Indra’s Penance at the Great River and Aditi’s Solar Vow for Vishnu’s Descent
महानदी यत्र सुरर्षिकन्या जलापदेशाद्धिमशैलमेत्य चक्रे जगत्पापविनष्टिमग्र्यां संदर्शनप्राशनमञ्जनेन
mahānadī yatra surarṣikanyā jalāpadeśāddhimaśailametya cakre jagatpāpavinaṣṭimagryāṃ saṃdarśanaprāśanamañjanena
{"location": "Brahmaloka (pitāmaha-ājira, ‘courtyard of the Grandfather’)", "location_type": "loka", "region": "Upper worlds beyond the mortal sphere", "sacred_significance": "Seat of Brahmā; symbol of the highest accessible station for beings bound by karma and limited power.", "cosmic_realm": "svarloka"}
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Three classic tīrtha-acts are named: darśana (seeing the sacred water), prāśana (drinking), and mañjana (bathing). The verse frames them as intrinsically sin-destroying at Mahānadī.
She functions as an etiological figure explaining the river’s exceptional pāpa-haraṇa power. Even without her personal name in this excerpt, the Purāṇic pattern is clear: a celestial-sage lineage and a journey to Himālaya confer sanctity and cosmic efficacy on the river.
Himālaya is a paradigmatic source-region for sacred waters and tapas. Mentioning dhimaśaila situates Mahānadī within a sanctified Himalayan cosmography, strengthening its authority as a purifier.