The Sarasvata Hymn to Vishnu (Vishnu-Pañjara) and the Redemption of a Rakshasa
ये कूष्माण्डास्तथा यक्षा दैत्या ये च निशाचराः प्रेता विनायकाः क्रूरा मनुष्या जृम्भकाः खगाः
ye kūṣmāṇḍāstathā yakṣā daityā ye ca niśācarāḥ pretā vināyakāḥ krūrā manuṣyā jṛmbhakāḥ khagāḥ
તેઓ કૂષ્માંડ હોય, યક્ષ હોય, દૈત્ય હોય કે નિશાચર; પ્રેત હોય, ક્રૂર વિનાયક હોય; અથવા ક્રૂર મનુષ્ય, જૃંભક અને ખગ—(સર્વે નિરુપદ્રવ બને).
{ "primaryRasa": "bhayanaka", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
In many Purāṇic and ancillary traditions, ‘Vināyaka’ can denote obstructing spirits that cause impediments (vighna). This usage is not necessarily the devotional Gaṇeśa; rather it reflects an older/parallel semantic layer where vināyakas are a troublesome class to be appeased or restrained.
The list is pragmatic: danger to a pilgrim can come from any source—spirits, animals, or hostile people. Including ‘krūrā manuṣyāḥ’ universalizes the protective scope.
Jṛmbhakas are typically portrayed as afflicting entities associated with seizure-like troubles, stupor, or epidemic/possession motifs. Their mention signals protection against illness-like or trance-like harms encountered in liminal spaces (forests, cremation grounds, remote tīrthas).