The Narrative of the Five Pretas
Eligibility for rites and jīvac-chrāddha procedure
वैवस्वताय कालाय सर्वप्राणहराय च / स्वधाकारनमस्कारप्रणवैः सह सप्तधा
vaivasvatāya kālāya sarvaprāṇaharāya ca / svadhākāranamaskārapraṇavaiḥ saha saptadhā
వైవస్వత (యమ)కు, కాలానికి, సమస్త ప్రాణాలను హరించువానికి—‘స్వధా’ ఉచ్చారణ, నమస్కారం, ప్రణవం (ఓం)తో కూడి ఏడు విధాలుగా అర్పించాలి.
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda)
Afterlife Stage: Yamaloka Journey
Ritual Type: Ekoddishta
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: During jalāñjali/tarpaṇa segment; sevenfold with svadhā and praṇava
Concept: Death as governed by Kāla and Dharmarāja; ritual speech (praṇava, svadhā) and namaskāra align the performer with cosmic law and aid the departed.
Vedantic Theme: Kāla as a manifestation of Īśvara’s power; nāda (Oṁ) as sacred principle supporting rite and recollection of the Absolute.
Application: Maintain correct mantra-utterance and reverence; contemplate time’s sovereignty to prioritize dharma and devotion in daily life.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: ritual site
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.8.28 (seven jalāñjalis to Yama-forms); Garuda Purana 2.8.30–31 (tilodaka and piṇḍa offerings follow)
This verse treats Yama as the presiding authority over death and post-death order; invoking him with svadhā, namaskāra, and Oṁ aligns the rite with dharma and the cosmic administration of karma.
By addressing Kāla as “sarvaprāṇahara” (taker of all life-breaths), the verse frames death as an inevitable function of Time, not merely a personal event, reinforcing the Purāṇic view of cosmic law.
Whether performing śrāddha or simply remembering mortality, the verse encourages disciplined reverence—humility (namaskāra), sacred intention (Oṁ), and gratitude to ancestors (svadhā)—as a way to live ethically under the awareness of Kāla.