Harihara Revelation and the Kurukshetra Tirtha Cycle: Sthanu in Vishnu and the Sanctification of Saptasarasvata
ऋमं देवर्षिभूतानां मनुष्याणां विशेषतः पितृणां च द्विजश्रेष्ठ सर्वर्वणेषु चैकता
ṛmaṃ devarṣibhūtānāṃ manuṣyāṇāṃ viśeṣataḥ pitṛṇāṃ ca dvijaśreṣṭha sarvarvaṇeṣu caikatā
தேவர்கள், ரிஷிகள், பூதங்கள் ஆகியோரிடமும்—சிறப்பாக மனிதர்களிடமும்—மேலும் பித்ருக்களிடமும் உள்ள ‘ரிணம்’ எனும் கடன், ஓ இருமுறைப் பிறந்தவர்களில் சிறந்தவனே, எல்லா வர்ணங்களிலும் ஒரே பொதுக் கொள்கையாகும்.
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The verse gestures to the classical doctrine of obligations: duties owed to devas (through yajña/offerings), to ṛṣis (through study and preservation of sacred knowledge), to pitṛs (through śrāddha and lineage duties), and broadly to living beings and humans (through non-harm, charity, and social responsibility).
It highlights interpersonal dharma—truthfulness, non-injury, generosity, and social reciprocity—as a particularly immediate and ethically weighty sphere of obligation, even while ritual debts to devas/ṛṣis/pitṛs remain important.
It indicates that the core principle of moral obligation is not exclusive to one class: while specific rites may vary by varṇa, the foundational duty to repay obligations (through right conduct and prescribed acts) is shared.