Harihara Revelation and the Kurukshetra Tirtha Cycle: Sthanu in Vishnu and the Sanctification of Saptasarasvata
षडङ्गनिधनं घोरं षाङ्गुण्यप्रतिषेधनम् एकादशममेवोक्तं नरकं सद्भिरुत्तमम्
ṣaḍaṅganidhanaṃ ghoraṃ ṣāṅguṇyapratiṣedhanam ekādaśamamevoktaṃ narakaṃ sadbhiruttamam
अकरावा नरक, सत्पुरुषांनी अत्यंत कठोर म्हणून सांगितलेला—षडङ्गांचा घोर नाश आणि षाङ्गुण्य (षड्गुणयुक्त शिस्त/सद्गुण) याचा निषेध वा अडथळा।
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That is the most natural Purāṇic-dharmic reading: ‘six limbs’ as the Vedāṅgas that preserve correct recitation, ritual procedure, grammar, etymology, meter, and calendrical astronomy. ‘Destroying the ṣaḍaṅga’ then means undermining the infrastructure of Vedic learning—through suppression, corruption, or deliberate mis-teaching.
Ṣāṅguṇya literally indicates ‘sixfold goodness/completeness.’ In dharma contexts it can denote a recognized sixfold set of virtues or the proper completeness of a rite/discipline. ‘Pratiṣedhana’ implies obstructing or denying that normative framework—thus producing defective practice and social-religious confusion.
Here ‘uttama’ is best read as ‘most notable/most severe’ because the targeted sins attack the roots of dharma itself: the educational and disciplinary structures that enable correct knowledge and practice. When those are ruined, many other transgressions proliferate—hence the text marks this naraka as especially grave.