Dharma–Adharma Marks; Daśāha, Piṇḍa Formation, Śrāddha Calendar, Śayyā-dāna, and Sapiṇḍīkaraṇa Rules
उदकुम्भेन पुष्टानि तान्यस्थीनि भवन्ति हि / एतस्माद्दीयते कुम्भः प्रीतिः प्रेतस्य जायते
udakumbhena puṣṭāni tānyasthīni bhavanti hi / etasmāddīyate kumbhaḥ prītiḥ pretasya jāyate
ഉദകുംഭദാനത്തിലൂടെ ആ (സൂക്ഷ്മതത്ത്വങ്ങൾ) പോഷിതമായി അസ്ഥികളായി മാറുന്നു. അതുകൊണ്ടാണ് കുംഭം നൽകുന്നത്; അതിനാൽ പ്രേതന് പ്രീതി, തൃപ്തി ജനിക്കുന്നു.
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vainateya)
Afterlife Stage: Pretayoni
Ritual Type: Ekoddishta
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: Post-death sequence connected with ekādaśāha onward; kumbha-giving as part of preta-support rites.
Concept: Ritual causality: udakumbha offerings ‘nourish’ subtle constituents culminating in bones; giving the pot yields preta-prīti (satisfaction).
Vedantic Theme: Subtle-body continuity under karma; compassionate action (anukampā) expressed through prescribed rites; the living’s duty supports orderly transition.
Application: Perform kumbha-dāna/udaka-related offerings with faith and cleanliness; understand the rite as supportive care for the departed, aiding emotional closure for the family.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: domestic/cremation-following ritual setting
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.34.60 on daily anna+udaka offerings from the ghaṭa; Garuda Purana preta-śarīra formation teachings (piṇḍa/udaka nourishing limbs) in śrāddha-related passages
This verse states that the udaka-kumbha nourishes the preta’s post-death formation—supporting the emergence of bodily structures like bones—thereby giving the departed satisfaction (prīti).
It reflects the Garuda Purana’s view that the departed (preta) undergoes a transitional state where ritual offerings materially support its subtle journey; the water-pot offering specifically provides nourishment and relief during this phase.
Perform post-death rites with sincerity—especially water offerings and prescribed donations—seeing them as acts of support and compassion for the departed and as dharmic duties for the family.