The Battle at Mandara: Vinayaka, Nandin, and Skanda Rout the Daitya Hosts
परिघं विफलं दृष्ट्वा समायान्तं च पार्षदम् बबन्ध बाहुपाशेन राहू रक्षन् हि मातुलम्
parighaṃ viphalaṃ dṛṣṭvā samāyāntaṃ ca pārṣadam babandha bāhupāśena rāhū rakṣan hi mātulam
Vendo que o parigha fora inútil e que o assistente (pārṣada) se aproximava, Rāhu —de fato protegendo seu tio materno— amarrou-o com o laço de seus próprios braços.
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Pārṣada denotes a retainer/attendant—classically used for the gaṇas of Śiva, but also for attendants of other divine or royal figures. In this battle-context it signals that the opponent is not a minor fighter but a recognized member of a chief’s entourage.
Bāhupāśa is a close-quarters binding hold—an ‘arm-noose’—often used in Purāṇic battle scenes to show strength and tactical shift when weapons fail.
Purāṇic narratives frequently foreground kinship obligations as a dharmic or strategic motive. Here it frames Rāhu’s action as protective loyalty rather than mere aggression.