Himavat Ratna-utpatti, Bhīṣma-maṇi Praśaṃsā, and Pitṛ-tarpaṇa Phala
पितॄतर्पणे पितॄणां तृप्तिर्बहुवार्षिकी भवति / शाम्यन्त्यद्भुतान्यपि सर्पाण्डजाखुवृश्चिकविषाणि / सलिलाग्निवैरितस्करभयानि भीमानि नश्यन्ति
pitṝtarpaṇe pitṝṇāṃ tṛptirbahuvārṣikī bhavati / śāmyantyadbhutānyapi sarpāṇḍajākhuvṛścikaviṣāṇi / salilāgnivairitaskarabhayāni bhīmāni naśyanti
Dengan melaksanakan tarpaṇa (curahan persembahan air) bagi Pitṛ, para leluhur memperoleh kepuasan yang berpanjangan selama bertahun-tahun. Bahkan bencana yang luar biasa pun reda—seperti bisa ular, makhluk yang lahir dari telur, tikus dan kala jengking—serta lenyaplah ketakutan dahsyat terhadap air, api, musuh dan pencuri.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Afterlife Stage: Svarga
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: Regular pitṛ-kārya occasions (e.g., amāvāsyā, pitṛ-pakṣa, annual tithi) implied; verse emphasizes multi-year effect.
Concept: Pitṛ-tarpaṇa yields long-lasting pitṛ-tṛpti and removes diverse upadravas (poisons, calamities, fears).
Vedantic Theme: Ṛṇa-traya (debt to ancestors) and dharmic reciprocity; unseen merit (adṛṣṭa) manifesting as protection and well-being.
Application: Perform regular tarpaṇa with purity, correct mantras and intention; integrate with ethical living and gratitude toward lineage.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: ritual site (home/riverbank)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa/Śrāddha sections broadly (pitṛ-tarpaṇa, śrāddha-phala); Garuda Purana 1.76.3-4 (protective upāyas)
This verse states that tarpaṇa brings long-lasting satisfaction to the Pitṛs and also pacifies dangers and fears affecting the living, indicating both ancestral welfare and protective fruit.
Indirectly, it emphasizes Pitṛkārya (ancestor rites) as supportive duties connected with post-death well-being; satisfying the Pitṛs is treated as a crucial ritual link between descendants and the departed/ancestral realm.
Perform tarpaṇa/Śrāddha with sincerity (as per one’s tradition) and cultivate gratitude to ancestors; the teaching frames such observances as dharmic acts believed to reduce obstacles and promote family well-being.