Moksha and Svarga through Dāna, Tīrtha, Nāma-smaraṇa, and Bhāva
या वापी निर्जले देशे यद्दानं निर्धने द्विजे / प्राणिनां यो दयां धत्ते स भवेन्नाकनायकः
yā vāpī nirjale deśe yaddānaṃ nirdhane dvije / prāṇināṃ yo dayāṃ dhatte sa bhavennākanāyakaḥ
ജലമില്ലാ ദേശത്ത് വാപി നിർമ്മിപ്പിക്കുന്നവൻ, ദരിദ്ര ബ്രാഹ്മണന് ദാനം ചെയ്യുന്നവൻ, ജീവികളോടു കരുണ ധരിക്കുന്നവൻ—അവൻ സ്വർഗ്ഗത്തിലെ നായകനാകുന്നു.
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Threefold dharma—public welfare (well), support of the needy brāhmaṇa, and universal compassion—leads to exalted heavenly status.
Vedantic Theme: Dayā (compassion) as sattva-guṇa expression; karma aligned with dharma elevates the jīva’s trajectory.
Application: Combine infrastructure charity, targeted support for the vulnerable/learned, and daily non-harm/compassion in conduct.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: arid region
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: dayā and dāna repeatedly praised as puṇya; svarga titles as karmic rewards
This verse presents charity (dāna) and compassion (dayā) as high-merit deeds: public welfare (providing water), supporting the needy, and kindness to all beings together elevate one to honored heavenly status.
By highlighting acts that generate puṇya—especially compassion and life-supporting charity—the verse implies that such merit shapes favorable post-death destinations, described in the Purana as higher, celestial attainments.
Support water access and community resources, give responsibly to those in need (including learned and needy persons), and practice non-cruelty and compassion toward all living beings as daily dharma.