Āyuḥ-kṣaya by Vikarma; Impermanence of the Body; Aśauca and Child Śrāddha Procedures; Dāna as Remedy
अरक्षितारं राजानं नित्यं धर्मविवर्जितम् / क्रूरं व्यसनिनं मूर्खं वेदवादबहिष्कृतम् / प्रजापीडनकर्तारं राजानं यमशासनम्
arakṣitāraṃ rājānaṃ nityaṃ dharmavivarjitam / krūraṃ vyasaninaṃ mūrkhaṃ vedavādabahiṣkṛtam / prajāpīḍanakartāraṃ rājānaṃ yamaśāsanam
രക്ഷ നൽകാത്ത, നിത്യവും ധർമ്മവിവർജിതനായ, ക്രൂരനും വ്യസനാസക്തനും മൂഢനും വേദോപദേശത്തിൽ നിന്ന് ബഹിഷ്കൃതനും, പ്രജയെ പീഡിപ്പിക്കുന്ന രാജാവ്—യമന്റെ ദണ്ഡശാസനത്തിന് അധീനനാകുന്നു.
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Afterlife Stage: Yamaloka Journey
Concept: A king who fails to protect, abandons dharma, indulges in vice, rejects Vedic counsel, and oppresses subjects is liable to Yama’s chastisement.
Vedantic Theme: Rājadharma as loka-saṅgraha; misuse of power accrues heavy pāpa and binds the ruler to punitive karma.
Application: Leaders must prioritize protection, justice, sobriety, and wise counsel; institutions should restrain cruelty and corruption.
Primary Rasa: raudra
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: political realm/court
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: Yama as enforcer of moral order; condemnation of oppression and adharma by rulers (thematic parallel)
This verse frames protection of subjects as a ruler’s core dharma; when a king becomes cruel, vice-driven, and oppressive, he becomes liable to Yama’s punitive order in the afterlife.
It explicitly links social harm—failure to protect and active oppression of prajā—with post-death accountability, stating that such a ruler is subject to Yama’s chastisement.
For leaders: prioritize protection, fairness, and self-restraint; for individuals: support governance rooted in dharma and avoid enabling cruelty, addiction, and oppression.