Chapter 78: Royal Responsibility for Wealth, Social Order, and the Protection of Dvijas
Kekaya Exemplum
अभिशस्तमिवात्मानं मन्यन्ते येन कर्मणा । तस्माद् राजर्षय: सर्वे ब्राह्मणानन्वपालयन्
abhiśastam ivātmānaṃ manyante yena karmaṇā | tasmād rājarṣayaḥ sarve brāhmaṇān anvapālayan |
Бхишма сказал: «Каким бы деянием ни навлёк царь на себя порицание, связанное с брахманом, он начинает считать себя словно публично осуждённым. Потому все царственные риши, памятуя о дхарме и о собственной нравственной чести, неизменно защищали и опекали брахманов.»
भीष्म उवाच
A ruler’s moral legitimacy is tied to how he treats brāhmaṇas and the learned; wrongdoing that brings blame in relation to them makes the king feel ‘condemned,’ so wise kings protect and support them as a matter of rajadharma.
In Bhīṣma’s instruction on kingship in the Śānti Parva, he explains why earlier royal sages consistently safeguarded brāhmaṇas: any censurable act involving them stains the king’s conscience and reputation, so protection of brāhmaṇas is presented as a practical and ethical duty of rule.