Brahmā’s Curse, Four Births, and the Dharma of Shared Embodiment
Draupadī/Kṛṣṇā
अपरोक्षवतीनां तु तासां लेपो न सर्वथा / अथवा मुद्गलस्येव रतिकाले खगेश्वर
aparokṣavatīnāṃ tu tāsāṃ lepo na sarvathā / athavā mudgalasyeva ratikāle khageśvara
Mas para aquelas mulheres que estão presentes de modo direto (não separadas nem ocultas), não há de forma alguma qualquer “mancha” ou impureza sobre elas; ou então, ó Senhor das aves, é como no caso de Mudgala, no momento da união sexual.
Lord Vishnu (addressing Garuda)
Concept: Assessment of doṣa (fault/impurity) depends on presence/visibility and contextual dharma; not all situations incur taint.
Vedantic Theme: Viveka (discernment) applied to dharma—distinguishing apparent impurity from real fault.
Application: Avoid blanket judgments about impurity; evaluate conduct by intent, context, and authoritative exemplars.
Primary Rasa: shringara
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.17.45-48 (continuation on doṣa, exclusivity, and discernment)
This verse uses ‘lepa’ to clarify when impurity is considered applicable and when it is not, emphasizing dharma-based distinctions rather than blanket assumptions.
Within the Preta Kanda’s broader concern for subtle conditions and ritual states, the verse signals that certain states are judged by immediate presence and circumstance, which affects how rites and conduct are evaluated.
Apply dharma with contextual discernment: follow purity/ritual rules thoughtfully, considering circumstance and intent, rather than treating all situations as identical.