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Shloka 9

Daiva–Puruṣakāra Saṃvāda

Kṛpa’s Counsel on Destiny and Human Effort

इस प्रकार श्रीमह्याभारत सौप्तिकपर्वमें अश्वत्थामाकी मन्त्रणाविषयक पहला अध्याय पूरा हुआ

sañjaya uvāca | tābhyāṃ sarve hi kāryārthā manuṣyāṇāṃ nararṣabha | viceṣṭantaḥ sama dṛśyante nivṛttās tu tathaiva ca | narāśreṣṭha! manuṣyōṃ ke pravṛtti aura nivṛtti-sambandhī sāre kārya daiva aura puruṣārtha donoṃ se hī siddha hote dekhe jāte haiṃ |

സഞ്ജയൻ പറഞ്ഞു—ഹേ നരശ്രേഷ്ഠാ, മനുഷ്യരുടെ പ്രവൃത്തിയോടും നിവൃത്തിയോടും ബന്ധപ്പെട്ട എല്ലാ കാര്യങ്ങളും ഈ രണ്ടിന്റെയും—ദൈവവും പുരുഷപ്രയത്‌നവും—സഹകരണത്തിലൂടെയാണെന്ന് കാണപ്പെടുന്നു. പരിശ്രമിക്കുന്നവരായാലും പിന്മാറിയവരായാലും, ഫലങ്ങൾ ഒരുപോലെ ഈ രണ്ടിന്റെയും സംയുക്ത പ്രവർത്തനത്തിൽ നിന്നാണ് ഉദ്ഭവിക്കുന്നത്.

{'tābhyām''by those two (i.e., by both factors)', 'sarve': 'all', 'kāryārthāḥ': 'purposes to be achieved
{'tābhyām':
intended tasks/ends', 'manuṣyāṇām''of human beings', 'nararṣabha': 'O bull among men (honorific address)', 'viceṣṭantaḥ': 'those who strive
intended tasks/ends', 'manuṣyāṇām':
those engaged in effort', 'sama''equally
those engaged in effort', 'sama':
in the same manner', 'dṛśyante''are seen
in the same manner', 'dṛśyante':
are observed', 'nivṛttāḥ''those who have withdrawn
are observed', 'nivṛttāḥ':
those who desist from action', 'tathaiva''just so
those who desist from action', 'tathaiva':
likewise', 'narāśreṣṭha''O best of men (honorific address)', 'pravṛtti': 'engagement in action
likewise', 'narāśreṣṭha':
active pursuit', 'nivṛtti''withdrawal
active pursuit', 'nivṛtti':
cessation/renunciation of action', 'daiva''fate
cessation/renunciation of action', 'daiva':
the divine dispensation', 'puruṣārtha''human effort
the divine dispensation', 'puruṣārtha':

संजय उवाच

S
Sanjaya

Educational Q&A

The verse teaches a balanced view: human outcomes arise through the combined operation of daiva (destiny) and puruṣārtha (personal effort). It cautions against absolutizing either—neither pure fatalism nor pure self-reliance alone explains results.

Sanjaya offers a reflective general principle to the listener (addressed as ‘best of men’), framing human action in terms of pravṛtti (active striving) and nivṛtti (withdrawal). This sets an ethical-philosophical tone within the Sauptika Parva’s grim aftermath of war.