Dharma–Adharma Marks; Daśāha, Piṇḍa Formation, Śrāddha Calendar, Śayyā-dāna, and Sapiṇḍīkaraṇa Rules
एकादशाहे यः पिण्डस्तं दद्यादामिषेण तु / सिद्धान्नं तस्य दातव्यं कृशराः पूपकाः पयः / प्रक्षाल्य विप्रचरणावर्घ्यं धूपञ्च दीपक्रम्
ekādaśāhe yaḥ piṇḍastaṃ dadyādāmiṣeṇa tu / siddhānnaṃ tasya dātavyaṃ kṛśarāḥ pūpakāḥ payaḥ / prakṣālya vipracaraṇāvarghyaṃ dhūpañca dīpakram
ఏకాదశ దినమున అర్పించవలసిన పిండమును ఆమిషముతో కూడి ఇవ్వవలెను. ఆ కర్మలో సిద్ధాన్నము—కృశర, పూపకములు, పాలు—కూడ అర్పించవలెను. విప్రుల పాదములు కడిగి అర్ఘ్యమిచ్చి, అనంతరం విధివిధానముగా ధూప-దీప క్రమమును నిర్వహించవలెను.
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda/Vainateya)
Afterlife Stage: Pretayoni
Ritual Type: Ekoddishta
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: 11th day after death (ekādaśāha)
Concept: Eleventh-day śrāddha prescribes specific foods and honor to brāhmaṇas; proper sequence and generosity stabilize the preta’s condition.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma as yajña-like reciprocity; offering to worthy recipients as a means of subtle benefit transfer (adr̥ṣṭa-phala).
Application: On the 11th day, perform piṇḍa with prescribed naivedya, honor brāhmaṇas (wash feet, offer arghya), and complete dhūpa-dīpa in correct order.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.34 (śrāddha day-wise prescriptions; 11th-day specifics); Garuda Purana: brāhmaṇa-satkara as śrāddha limb in adjacent ritual passages
This verse treats the eleventh day as a specific śrāddha milestone where a designated piṇḍa is offered with defined foods and honor-rites, reinforcing the structured ritual support given to the departed in the Preta stage.
By prescribing piṇḍa, cooked foods, and the formal honoring of brāhmaṇas (feet-washing, arghya, incense, lamp sequence), the verse frames śrāddha as an ordered dharmic act believed to aid the preta through correct post-death rites.
Follow a disciplined, respectful sequence in memorial rites—offer food with sincerity, honor qualified priests/elders properly, and keep the ritual orderly (arghya, incense, lamps), emphasizing reverence and dharma rather than mere formality.