Prahlada’s Kurukshetra Pilgrimage and the Origin of the Chakra–Trishula Exchange
तत्र स्नात्वा च दृष्ट्वा च संतर्प्य पितृदेवताः पुण्डरीकं च संपूज्य उवास दिवसत्रयम्
tatra snātvā ca dṛṣṭvā ca saṃtarpya pitṛdevatāḥ puṇḍarīkaṃ ca saṃpūjya uvāsa divasatrayam
{"has_teaching": true, "teaching_type": "bhakti", "core_concept": "Darśana of Śiva at a tīrtha as a direct means of inner purification and grace.", "teaching_summary": "The verse elevates Koṭitīrtha as a locus where the devotee encounters Rudra (vṛṣabhadhvaja). It teaches that pilgrimage culminates in darśana—transformative seeing—rather than mere ritual completion.", "vedantic_theme": "Īśvara-anugraha (grace) accessed through bhakti and sacred space; non-exclusivist theism implied by Purāṇic inclusivity.", "practical_application": "Approach tīrtha-darśana with focused attention (ekāgratā), treating the site as a living presence rather than a symbol only."}
{ "primaryRasa": "", "secondaryRasa": "", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Tarpaṇa is classically water-mediated: libations (udaka) are offered to sustain and honor the Pitṛs. A major water-site (‘great waters’ in the preceding verse) is therefore especially apt for pitṛ-kārya, amplifying the rite’s efficacy in Purāṇic valuation.
A three-day residence marks deliberate observance rather than a passing visit. In tīrtha literature, extended stay often implies completion of vows (vrata), repeated bathing/worship cycles, and accruing compounded merit tied to the site’s sanctity.
It can encompass all three. In pilgrimage idiom, ‘darśana’ includes beholding the installed deity (mūrti/liṅga), the sanctified natural feature (water/lotus-lake), and the ritualized space as a manifestation of sacred presence.