Explanation of the Sapiṇḍana Rite; Causes of Pretahood; Viṣṇu Worship and Preta-ghaṭa Dāna
प्रेतकल्पे सपिण्डननिरूपणं नाम षड्विंशो ऽध्यायः तार्क्ष्य उवाच / कथं प्रेता वसन्त्यत्र कीदृग्रूपा भवन्ति ते / महाप्रेताः पिशाचाश्च कैःकैः कर्मफलैर्विभो / सर्वेषामनुकम्पार्थं ब्रूहि मे मधुसूदन
pretakalpe sapiṇḍananirūpaṇaṃ nāma ṣaḍviṃśo 'dhyāyaḥ tārkṣya uvāca / kathaṃ pretā vasantyatra kīdṛgrūpā bhavanti te / mahāpretāḥ piśācāśca kaiḥkaiḥ karmaphalairvibho / sarveṣāmanukampārthaṃ brūhi me madhusūdana
Dalam Preta-kalpa, bab kedua puluh enam yang bernama “Huraian tentang upacara Sapiṇḍana.” Tārkṣya (Garuda) berkata: “Bagaimanakah para preta tinggal di sini, dan apakah rupa mereka? Dan oleh buah-buah karma yang manakah, wahai Tuhan, ada yang menjadi mahā-preta dan ada pula yang menjadi piśāca? Demi belas kasihan kepada semua makhluk, jelaskanlah kepadaku, wahai Madhusūdana (Vishnu).”
Garuda (Tārkṣya, Vinatā-putra) addressing Lord Vishnu (Madhusūdana)
Afterlife Stage: Pretayoni
Ritual Type: Sapindana
Beneficiary: Pitr
Concept: Forms and dwelling-states of pretas arise from specific karma-phala; knowledge is sought for universal compassion.
Vedantic Theme: Karma determines embodiment and experience across realms; jñāna (right understanding) supports dharma and compassionate action.
Application: Cultivate awareness that actions shape post-mortem outcomes; let compassion motivate learning and performing supportive rites and ethical living.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Type: dialogue setting (Vishnu–Garuda samvada)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa: subsequent sections describing preta-lakṣaṇa, preta-vāsa, mahāpreta and piśāca causes (2.27 onward); Garuda Purana: naraka descriptions and karma-phala mapping in Pretakalpa chapters
This verse introduces the Sapiṇḍana topic as a compassionate inquiry into the preta condition, implying the rite’s role in addressing the post-death state and integrating the departed into the ancestral continuum.
It frames the after-death journey as a karma-shaped existence: beings may remain as pretas in various forms, and specific karmic results can lead to more intense states such as mahāpreta or piśāca.
Live with awareness of karma’s consequences and, when a death occurs, perform prescribed śrāddha-related duties (including sapiṇḍana where traditional practice applies) with compassion and responsibility toward the departed.