Adhyaya 31 — Naimittika and Related Śrāddha Rites: Sapiṇḍīkaraṇa, Eligibility, Timing, and Procedure
कन्यादूषयिता वैद्यो गुरुपित्रोस्तथोज्झकः ।
भृतकाध्यापकोऽमित्रः परपूर्वापतिस्तथा ॥
kanyādūṣayitā vaidyo gurupitrostathojjhakaḥ | bhṛtakādhyāpako 'mitraḥ parapūrvāpatistathā ||
Celui qui corrompt une jeune fille; le médecin (par profession, tenu ici pour rituellement impropre); celui qui abandonne son maître ou son père; celui qui enseigne pour un salaire; l’ennemi; et celui qui a pris l’ancienne épouse d’un autre homme — de telles personnes doivent être évitées (dans les rites liés au śrāddha).
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Śrāddha is framed as an ethically charged rite: the performer must honor ancestors through restraint and by choosing recipients whose conduct supports dharma. The exclusions emphasize sexual ethics, loyalty to elders/teachers, and integrity in learning.
This passage belongs to āchāra/dharma instruction (not directly to sarga/pratisarga/vaṃśa/manvantara/vaṃśānucarita), functioning as ancillary dharma material within the Purāṇa.
The ‘fitness’ of the recipient symbolizes the vessel-like nature of ritual transmission: offerings meant to elevate the pitṛs should pass through a mind-and-conduct aligned channel; adharma is portrayed as causing the rite to lose its intended subtle efficacy.