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Shloka 34

Adhyaya 40: Kali-yuga Lakshana, Yuga-sandhyamsha, and the Re-emergence of Dharma

शुक्लदन्ताजिनाक्षाश् च मुण्डाः काषायवाससः शूद्रा धर्मं चरिष्यन्ति युगान्ते समुपस्थिते

śukladantājinākṣāś ca muṇḍāḥ kāṣāyavāsasaḥ śūdrā dharmaṃ cariṣyanti yugānte samupasthite

ಯುಗಾಂತ ಸಮೀಪಿಸಿದಾಗ ಶೂದ್ರರೂ ತಪಸ್ವಿಗಳ ಗುರುತುಗಳನ್ನು ಧರಿಸುವರು—ಶ್ವೇತ ದಂತ, ಮೃಗಚರ್ಮ, ರುದ್ರಾಕ್ಷ; ಮುಂಡಿತ ಶಿರಸ್ಸು ಮತ್ತು ಕಾಷಾಯ ವಸ್ತ್ರಗಳಿಂದ ‘ಧರ್ಮ’ ಆಚರಿಸುವರು.

śukla-dantawhite-tusked/with white teeth
śukla-danta:
ajinadeerskin
ajina:
akṣāḥrosary beads (rudrākṣa/akṣa-beads)
akṣāḥ:
caand
ca:
muṇḍāḥshaven-headed
muṇḍāḥ:
kāṣāya-vāsasaḥwearing ochre robes
kāṣāya-vāsasaḥ:
śūdrāḥŚūdras
śūdrāḥ:
dharmamdharma/religious conduct
dharmam:
cariṣyantiwill practice/undertake
cariṣyanti:
yuga-anteat the end of the yuga
yuga-ante:
samupasthitewhen it has arrived/when it is imminent
samupasthite:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

FAQs

It warns that external signs of religiosity can proliferate near yugānta; for Linga-worship, the implication is that true devotion to Pati (Śiva) is measured by inner purity and right practice, not merely by ascetic costume.

Indirectly: Śiva as Pati is not reached by outward marks alone. Shiva-tattva is realized when the pashu (soul) loosens pasha (bondage) through genuine discipline, devotion, and knowledge rather than mere appearance.

It highlights ascetic identifiers (muṇḍa, kāṣāya, ajina, akṣa-mālā) and implies the Shaiva critique: such externals must be joined to authentic sādhanā—especially inner restraint and Pāśupata-oriented transformation—to be meaningful.