Pānīya-dāna and Anna-dāna: The Primacy of Life-Sustaining Gifts (पानीयदान-प्रशंसा / अन्नदान-प्रशंसा)
केन तुष्यन्ति ते सद्यः किं तुष्टा: प्रदिशन्ति च । शंस मे तन््महाबाहो फल पुण्यकृतं महत्
kena tuṣyanti te sadyaḥ kiṁ tuṣṭāḥ pradiśanti ca | śaṁsa me tan mahābāho phalaṁ puṇyakṛtaṁ mahat ||
ယုဓိဋ္ဌိရက မေး၏—“ထိုဗြာဟ္မဏတို့သည် မည်သည့်အလှူကြောင့် ချက်ချင်း ပျော်ရွှင်ကြသနည်း။ ပျော်ရွှင်သွားသောအခါ ပြန်လည်၍ ဘာကို ပေးကြသနည်း။ မဟာဗာဟုရေ၊ ဒါနကြောင့် ဖြစ်ပေါ်သော ကြီးမြတ်သည့် ကုသိုလ်၏ အကျိုးကို ငါ့အား ပြောပြပါ။”
युधिछ्िर उवाच
The verse frames dāna (giving) as a central ethical practice: Yudhiṣṭhira seeks to know which forms of giving most quickly bring genuine satisfaction to worthy recipients (brāhmaṇas) and what spiritual or moral ‘fruit’ (phala/puṇya) such giving yields. It sets up a discussion on discerning, purposeful charity rather than indiscriminate giving.
In the Anuśāsana Parva’s instruction on dharma, Yudhiṣṭhira questions the revered instructor (addressed as ‘Mahābāhu’) about the immediate effects of gifts: what makes brāhmaṇas pleased and what blessings or benefits they confer when pleased, and he asks for an account of the great merit resulting from charitable acts.