गंगोत्तरवहा यत्र यमुना पूर्ववाहिनी । तत्संभेदं नरः प्राप्य मुच्यते ब्रह्महत्यया
gaṃgottaravahā yatra yamunā pūrvavāhinī | tatsaṃbhedaṃ naraḥ prāpya mucyate brahmahatyayā
ณ ที่ซึ่งคงคาไหลขึ้นเหนือ และยมุนาไหลไปทิศตะวันออก ผู้ใดไปถึงจุดบรรจบแห่งนั้น ย่อมหลุดพ้นแม้จากบาปพราหมณ์ฆาต (พรหมหัตยา)
Skanda
Tirtha: Directional Saṅgama in Kāśī-māhātmya (Gaṅgottaravāhā–Yamunāpūrvavāhinī saṅgama)
Type: sangam
Listener: Pilgrimage-inquirer (traditional frame)
Scene: Two rivers meet: Gaṅgā shown curving northward, Yamunā entering from the west and flowing east; at the confluence a penitent pilgrim with folded hands stands waist-deep in water; above, a subtle radiance signifies sin-dissolution.
Contact with an exceptionally sanctified tīrtha is portrayed as capable of absolving even the gravest sins.
A distinctive saṃbheda (meeting-point) where Gaṅgā is north-flowing and Yamunā is east-flowing.
Prāpti—physically reaching the tīrtha (tīrtha-sevā/pilgrimage contact) as the stated means of purification.