गंगायां भास्करे क्षेत्रे मातापित्रोर्गुरौ मृते । आधाने सोमपाने च वपनं सप्तसु स्मृतम्
gaṃgāyāṃ bhāskare kṣetre mātāpitrorgurau mṛte | ādhāne somapāne ca vapanaṃ saptasu smṛtam
O vapana (raspar) é ensinado como apropriado em sete ocasiões: no Gaṅgā, no Bhāskara-kṣetra, na morte da mãe ou do pai ou do mestre, no rito de estabelecer o fogo sagrado (ādhāna) e no rito de beber Soma.
Sūta (Lomaharṣaṇa) to the sages (deduced)
Tirtha: Gaṅgā; Bhāskara-kṣetra (Sūrya-kṣetra)
Type: river
Listener: Continuing addressee
Scene: A montage-like ritual tableau: a pilgrim at Gaṅgā with shaved head; a Sūrya shrine labeled Bhāskara-kṣetra; mourners after a guru/parent’s death; a sacred fire being established (ādhāna); and a Soma-yāga scene with priests.
Ritual acts like shaving become dharmic markers when aligned with life-transitions, ancestral duty, and Vedic consecrations.
Gaṅgā and Bhāskara-kṣetra are highlighted as contexts where prescribed purification rites are especially fitting.
Vapana (shaving) is prescribed on seven occasions, including pilgrimage contexts and major saṃskāra/śrauta rites.