Shukra’s Curse on King Danda and Andhaka’s Challenge to Shiva
बाढमाह ऋषिश्रेष्ठस्ततो नत्वा महेश्वरम् गते ते ऋषिणा सार्द्धू पुष्करारण्यमादरात्
bāḍhamāha ṛṣiśreṣṭhastato natvā maheśvaram gate te ṛṣiṇā sārddhū puṣkarāraṇyamādarāt
Pagkaraan, ang pinakadakilang rishi ay sumagot: “Gayon nga.” Pagyukod nila kay Maheśvara (Śiva), sila’y lumisan na kasama ang rishi at, nang may paggalang, nagtungo sa gubat ng Puṣkara (Puṣkarāraṇya).
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The verse frames pilgrimage as beginning with deity-vandana (obeisance). Even when the destination is a tīrtha, the journey is ritually ‘authorized’ by honoring a presiding deity—here Śiva—signaling the Purāṇic norm of integrating devotion with sacred geography.
In tīrtha literature, “araṇya” marks a sanctified ecological zone—woodland, hermitages, and ritual sites—forming a pilgrimage micro-region around Puṣkara rather than a single point-location.
Not necessarily. The act of bowing to Śiva functions as a conventional auspicious preface; Puṣkara traditions are often multi-deity, and the chapter’s emphasis is on tīrtha-mahimā rather than exclusive sectarian identity.