Kīṭopākhyāna: Prajā-pālana as Kṣatra-vrata and the Attainment of Brāhmaṇya
मां स भक्षयते यस्माद् भक्षयिष्ये तमप्यहम् । एतन्मांसस्य मांसत्वमनुबुद्ध्यस्व भारत
māṁ sa bhakṣayate yasmād bhakṣayiṣye tam apy aham | etan māṁsasya māṁsatvam anubuddhyasva bhārata, bharatanandana ||
Bhīṣma berkata: “Kerana dia memakan aku, aku juga akan memakan dia.” Inilah tepatnya yang menjadikan ‘daging’ (māṁsa) itu ‘daging’: fahamilah, wahai Bharata, bahawa kata itu sendiri menunjuk kepada kitaran saling memakan dan pembalasan.
भीष्म उवाच
The verse uses a traditional wordplay on māṁsa (“meat/flesh”) to highlight the ethical idea of reciprocal harm: the one who is eaten ‘promises’ to eat the eater in turn. It frames meat-eating as participation in a cycle of violence and retaliation, urging moral reflection.
In Anushasana Parva, Bhishma is instructing Yudhishthira on dharma and ethical conduct. Here he explains the moral implication of consuming flesh by presenting the victim’s imagined statement—“he eats me, so I will eat him”—and then tells the listener to grasp this as the intended sense behind the term māṁsa.