāno bhūri-dakṣiṇāḥ ||
Él, en cambio, es aquí honrado en extremo, colmado de fortuna regia como el propio Indra. Pero ¿qué fruto de qué acto es éste, que mis mismos parientes hayan caído en el infierno? Mis hermanos eran conocedores de todo dharma: valientes, veraces y entregados a una conducta conforme a las enseñanzas sagradas. Firmes en el deber del kṣatriya, celebraron grandes sacrificios y otorgaron dádivas abundantes; y, sin embargo, ¿por qué les ha sobrevenido tal destino?
वैशम्पायन उवाच
The verse foregrounds the tension between visible merit (valor, truthfulness, sacrifices, generosity) and unseen karmic consequence. It raises the ethical problem of how outcomes in the afterlife may reflect subtle or prior causes beyond outwardly righteous conduct, prompting inquiry into the complexity of karma and dharma.
A speaker observes that one person is honored and prosperous like Indra, while the speaker’s own close relatives have fallen into hell. The speaker protests that these kinsmen were exemplary kṣatriyas—brave, truthful, scripturally aligned, and generous sacrificers—and asks why they have met such a grim destiny.