Dietary Rules & Purification — Dietary Rules, Purification (Śauca), and the Duties of the Householder and Forest-Dweller
विषोद्बन्धनशस्त्राम्बुवह्निपातमृतेषु च बाले प्रव्राजि संन्यासे देशान्तरमृते तथा
viṣodbandhanaśastrāmbuvahnipātamṛteṣu ca bāle pravrāji saṃnyāse deśāntaramṛte tathā
Dan (terpakai peraturan khas) dalam kes mereka yang mati kerana racun, gantung/cekik, senjata, air (lemas), api, atau jatuh; demikian juga dalam hal seorang kanak-kanak, seorang pertapa pengembara (pravrājaka/saṃnyāsin), dan orang yang mati di negeri asing.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The tradition recognizes that circumstances of death vary and require compassionate, context-sensitive ritual handling—protecting both the dignity of the deceased and the ritual well-being of the community.
This is prescriptive dharma material (procedural exceptions) housed within a purāṇic compilation; it is not part of sarga/pratisarga/vaṃśa/manvantara/vaṃśānucarita narration.
Listing ‘untimely/violent’ deaths and liminal social identities (child, renunciant, death abroad) marks boundary-cases where ordinary household rites may not map neatly—highlighting dharma’s adaptive application rather than a single rigid template.