Aśauca-vidhi — Rules of Birth/Death Impurity, Sapinda Circles, and Śrāddha Sequence
आचार्यपुत्रे पत्न्यां च अहोरात्रमुदाहृतम् / एकाहं स्यादुपाध्याये स्वग्रामे श्रोत्रिये ऽपि च
ācāryaputre patnyāṃ ca ahorātramudāhṛtam / ekāhaṃ syādupādhyāye svagrāme śrotriye 'pi ca
Pour le fils de l’ācārya et pour son épouse, il est dit que l’impureté dure un jour et une nuit. Pour l’upādhyāya (enseignant) et aussi pour un śrotriya (brahmane versé dans les Veda) dans son propre village, ce doit être un jour.
Suta (narrator) relaying a Dharma teaching within the Kurma Purana
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
This verse is primarily dharma-śāstra oriented, prescribing ashauca durations; indirectly, it supports Atman-realization by emphasizing disciplines of purity that prepare the mind for mantra, worship, and yogic steadiness.
No direct yogic technique is taught here; the verse highlights preparatory restraints (niyama-like purity observances) that protect the efficacy of japa, pūjā, and śaiva–vaiṣṇava devotional practice central to the Kurma Purana’s soteriology.
The verse does not explicitly mention Shiva or Vishnu; it contributes to the shared dharmic framework within which the Kurma Purana presents a Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis, where purity rules support worship of the one Supreme expressed through multiple forms.