Karmic Causality, Fate, and the Supremacy of Food-Charity
within Guru-tīrtha Glorification
अन्नैकस्य प्रदानस्य फलं भुंक्ते भवेन्नरः । ग्रासाद्ग्रासं प्रदातव्यं मुष्टिप्रस्थं न संशयः
annaikasya pradānasya phalaṃ bhuṃkte bhavennaraḥ | grāsādgrāsaṃ pradātavyaṃ muṣṭiprasthaṃ na saṃśayaḥ
అన్నం ఒక్క భాగం దానం చేసిన ఫలమును కూడా మనిషి పొందుతాడు. కాబట్టి గ్రాసం గ్రాసంగా అన్నదానం చేయాలి—ముష్టి మేరకైనా, ప్రస్థ ప్రమాణమైనా, సందేహం లేదు.
Unspecified (narratorial instruction within the Bhūmi-khaṇḍa context; commonly framed in the Pulastya–Bhīṣma dialogue in this khanda)
Concept: Even a single portion of food yields fruit; therefore give continuously—morsel by morsel—according to capacity, without hesitation.
Application: Set aside a small portion from each meal for someone else (guest, animal, needy); donate in micro-acts daily rather than waiting for large occasions.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A mother at a hearth pinches small morsels from a fresh pot of rice, placing them into a leaf-bowl for a hungry child and a wandering mendicant. The act repeats like a rhythmic pattern—each morsel turning into a tiny spark that rises and forms a luminous garland of merit above the courtyard.","primary_figures":["householder (giver)","mendicant/poor recipient","child or pilgrim","optional cow or dog receiving a morsel"],"setting":"simple kitchen courtyard with clay stove, grain jars, banana leaves, tulasi planter near the doorway","lighting_mood":"forest dappled","color_palette":["smoke gray","rice white","terracotta","leaf green","sunlit amber"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: domestic annadāna scene with repeated morsel-giving; gold leaf sparks rising from each morsel forming a halo-garland; rich reds/greens, ornate border, detailed brass vessels and lamps, a small framed Viṣṇu icon blessing the act.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: tender household moment, delicate steam and fine textile patterns; soft hillside background; emphasis on hands pinching morsels; cool greens and warm ambers, lyrical realism.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines and stylized hearth; giver’s hands emphasized; rhythmic motif of small golden dots rising; red/yellow/green palette with temple-wall aesthetic.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: patterned repetition—morsels depicted as lotus-like dots; central giver framed by floral borders; peacocks and cows at the edges receiving food; deep blue ground with gold highlights and intricate vines."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["hearth crackle","soft clink of vessels","distant temple bell","sparrows in courtyard"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: annaikasya = anna + ekasya; grāsādgrāsaṃ = grāsāt + grāsam (t/d assimilation); muṣṭiprasthaṃ treated as karmadhāraya compound; bhavennaraḥ = bhavet + naraḥ (t + n → nn).
It teaches that even a small act of giving food yields spiritual merit, so one should practice consistent, repeated food-giving—morsel by morsel—according to one’s capacity.
It emphasizes regularity and sincerity in charity: even small, continuous offerings of food are valuable and should not be postponed until one can give a large donation.
It promotes compassion and practical generosity—feeding others whenever possible—affirming that no gift of food is too small to matter.