Preta-bhāva: Causes, Remedies, and the Rationale of Post-death Rites
Question-Catalogue
शंव स्कन्धे वहेत्पुत्रो वह्निदाता च पौत्रकः / किमर्थं देव देवेश आज्येनाभ्यञ्जनं कुतः
śaṃva skandhe vahetputro vahnidātā ca pautrakaḥ / kimarthaṃ deva deveśa ājyenābhyañjanaṃ kutaḥ
പുത്രൻ ശവത്തെ തോളിൽ വഹിക്കണം; പൗത്രൻ ചിതാഗ്നി ദാതാവാകണം. ഹേ ദേവദേവേശാ, നെയ്യാൽ അഭ്യഞ്ജനം ഏതു ലക്ഷ്യത്താൽ, എന്തുകൊണ്ട് ചെയ്യുന്നു?
Garuda (Vinata-putra) addressing Lord Vishnu
Ritual Type: Ekoddishta
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: Antyeṣṭi day and immediate post-cremation rites (contextual)
Concept: Antyeṣṭi is a saṃskāra where family members discharge ṛṇa (debts) to ancestors; ghee-anointing sanctifies and aids the rite’s efficacy.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma as harmonizer of saṃsāra; honoring the body as a temporary vessel while assisting the jīva’s transition.
Application: In bereavement, follow clear role assignments, maintain śauca (ritual purity), and perform rites calmly to support collective closure and the departed’s passage.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: cremation ground
Related Themes: Garuda Purana antyeṣṭi-vidhi: kartā roles, agni-dāna, snehana/ājya usage in cremation rites
This verse highlights dharmic role-allocation in antyeṣṭi: the son bears primary responsibility for the departed, while the grandson may be appointed to provide/establish the cremation fire—ensuring continuity of lineage-based duty in the last rites.
The verse frames ghee-anointing (ājya-abhyāñjana) as a deliberate ritual act whose rationale is being sought; in the Preta Kanda narrative, such questions prompt Vishnu’s explanation of how specific rites support the proper transition of the deceased through post-death stages.
When performing last rites, follow clearly assigned responsibilities within the family and consult learned guidance for ritual details like ghee anointing—treating them as intentional acts of duty (dharma) rather than mere custom.