Kāraṇānvēṣaṇam: The 32 Marks of Hari, Defects (Doṣas), Death-Omens, and Hari’s Omnipresence in Social & Household Life
गङ्गा द्वादशभिर्युक्ता बुध एकादशैर्युतः / शनिस्तु दशसंख्याकैः पुष्करो नवभिर्युतः
gaṅgā dvādaśabhiryuktā budha ekādaśairyutaḥ / śanistu daśasaṃkhyākaiḥ puṣkaro navabhiryutaḥ
புனித கங்கை பன்னிரண்டுடன் யுக்தம்; புதன் பதினொன்றுடன்; சனி பத்து எண்ணிக்கையுடன்; புஷ்கரம் ஒன்பதுடன் யுக்தம்।
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Sacred geography and graha-devatā correspondences are ordered and measurable; tīrtha and cosmic time (grahas) are integrated in dharmic life.
Vedantic Theme: Ritual purity and cosmic order (ṛta/niyati) as supports for sattva and inward clarity.
Application: Align pilgrimage/ritual observances with disciplined attention to traditional correspondences; treat tīrtha-sevā and graha-śānti as means to cultivate steadiness and ethical living.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: river; tīrtha
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.22.25-27,29 (same enumerative sequence)
This verse presents a traditional mapping of specific counts to revered entities (Gaṅgā, Budha, Śani, Puṣkara), indicating that ritual merit and observances are often prescribed with definite numerical measures.
In the Preta Kanda context, such associations support the broader teaching that purification and merit—often performed through tīrtha-related acts and correctly measured rites—aid the departed and the family in reducing obstacles in the post-death journey.
When performing śrāddha, dāna, japa, or tīrtha-related observances, follow traditional counts and procedures carefully, treating sacred places and disciplined practice as aids to purification and ethical living.