Karmic Causes of Narakas and the Irremediability of Ingratitude (Kṛtaghna-doṣa)
गोब्राह्णणाग्नयः स्पृष्टा यैरुच्छिष्टैः क्षपाचर क्षिप्यन्ते हि करास्तेषां तप्तसुम्भे सुदारुणे
gobrāhṇaṇāgnayaḥ spṛṣṭā yairucchiṣṭaiḥ kṣapācara kṣipyante hi karāsteṣāṃ taptasumbhe sudāruṇe
ឱ អ្នកដើរពេលរាត្រី (kṣapācara) អ្នកណាដែលដោយសារភាពមិនបរិសុទ្ធពីអាហារសល់ (ucchiṣṭa) ធ្វើឲ្យគោ ព្រាហ្មណ៍ ឬភ្លើងបូជាសក្ការៈត្រូវប៉ះ—ដៃរបស់ពួកនោះត្រូវគេបោះចូលក្នុងឆ្នាំងដែកក្តៅដ៏សាហាវ។
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Ritual and ethical discipline are treated as inseparable: careless impurity (ucchiṣṭa) becomes a moral fault when it pollutes protected sanctities—cow, brahmin, and sacrificial fire—thus generating severe karmic consequences.
This is not sarga/pratisarga/vaṃśa material; it aligns best with dharma-nirdeśa embedded within the Purāṇic narrative stream, i.e., an ethical-ritual instruction segment ancillary to vaṃśānucarita/ākhyāna sections.
Hands symbolize agency and action; the punishment targeting hands teaches that impure actions (especially those violating sacred boundaries) deform the doer’s very capacity to act, reflecting a karmic ‘fit’ between deed and result.