Determining Rites for Difficult/Inauspicious Deaths; Annual and Daily Śrāddha Rules
इष्टापूर्तादिके श्राद्धं कुर्यादाभ्युदयं तथा / उत्पातादिनिमित्तेषु नित्य श्राद्धवदेव तु
iṣṭāpūrtādike śrāddhaṃ kuryādābhyudayaṃ tathā / utpātādinimitteṣu nitya śrāddhavadeva tu
యజ్ఞాది ఇష్టకర్మలు, కూప-తటాకాది పూర్తకర్మల సందర్భంలో శ్రాద్ధం చేయాలి; అలాగే ఆభ్యుదయిక (మంగళ) శ్రాద్ధమును కూడా చేయాలి. ఉత్పాతాది సూచనలప్పుడు నిత్యశ్రాద్ధ విధానమే అనుసరించాలి।
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Ritual Type: Parvana
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: During iṣṭa-pūrta undertakings; during ābhyudaya occasions; and upon utpāta/nimitta events, performed like nitya śrāddha
Concept: Śrāddha is to be performed alongside meritorious undertakings and on auspicious occasions; in times signaled by portents, perform it like the daily śrāddha to stabilize karma and avert disorder.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-kāṇḍa as harmonizing force: timely rites align human action with cosmic order (ṛta), mitigating inauspiciousness.
Application: Attach śrāddha to major dharmic projects (charity, public benefaction) and perform ābhyudayika śrāddha for auspicious milestones; when ominous signs arise, do a nitya-style śrāddha with steadiness and correctness.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: household/temple-adjacent ritual setting
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.45 (categories and occasions of śrāddha)
This verse links ancestor-offerings with meritorious deeds (iṣṭa and āpūrta), indicating that Pitṛ-obligations should accompany major dharmic acts to strengthen merit and continuity of family duty.
By prescribing timely Śrāddha, it implies that proper offerings support the Pitṛs and maintain the ritual order that benefits the departed and the family, a recurring Preta-kāṇḍa theme about post-death welfare through rites.
When doing significant charity or religious observances, include a simple Pitṛ-tarpaṇa/Śrāddha as appropriate, and in times of alarming omens or disturbances, perform it following the regular nitya-śrāddha discipline (with sincerity and proper conduct).