The Preta’s Staged Journey to Yama’s City: Monthly Śrāddha Supports, Vaitaraṇī Crossing, and the Witnesses of Deeds
सप्तमे मासि सम्प्राप्ते पुरं बह्वापदं व्रजेत् / तत्र भुक्त्व प्रदत्तं यच्छ्राद्धं सप्तममासिकम्
saptame māsi samprāpte puraṃ bahvāpadaṃ vrajet / tatra bhuktva pradattaṃ yacchrāddhaṃ saptamamāsikam
Apabila bulan ketujuh tiba, roh yang telah berpisah menuju sebuah kota yang dipenuhi banyak bahaya. Di sana, setelah menerima dan menikmati persembahan yang diberikan, dia memperoleh śrāddha bulanan bulan ketujuh yang dilakukan oleh orang yang masih hidup.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Afterlife Stage: Yamaloka Journey
Ritual Type: Ekoddishta
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: Seventh month after death (saptama-māsika)
Concept: Śrāddha performed by the living becomes experiential support for the departed during the preta-journey.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-bandha and subtle continuity: post-death experience is conditioned by saṃskāra and by dharmic acts of survivors (pitṛ-yajña).
Application: Perform the सप्तममासिक-śrāddha punctually with proper offering and intention, understanding it as direct aid to the departed’s passage.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Type: city
Related Themes: Garuda Purana, Pretakalpa: monthly stations of the preta and corresponding māsika-śrāddhas (contextual sequence around 2.16.1–2.16.50); Garuda Purana: śrāddha-phala passages describing relief to preta through offerings
This verse presents the seventh-month śrāddha as timely support to the departed during a perilous stage of the post-death journey, where the offering is said to be received and partaken of by the preta.
It describes the departed moving through specific stations over months, reaching a dangerous city in the seventh month, and indicates that ritual offerings from the family are experienced as sustenance and aid along the route.
If one follows śrāddha traditions, this verse supports observing the monthly rites with sincerity and proper offering (food/charity) as a disciplined way to honor ancestors and maintain continuity of dharma in the family.