The Churning of the Ocean
Samudra Manthana
लक्ष्मीभ्राता शीतरश्मिर्जातश्च सुधया ततः । उत्पन्ना सा हरेर्जाया तुलसी लोकपावनी
lakṣmībhrātā śītaraśmirjātaśca sudhayā tataḥ | utpannā sā harerjāyā tulasī lokapāvanī
Pagkaraan, mula sa amṛta (nektar ng walang-kamatayan) ay isinilang ang may malamig na sinag—ang kapatid ni Lakṣmī, ang Buwan. At lumitaw rin si Tulasī, kabiyak ni Hari, tagapagpadalisay ng mga daigdig.
Narrator (contextual speaker not specified in the provided excerpt; commonly within Brahma-khaṇḍa dialogues such as Pulastya → Bhīṣma)
Concept: Tulasi is loka-pāvanī and intimately related to Hari; her sanctity is cosmic in origin, not merely botanical.
Application: Honor Tulasi daily (watering, pradakṣiṇā, offering leaves to Viṣṇu/Kṛṣṇa); treat purity as relational—purity through loving service to Bhagavān.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: celestial_realm
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"From the foaming, moonlit ocean of nectar, the cool-rayed Moon rises like a silver disc crowned with mist. Beside him, Tulasi manifests as a divine maiden and as a sacred plant simultaneously—green leaves shimmering with amṛta droplets—while distant devas and asuras pause mid-churn in astonishment.","primary_figures":["Candra (Moon)","Tulasi (as Tulasi-devī/Vṛndā)","Devas","Asuras","Vāsuki","Mandara mountain (churning rod)"],"setting":"Cosmic ocean churning scene with Mandara, coiled serpent-rope, froth of amṛta, celestial sky layered with clouds and stars.","lighting_mood":"moonlit","color_palette":["silver white","sea-foam turquoise","amrita gold","leaf green","midnight indigo"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Samudra-manthana tableau with Mandara at center, Vāsuki as ornate rope; from a golden amṛta wave rises Candra with silver halo and Tulasi-devī in green-gold sari holding a Tulasi sprig; heavy gold leaf on halos and ocean highlights, jewel-like detailing on crowns and ornaments, rich red-green borders.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: delicate ocean swells in cool blues; Candra emerging with soft silver wash; Tulasi as a graceful figure with translucent veil, holding a small plant; devas and asuras rendered with refined faces; lyrical clouds and fine linework, gentle Himalayan-like palette despite cosmic setting.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlines; stylized Mandara and Vāsuki; Candra with large expressive eyes and pale aura; Tulasi in vivid green with red-yellow accents; symmetrical composition, temple-wall pigment textures, ornate jewelry patterns.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central ocean mandala with lotus motifs; Candra as a silver circle above waves; Tulasi framed by floral borders and garlands; peacocks and lotuses around the perimeter; deep blue ground with gold detailing and intricate vine patterns."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"narrative","suggested_raga":"Desh","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"authoritative","sound_elements":["ocean surf","conch shell","temple bells","low drum pulse (mridangam)","wind through leaves"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: शीतरश्मिर्जातश्च = शीतरश्मिः + जातः + च; हरेर्जाया = हरेः + जाया.
The verse identifies the Moon (Soma/Chandra), described as “cool-rayed” (śīta-raśmi), as Lakṣmī’s brother.
“Lokapāvanī” means “purifier of the worlds,” indicating Tulasī’s sanctifying power in devotion and ritual purity within Vaiṣṇava tradition.
By stating that beings arise “from nectar” (sudhā/amṛta), the verse echoes the cosmological motif of amṛta emerging from the churning and becoming a source for divine manifestations.