Preta-bhāva: Causes, Remedies, and the Rationale of Post-death Rites
Question-Catalogue
शृकृष्ण उवाच / शृणु दानं प्रवक्ष्यामि सर्वाशु भविनाशनम् / सन्तप्तहाटकमयं घटकं विधाय ब्रह्मेशकेशवयुतं सह लोकपालैः / क्षीराज्यपूर्णविविरं प्रणिपत्य भक्त्या विप्राय देहि तव दानशतैः किमन्यैः
śṛkṛṣṇa uvāca / śṛṇu dānaṃ pravakṣyāmi sarvāśu bhavināśanam / santaptahāṭakamayaṃ ghaṭakaṃ vidhāya brahmeśakeśavayutaṃ saha lokapālaiḥ / kṣīrājyapūrṇaviviraṃ praṇipatya bhaktyā viprāya dehi tava dānaśataiḥ kimanyaiḥ
ஸ்ரீகிருஷ்ணன் கூறினார்—கேள்; எல்லாப் பயங்களையும் விரைவில் அழிக்கும் ஒரு தானத்தை நான் உரைக்கிறேன். தீயில் சுத்திகரிக்கப்பட்ட பொன்னால் ஒரு கலசம் செய்து, அதில் பிரம்மா, ஈசன் (சிவன்), கேசவன் (விஷ்ணு) மற்றும் லோகபாலர்களுடன் அலங்கரித்து; அதன் உள்ளை பாலும் நெய்யும் நிரப்பி, பக்தியுடன் வணங்கி, ஒரு பிராமணருக்கு தானமாக அளி—அப்பொழுது நூறு பிற தானங்கள் எதற்கு?
Śrī Kṛṣṇa (identified in the verse as śrīkṛṣṇa)
Afterlife Stage: Pretayoni
Beneficiary: Pitr
Concept: Specific, devotionally performed dāna—properly crafted, consecrated, and given to a worthy recipient—can swiftly remove fear and adverse post-mortem conditions.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-yoga purified by bhakti; efficacy depends on śraddhā, right recipient (pātra), and intention, aligning action with dharma.
Application: If following tradition: commission/prepare the prescribed golden vessel with iconography, fill with kṣīra and ghṛta, bow with devotion, and donate to a qualified brāhmaṇa; otherwise, emulate the principle—high-integrity giving with reverence and purity.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: ritual-instruction setting
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: dāna-mahātmyas and preta-śānti dānas in Pretakalpa/śrāddha-related chapters; Garuda Purana: discussions of pātra (worthy recipient) and bhakti as multiplier of merit
This verse presents a specific ritual charity—offering a gold vessel associated with major deities and filled with milk and ghee—as a highly efficacious dāna said to quickly remove fear and confer strong spiritual merit, surpassing many lesser donations.
In the Preta Kanda, dāna is repeatedly taught as a support for the deceased and the family’s ritual duty; here, Kṛṣṇa emphasizes a potent form of charity that counters fear (bhaya), a common theme in post-death passages dealing with uncertainty, rites, and the soul’s welfare.
Prioritize sincere, dharmic giving with devotion—especially supporting qualified priests/learned brāhmaṇas and ritual needs—rather than focusing on quantity; the verse highlights intention (bhakti) and meaningful, tradition-aligned charity.