The Narrative of the Five Pretas
Eligibility for rites and jīvac-chrāddha procedure
आग्नेय्यां चाथ रौद्राय याम्यां सूर्यद्विजाय तु / विश्वेभ्यश्चाथ देवेभ्यस्तिलपात्रं निवेदयेत्
āgneyyāṃ cātha raudrāya yāmyāṃ sūryadvijāya tu / viśvebhyaścātha devebhyastilapātraṃ nivedayet
ในทิศอาคเนย์พึงถวายภาชนะงาแด่เทวะแห่งรุทร; ในทิศยามยะ (ทิศใต้) แด่สุริยะและเหล่าทวิชะ; และเช่นเดียวกันพึงน้อมถวายภาชนะงาแด่วิศวเทวะทั้งหลายด้วย
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Ritual Type: Parvana
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: During śrāddha ancillary offerings arranged by quarters (dik).
Concept: Ritual geography: correct placement by direction and correct recipient (Rudra/Sūrya/brāhmaṇas/Viśvedevas) ensures harmony between human act and cosmic administration.
Vedantic Theme: Interconnected order (ṛta) where space, deity, and act correspond; disciplined action refines the mind (antaḥkaraṇa-śuddhi).
Application: When performing rites, follow spatial instructions carefully; treat ‘where’ and ‘to whom’ as part of ethical accuracy, not superstition.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Type: directional-quarters
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.8 (directional offerings; tilapātra usage in śrāddha context)
This verse treats tilapātra as a prescribed ritual offering to specific deities and sacred recipients; sesame is used as a purificatory, merit-bearing substance in rites connected with śrāddha and preta-related observances.
The verse maps recipients to dik (quarters): Agni’s quarter for a Rudra-related offering and the southern (Yama) quarter for Sūrya and dvijas, reflecting the ritual cosmology where directions organize sacred acts for order, protection, and proper transmission of offerings.
When performing śrāddha or memorial charity, one can emphasize disciplined giving—especially sesame-based dāna and respectful offerings to qualified priests/Brāhmaṇas—done with clarity of intention and adherence to traditional procedure.