The Sin of Breaking Households: Citrā’s Past Karma and the Remedy of Hari’s Name and Meditation
शुद्धं च जायते वत्स संगाद्वह्नेः स्वरूपवत् । हरेर्ध्यानान्महाप्राज्ञ शीघ्रं तस्य महात्मनः
śuddhaṃ ca jāyate vatsa saṃgādvahneḥ svarūpavat | harerdhyānānmahāprājña śīghraṃ tasya mahātmanaḥ
குழந்தையே, அக்னியின் சங்கத்தால் பொருள் அக்னி-சுவபாவம் போலச் சுத்தமாவது போல; பேரறிவாளனே, ஹரியின் தியானத்தால் அந்த மகாத்மன் விரைவில் தூய்மையடைகிறான்.
Not specified in the provided excerpt (context needed from surrounding verses).
Concept: Hari-dhyāna rapidly purifies the practitioner, like fire’s transformative contact.
Application: Set a fixed daily meditation on Hari (form, names, qualities); when distracted, return gently—treat repetition as ‘contact with fire’ that gradually makes the mind luminous.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A meditator sits in stillness as a subtle, translucent flame-like aura rises from the heart, mirroring a nearby sacred fire. Above the meditator’s brow, Hari appears in a gentle vision—blue as raincloud, crowned, holding conch and discus—his presence washing the scene with immediate clarity, as if soot is lifting from the air.","primary_figures":["a meditating devotee (mahātmā)","Hari (Viṣṇu) in visionary form","Agni (symbolic fire)"],"setting":"quiet shrine corner or hermitage with a small lamp/fire, japa-mālā, and a simple Viṣṇu icon","lighting_mood":"divine radiance","color_palette":["sapphire blue","lamp-gold","ivory","vermillion","charcoal-to-silver gradient"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Viṣṇu as central radiant figure with gold leaf halo, devotee seated below in dhyāna, small lamp/fire with gilded flames, rich red-green drapery, ornate crown and jewelry, emphasis on ‘swift purification’ through luminous highlights.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: tranquil interior shrine with soft light, devotee in profile, a faint Viṣṇu vision in the upper space; cool blues and ivories, delicate brushwork, minimal ornament, contemplative mood.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold-lined Viṣṇu with large eyes and elaborate crown, devotee seated in symmetrical posture, stylized flame motif rising; warm yellows and reds with green accents, temple-wall composition.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central Viṣṇu iconography framed by lotus borders; devotee below with mala; lamp motifs repeated; deep blue background with gold and pink lotuses to signify purity blossoming."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"meditative","suggested_raga":"Bhupali","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"serene","sound_elements":["single temple bell","soft conch in distance","steady tanpura","near-silence"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: संगात्+वह्नेः → संगाद्वह्नेः (त्→द् before व); हरेः+ध्यानात् → हरेर्ध्यानात् (visarga→र् before ध); ध्यानात्+महाप्राज्ञ → ध्यानान्महाप्राज्ञ (त्→न् before म).
It teaches that association with purity transforms a person, and that meditation on Hari (Viṣṇu) purifies a great-souled practitioner quickly.
Fire symbolizes transformative contact: just as an object takes on the nature of fire through close contact, a person becomes purified through contact with sanctity—here emphasized as dhyāna (meditation) on Hari.
By presenting Hari-dhyāna as a swift means of inner purification, it highlights devotion-centered contemplation as an effective spiritual practice aligned with Vaiṣṇava bhakti.