Post-cremation Ripening of Karma and the Principal Narakas
आजाविको माहिषिकस्तथा चक्री ध्वजी च यः / रङ्गोपजीविको विप्रः शाकुनिर्ग्रामयाजकः
ājāviko māhiṣikastathā cakrī dhvajī ca yaḥ / raṅgopajīviko vipraḥ śākunirgrāmayājakaḥ
Ang tagapag-alaga ng kambing, tagapag-alaga ng kalabaw, ang nabubuhay sa pagbebenta o pagpapakita ng mga gulong at mga bandila; ang Brahmin na nabubuhay sa pagtatanghal sa entablado; ang manghuhula sa pamamagitan ng mga ibon; at ang paring-baryo na gumagawa ng mga ritwal kapalit ng bayad—sila’y ibinibilang sa mga kapintasan na hanapbuhay na binanggit dito.
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Certain professions—animal-keeping for trade, display-based commerce, performance as livelihood for a brāhmaṇa, bird-divination, and hired village priestcraft—are censured as dharmically compromised.
Vedantic Theme: Svadharma and purity of means (śuddha-ājīva) support sattva; compromised livelihood strengthens rajas/tamas and binds karma.
Application: Choose work aligned with integrity and non-exploitation; for religious roles, avoid superstition-for-profit and transactional ritualism.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: social/occupational sphere (ājīvika)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa: lists of forbidden livelihoods (especially for brāhmaṇas) as causes of pāpa; Garuda Purana: linkage between ājīvika-doṣa and post-mortem suffering
This verse functions as a dharmic warning: it identifies livelihoods considered spiritually blameworthy (especially when pursued through deception, exploitation, or improper priestly conduct), which the text links to negative karmic outcomes assessed after death.
In the Preta Kanda’s framework, one’s means of livelihood is part of one’s karma-account; such enumerations indicate categories of conduct that can attract censure and punishment when the soul is evaluated in Yama’s realm.
Choose ethical work, avoid superstition-based exploitation (e.g., deceptive divination), and ensure religious services are performed with integrity rather than purely for profit—aligning earning with dharma.