Narmadā
Revā) Tīrtha Greatness: The Gandharva Maidens’ Curse Narrative (Acchodā Episode Begins
कथं रेवाजलस्पर्शाद्विपाकाच्छापसंभवात् । विमुक्ताः कुत्र ताः सस्नुः सर्वं मे कथय प्रभो
kathaṃ revājalasparśādvipākācchāpasaṃbhavāt | vimuktāḥ kutra tāḥ sasnuḥ sarvaṃ me kathaya prabho
शापजन्य विपाक परिपक्व झाल्यावर रेवेच्या जलस्पर्शाने त्या कशा मुक्त झाल्या? त्यांनी कुठे स्नान केले? हे प्रभो, मला सर्व सांगावे.
Unspecified (a questioner addressing a revered authority as 'Prabhu')
Concept: Karma’s ‘ripening’ (vipāka) can be met with an appropriate sacred remedy (tīrtha-snāna), transforming curse into liberation.
Application: When facing consequences, combine accountability (accept vipāka) with constructive spiritual practice (pilgrimage, prayer, charity) rather than despair.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: tirtha
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A respectful questioner leans forward toward a luminous sage, palms joined, as if asking for a map of liberation: ‘Where did they bathe?’ Behind them, the Revā flows in a sweeping curve, and faint silhouettes of women approach the ghāṭa with water-pots, suggesting the imminent revelation of the exact tīrtha.","primary_figures":["Questioner (devotee/king)","Revered authority (Prabhu—sage narrator)","Gandharva maidens (silhouetted, approaching snāna)"],"setting":"Riverside hermitage overlooking a prominent bathing ghat; steps descending into the river; small shrine and banyan tree","lighting_mood":"divine radiance (late afternoon glow)","color_palette":["amber","river teal","stone gray","marigold orange","deep brown"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: the questioner in ornate yet humble posture before the sage; the Revā behind as a stylized wave band with gold-leaf highlights; women with kalashas near the ghāṭa; rich reds/greens, embossed gold borders, gem-studded ornaments, and a small Vishnu-emblem shrine to anchor Vaishnava tīrtha sanctity.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: gentle river curve, delicate ghāṭa steps; refined figures with expressive hands; distant women approaching for snāna; soft atmospheric perspective and cool palette with warm sunlight accents; fine floral detailing around the hermitage.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines; sage labeled by posture and halo; river as patterned band; women in rhythmic procession; red/yellow/green palette with temple mural symmetry and iconographic clarity.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: ornate border of lotuses; central dialogue scene; stylized ghāṭa with repeated step motifs; peacocks near the banyan; deep blues and gold, emphasizing the sacred ‘where’ of snāna as a devotional geography."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Bhupali","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"reverent-soft","sound_elements":["flowing water","soft hand cymbals","birds","brief silence between questions"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: revājalasparśādvipākāt = revā-jala-sparśāt + vipākāt; vipākācchāpasaṃbhavāt = vipākāt + śāpa-saṃbhavāt (त् + श् → च्छ्); सर्वं मे = sarvam + me
It treats the Revā (Narmadā) as a liberating tīrtha whose waters can catalyze release from heavy karmic conditions, even those linked to a curse.
It frames liberation as occurring when the curse’s effect “ripens” (vipāka), implying a moral-causal timeline in which consequences mature and can be resolved through sacred contact and proper circumstance.
It emphasizes accountability and the desire to understand cause-and-effect: one should inquire into how actions, curses, and remedial sacred practices interact, rather than assuming liberation is random.