HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 41Shloka 11
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Vamana Purana — Harihara Non-Duality, Shloka 11

Harihara Non-Duality and the Revelation of Sadasiva to the Ganas

तथा पाशुपताश्चान्ये भस्मप्रहारणा विभो एते गणास्त्वसंख्याताः सहायार्थं समागताः

tathā pāśupatāścānye bhasmaprahāraṇā vibho ete gaṇāstvasaṃkhyātāḥ sahāyārthaṃ samāgatāḥ

Demikian pula ada Pāśupata lainnya, wahai Vibhu, yang cara menyerangnya dengan abu suci. Gaṇa-gaṇa yang tak terhitung ini telah berkumpul demi memberi pertolongan.

Narrator/reciter describing the gathering of Śiva’s gaṇas (addressed to Śiva as ‘vibhu’)
Shiva (Paśupati)
Śaiva gaṇa-loreMilitant asceticism (bhasma as emblem/weapon)Divine assistance and mobilizationAndhaka-vadha cycle

{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

They are devotees/initiates of Paśupati (Śiva), often portrayed in Purāṇic narrative as fierce ascetics and ritual specialists who bear Śaiva marks (especially bhasma) and serve as part of Śiva’s wider retinue.

Bhasma is both a ritual substance and a symbol of cremation-ground asceticism, signifying mastery over death and impurity. In Purāṇic battle imagery, such ascetic power is dramatized as efficacious—capable of subduing opponents through tapas and mantra-charged substances, not merely conventional arms.

It magnifies Śiva’s sovereignty and the cosmic scale of the conflict (here, within the Andhaka-vadha cycle). The ‘countless’ host signals that the divine side is supported by an overwhelming, multi-formed assemblage of beings.