Kirātāvatāra, Durvāsā-upākhyāna, and the Logic of Divine Rescue
Kirātākhyam-avatāra; Pāṇḍava-prasaṅga
धृतराष्ट्रेन दुष्टेन प्रथमं च ह्यचक्षुषा । धर्मस्त्यक्तः स्वयं लोभाद्युष्माकं राज्यमाहृतम्
dhṛtarāṣṭrena duṣṭena prathamaṃ ca hyacakṣuṣā | dharmastyaktaḥ svayaṃ lobhādyuṣmākaṃ rājyamāhṛtam
धृतराष्ट्रेण दुष्टेन प्रथमं ह्यचक्षुषा; लोभात् स्वयं धर्मः त्यक्तः, युष्माकं राज्यं च आहृतम्।
Suta Goswami (narrating the Purāṇic account to the sages, describing the adharmic seizure of the kingdom)
Tattva Level: pasha
The verse highlights that lobha (greed) makes one abandon dharma, creating karmic bondage (pāśa). In a Shaiva Siddhānta lens, turning from righteous order obscures the soul (paśu) from Shiva’s grace (pati-anugraha), leading to suffering and loss of rightful prosperity.
Linga-worship centers the devotee in dharma, self-restraint, and truth. This verse functions as a caution: when rulers and individuals abandon dharma for greed, they move away from Shiva as Saguna protector of cosmic order, and their authority becomes spiritually unsustainable.
A practical takeaway is daily dharma-sādhana: recite the Pañcākṣarī mantra (Om Namaḥ Śivāya) with a vow of truthfulness and non-greed, and apply tripuṇḍra (bhasma) as a reminder of impermanence—reducing lobha and restoring righteous discernment.