Karmic Causes of Narakas and the Irremediability of Ingratitude (Kṛtaghna-doṣa)
श्राद्धातिथेयमन्योन्यं यैर्भुक्तं भुवि मानवैः परस्परं भक्षयन्ते मांसानि स्वानि बालिशाः
śrāddhātitheyamanyonyaṃ yairbhuktaṃ bhuvi mānavaiḥ parasparaṃ bhakṣayante māṃsāni svāni bāliśāḥ
ଯେ ମାନବମାନେ ଭୂମିରେ ପରସ୍ପର ଅନ୍ୟୋନ୍ୟର ଶ୍ରାଦ୍ଧଭୋଜନ ଓ ଅତିଥିଭୋଜନ ଭୋଗ କରନ୍ତି, ସେଇ ବାଲିଶମାନେ ପରଲୋକରେ ପରସ୍ପର ନିଜ ମାଂସ ଭକ୍ଷଣ କରନ୍ତି।
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Ritual food is not ordinary consumption: śrāddha sustains ancestral obligation, and atithi-offering sustains social dharma. To steal/consume what is dedicated to another’s rite or guest is a breach of trust that rebounds violently.
Again, this is dharma-anuśāsana embedded in purāṇic discourse (not sarga/pratisarga/vaṃśa/manvantara/vaṃśānucarita).
‘Eating each other’s flesh’ is a graphic karmic metaphor: exploitative consumption of others’ sacred shares culminates in mutual predation—society collapses into cannibalistic reciprocity.