Prāyaścitta for Theft, Forbidden Foods, Impurity, and Ritual Lapses; Tīrtha–Vrata Remedies; Pativratā Mahātmyam via Sītā and Agni
चाण्डालान्त्यशवं स्पृष्ट्वा कृच्छ्रं कुर्याद् विशुद्धये / स्पृष्ट्वाभ्यक्तस्त्वसंस्पृश्यमहोरात्रेण शुद्ध्यति
cāṇḍālāntyaśavaṃ spṛṣṭvā kṛcchraṃ kuryād viśuddhaye / spṛṣṭvābhyaktastvasaṃspṛśyamahorātreṇa śuddhyati
ചാണ്ഡാലൻ, അന്ത്യജൻ അല്ലെങ്കിൽ ശവം സ്പർശിച്ചാൽ പൂർണ്ണ വിശുദ്ധിക്കായി കൃച്ഛ്ര പ്രായശ്ചിത്തം അനുഷ്ഠിക്കണം. എന്നാൽ സ്നാനം ചെയ്ത് അഭ്യംഗം ചെയ്ത ശേഷം ‘അസ്പൃശ്യ’നെ സ്പർശിച്ചാൽ ഒരു അഹോരാത്രത്തിനകം ശുദ്ധിയാകും।
Traditional Purāṇic narrator (instructional dharma section; framed as authoritative teaching within the Kurma Purana’s discourse)
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: shanta
This verse does not directly teach Ātman-doctrine; it focuses on śauca and prāyaścitta (ritual-ethical purification). Indirectly, it reflects the Purāṇic view that disciplined conduct and purification support eligibility for higher spiritual practice and knowledge.
No specific meditation is taught here; the practice highlighted is Kṛcchra (a structured austerity/penance) and time-bound purification (ahorātra). In the Kurma Purana’s broader Shaiva–Vaishnava synthesis, such discipline functions as preparatory purification (adhikāra-siddhi) for yoga and devotion.
It does not explicitly address Shiva–Vishnu unity; it belongs to the dharma section regulating purity and expiation. The synthesis is contextual: the Purana integrates disciplined dharma (often associated with Shaiva ascetic rigor) with Purāṇic devotion and cosmic order upheld by Hari.