Kuru's Consecration — Kuru’s Consecration and the Sanctification of Samantapañcaka (Kurukshetra)
अष्टौ सहस्राणि धरनुर्धराणां ये वारयन्तीह सुदुष्कृतान् वै स्नातुं न यच्छन्ति महोग्ररूपास्तवन्यस्य भूताः सचराचराणाम्
aṣṭau sahasrāṇi dharanurdharāṇāṃ ye vārayantīha suduṣkṛtān vai snātuṃ na yacchanti mahograrūpāstavanyasya bhūtāḥ sacarācarāṇām
Ici se trouvent huit mille puissants porteurs de la terre (êtres gardiens) qui répriment les véritables méchants; d’une forme extrêmement terrible, ils ne leur permettent pas de se baigner. Ces êtres, appartenant à ce Seigneur, protègent toutes les créatures, mobiles et immobiles.
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Tīrtha-snāna is not treated as a mechanical purifier for deliberate wrongdoing; the text emphasizes moral fitness. The 'fierce guardians' symbolize that sacred merit (puṇya) is approached through restraint, repentance, and right conduct—not by exploiting ritual as a loophole.
This belongs chiefly to Vamśānucarita/Ākhyāna-adjacent material in Purāṇas (narrative discourse) but functionally it is a Māhātmya (glorification of a sacred place). It is not sarga/pratisarga; it is a tīrtha-vidhi and tīrtha-stuti segment embedded in the larger Purāṇic narration.
The 'earth-bearers' and 'terrible-formed beings' function as dharma-bound gatekeepers: sacred geography is portrayed as alive, guarded, and ethically responsive. The moving/immoving totality (sacarācara) underscores cosmic order—tīrtha is a microcosm of ṛta/dharma.