Dietary Rules & Purification — Dietary Rules, Purification (Śauca), and the Duties of the Householder and Forest-Dweller
ततः पितृत्वमापन्ने दर्शपूर्णादिभिः सुभैः प्रीणनं तस्य कर्त्तव्यं यथा श्रुतिनिदर्शनात्
tataḥ pitṛtvamāpanne darśapūrṇādibhiḥ subhaiḥ prīṇanaṃ tasya karttavyaṃ yathā śrutinidarśanāt
Entonces, cuando ha alcanzado la condición de pitṛ (antepasado), debe ser complacido y propiciado mediante observancias auspiciosas, como los ritos de luna nueva y luna llena, conforme a lo indicado por la Śruti (el Veda).
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Dharma is presented as continuity: obligations do not end with death; once the deceased is regarded as pitṛ, regular, calendrically anchored rites sustain gratitude, lineage responsibility, and social-religious stability.
As with many Purāṇas, this is an instructional (ācāra/dharma) layer supplementing the pancalakṣaṇa; it is not a genealogical or cosmological section but a normative ritual guideline grounded in śruti.
Darśa–pūrṇamāsa cycles symbolize time’s sacred rhythm: aligning ancestral propitiation with lunar order expresses that the family’s invisible bonds are harmonized with cosmic periodicity.