An exposition of varṇa-dharma as taught by Yājñavalkya
अपुत्रा गुबपुज्ञातो देवरः पुत्रकान्यगा / सपिण्डो वा समोत्रो वा घृताभ्यक्त ऋतावियात्
aputrā gubapujñāto devaraḥ putrakānyagā / sapiṇḍo vā samotro vā ghṛtābhyakta ṛtāviyāt
Si une femme est sans fils et que son époux est inconnu (ou indisponible), alors le beau‑frère (devara) ou un parent—sapinda (de la même lignée ancestrale) ou du même gotra—après s’être oint de ghee, peut s’approcher d’elle au temps favorable (ṛtu) afin d’engendrer un fils.
Lord Vishnu
Concept: In specified exceptional conditions, niyoga-like begetting of a son through a designated kinsman is permitted, regulated by season and ritual preparation.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma as contextual rule-system balancing individual conduct with lineage/social obligations; ritual purity as support for ordered life.
Application: Recognize that traditional texts sometimes provide exception-procedures for social continuity; in modern terms, prioritize ethical safeguards, consent, and lawful frameworks around reproductive decisions.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana dharma passages on progeny, lineage rites, and exceptional procedures (general parallel motifs)
This verse treats a son as essential for lineage continuity and dharmic obligations, permitting a regulated, kin-based method to obtain progeny when the husband is unavailable.
It frames a sensitive act under strict dharmic constraints—qualified relative (sapinda/same gotra), ritual preparation (ghee anointment), and proper timing (ṛtu)—showing how conduct is regulated by purity and social-religious order.
As a historical dharma guideline, it highlights the text’s emphasis on regulated conduct, consent, and ritual propriety; modern readers typically apply it as contextual ethics rather than a literal prescription.