The Origin of the Maruts
Diti’s Penance and Indra’s Intervention
नावृत्तिभयमस्तीह परलोकभयं कुतः । इमां सृष्टिं महापुण्यां सर्वपापहरां शुभाम्
nāvṛttibhayamastīha paralokabhayaṃ kutaḥ | imāṃ sṛṣṭiṃ mahāpuṇyāṃ sarvapāpaharāṃ śubhām
ในที่นี้ไม่มีความหวาดกลัวต่อการตกต่ำ; แล้วความกลัวต่อปรโลกจะมาจากไหน? ระเบียบแห่งการสร้างอันศักดิ์สิทธิ์นี้เป็นมหาบุญ เป็นมงคล และขจัดบาปทั้งปวง
Unspecified (context needed; likely within a Pulastya–Bhīṣma dialogue typical of the Bhūmi-khaṇḍa)
Concept: Understanding/embracing this supremely meritorious sacred order removes sin and grants fearlessness regarding this life and the next.
Application: When anxiety about decline or afterlife arises, return to steady devotional study and remembrance; let ethical living and devotion replace fear with clarity.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A devotee stands at a crossroads under a vast sky: behind him loom shadowy forms labeled ‘fear of fall’ and ‘fear of the next world,’ dissolving as a radiant scripture-mandala appears before him. The mandala bears the words ‘mahāpuṇyā’ and ‘sarvapāpaharā,’ and a soft Vishnu-like light steadies his posture into fearless calm.","primary_figures":["devotee/listener","symbolic Vishnu radiance (no anthropomorphic form needed)","shadow-figures of fear (allegorical)"],"setting":"Symbolic landscape—pathway between darkness and light, with a faint temple silhouette in the distance.","lighting_mood":"divine radiance","color_palette":["midnight blue","smoky violet","sunrise gold","white radiance","saffron"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: central devotee facing a gold-leaf scripture-mandala, fears depicted as dark stylized figures receding; heavy gold embellishment around the mandala and halo-like aura, rich crimson and green garments, ornate temple arch in the background, traditional iconographic symmetry.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: a lone seeker on a mountain path at dawn, misty fears fading into the valley; a luminous circular text-mandala floats ahead; delicate gradients, cool blues shifting to warm gold, refined expression of calm courage.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlined allegory—fear figures in dark tones on one side, bright auspicious mandala on the other; devotee centered, strong red/yellow/green palette, temple-wall compositional balance and ornamental borders.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: large radiant mandala with lotus petals inscribed with ‘śubham’ motifs; devotee below with folded hands; intricate floral borders, deep blue ground, gold highlights, peacocks at corners symbolizing fearlessness and auspiciousness."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"dramatic","suggested_raga":"Durga","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["single conch call","temple bells swelling then fading","low drum pulse","wind hush","resolving silence"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: नावृत्तिभयमस्तीह = न + आवृत्तिभयम् + अस्ति + इह (स्वर-सन्धि: न + आ → ना; अस्ति + इह → अस्तीह)
It argues that when a practice or sacred arrangement eliminates the fear of relapse/return, fear about the next world becomes baseless—implying spiritual security and confidence.
It calls it “mahāpuṇyā” (highly meritorious), “śubhā” (auspicious), and “sarvapāpaharā” (destroyer/remover of all sins).
Commit to genuinely purifying, auspicious dharmic practice rather than anxiety: sincere engagement with a sin-removing path is presented as the antidote to fear and moral uncertainty.