द्वादशः सर्गः — Rama’s Proof of Power, the First Duel, and the Identification Mark
Kishkindha Kanda, Sarga 12
तमद्यैव प्रियार्थं मे वैरिणं भ्रातृरूपिणम्।वालिनं जहि काकुत्स्थ मया बद्धोऽयमञ्जलिः4.12.11।।
tam adyaiva priyārthaṃ me vairiṇaṃ bhrātṛrūpiṇam | vālinaṃ jahi kākutstha mayā baddho 'yam añjaliḥ ||
ດັ່ງນັ້ນ ມື້ນີ້ເທົ່ານັ້ນ ໂອ້ ກາກຸດສະຖະ ເພື່ອຂ້າພະເຈົ້າ ຂໍພຣະອົງຈົ່ງປະຫານວາລີ ຜູ້ເປັນສັດຕູຂອງຂ້າພະເຈົ້າແຕ່ມີຮູບເປັນພີ່ນ້ອງ; ຂ້າພະເຈົ້າປະນົມມືວອນຂໍຕໍ່ພຣະອົງ
'O Rama, for my pleasure kill Vali who is, to me, an enemy in the guise of a brother. I fold my hands to you.
The verse raises the dharmic tension between kinship and justice: Sugriva frames Vali as an unjust aggressor, arguing that wrongdoing can nullify the moral protection normally granted by brotherhood.
Sugriva urgently petitions Rama to remove Vali, whom he describes as a hostile brother, and does so with supplication.
Sugriva’s humility in seeking help and his insistence on remedy against adharma (wrongdoing).