The Explanation of Various Gifts (Dāna) and the Soul’s Entry into Another Body
अन्धकारे महाघोरे अमूर्ते लक्ष्यवर्जिते / उद्द्योतेनैव ते यान्ति दीपदानेन मानवाः
andhakāre mahāghore amūrte lakṣyavarjite / uddyotenaiva te yānti dīpadānena mānavāḥ
అత్యంత భయంకరమైన అంధకారంలో—రూపములేని, లక్ష్యచిహ్నరహితమైన చోట—మనుష్యులు కేవలం వెలుగుతోనే సాగుతారు; దీపదాన ఫలముగా వారు ముందుకు వెళ్తారు।
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Afterlife Stage: Yamaloka Journey
Concept: Dīpa-dāna yields guiding light in the post-mortem darkness; compassionate giving becomes literal/psychic illumination.
Vedantic Theme: Light as symbol of knowledge and auspiciousness; karma’s subtle fruit manifests as clarity and direction amid avidyā-like darkness.
Application: Offer lamps in temples and public spaces; support lighting for roads/homes; dedicate dīpa-dāna in remembrance of the departed and for removing fear/ignorance.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: liminal passage
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa: repeated imagery of darkness and fear on the soul’s route, relieved by merit; Garuda Purana dāna sections: dīpa-dāna praised for removing darkness and granting auspicious vision
This verse states that in the fearful, landmark-less darkness of the post-death passage, the departed can move forward through illumination; dīpa-dāna is taught as a meritorious act that provides that guiding light.
It depicts the route as “formless” and without recognizable signs, implying disorientation for the preta; symbolic and ritual light (dīpa) becomes the aid by which the departed is able to proceed.
Perform lamp-offering with śraddhā during śrāddha/antyeṣṭi-related observances, and cultivate a life that “gives light” to others—clarity, guidance, and dharmic support—mirroring the verse’s principle.