Dhṛtarāṣṭra’s Anxiety and Bhīṣma’s Theological Explanation of Pāṇḍava Invincibility
Book 6, Chapter 61
उदतिष्ठद् रजो भौम॑ छादयानं दिवाकरम् | न दिश: प्रदिशो वापि तत्र हन्यु: कथं नरा:
udatiṣṭhad rajo bhaumaṁ chādayānaṁ divākaram | na diśaḥ pradiśo vāpi tatra hanyuḥ kathaṁ narāḥ ||
Sañjaya berkata: Debu dari bumi bangkit bergulung-gulung hingga menutupi matahari. Arah mata angin dan arah antara pun tidak dapat dikenal pasti; dalam keadaan demikian, bagaimana para pejuang di sana dapat melayangkan serangan kepada sesiapa?
संजय उवाच
When perception and orientation collapse, action becomes indiscriminate; the verse highlights the ethical danger of warfare where judgment is obscured and responsibility for harm becomes harder to sustain.
Sañjaya describes the battlefield: massive dust rises from the ground, hides the sun, and makes it impossible to distinguish directions, so fighters cannot clearly see whom they are striking.