Adhyaya 33 — Madālasa on the Fruit of Śrāddha Performed on Lunar Days and Nakṣatras
यथासम्भावितान्नेन श्राद्धसम्पत्समन्वितः ।
युवानः पितरो यस्य मृताः शस्त्रेण वा हताः ॥
yathāsambhāvitānnena śrāddha-sampat-samanvitaḥ | yuvānaḥ pitaro yasya mṛtāḥ śastreṇa vā hatāḥ ||
シュラーダ(śrāddha)にふさわしい具を備え、身の丈に応じて供物の食を捧げるとき—両親が若くして亡くなった者、あるいは武器によって命を奪われた者の場合には……
{ "primaryRasa": "karuna", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The text recognizes exceptional suffering—untimely or violent death—and prescribes tailored care through rites, emphasizing compassion and responsibility rather than fatalism.
Again, dharma/ācāra guidance. It functions as applied ethics within household life.
Untimely/violent death is treated as a disruption in the ancestral transition; the rite is a symbolic repair, restoring order (ṛta) between the living and the departed.