Adhyaya 76 — The Sixth Manvantara: Cakshusha Manu, the Child-Snatcher, and the Problem of Kinship
जडाङ्गबाह्यकरणं शुद्धान्तः करणात्मकम् ।
जहारा तं परित्यक्तं सा तदा जातहारिणी ॥
jaḍāṅgabāhyakaraṇaṃ śuddhāntaḥ karaṇātmakam / jahāra taṃ parityaktaṃ sā tadā jātahāriṇī
Alors la jātahāriṇī emporta l’enfant ainsi abandonné—dont les membres et les sens extérieurs demeuraient encore inertes, mais dont l’organe intérieur (esprit/cœur) était pur.
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The verse emphasizes duty of guardianship: the helpless (with undeveloped ‘outer instruments’) must be protected. It also subtly affirms an inner purity in the newborn, underscoring the gravity of harming the innocent.
Ākhyāna; additionally it borrows sāṃkhya/vedānta vocabulary (antaḥkaraṇa) for vivid description, but remains narrative-moral rather than doctrinal exposition.
The ‘child’ can represent a fresh sattvic intention or spiritual birth. When outer discipline (bāhya-karaṇa control) is weak, predatory tendencies (jātahāriṇī) can seize and ‘consume’ that purity.