Ahiṃsā as Threefold Restraint (Mind–Speech–Action) and the Ethics of Consumption
बलीवर्दों मृतश्चापि जायते ब्रद्यराक्षस: । ब्रह्मरक्षश्ष मासांस्त्रींस्ततो जायति ब्राह्मण:
balīvardo mṛtaś cāpi jāyate brahmarākṣasaḥ | brahmarākṣasaḥ māsāṁs trīṁs tato jāyati brāhmaṇaḥ ||
યુધિષ્ઠિરે કહ્યું—બળદ મરે ત્યારે તે બ્રહ્મરાક્ષસ બને છે. ત્રણ માસ બ્રહ્મરાક્ષસ રહી પછી તે ફરી બ્રાહ્મણ-યોનિમાં જન્મ પામે છે.
युधिछिर उवाच
The verse presents a karmic sequence: a being’s next state can shift dramatically based on moral causality, including an intermediate, painful or distorted condition (brahmarākṣasa) before returning to a higher birth (brāhmaṇa). It highlights accountability and the possibility of restoration after a limited period of consequence.
Yudhiṣṭhira is speaking within a dharma-discourse context, describing the post-mortem destiny of a bull: upon death it becomes a brahmarākṣasa, remains so for three months, and then is reborn as a brāhmaṇa—an illustrative example used to explain moral recompense and transformation across births.