Prāyaścitta for Food-Contact, Social Contact, Aśauca Periods, and Formal Penance Systems
कृतपापश्चरेद्रोधे द्वौ पादौ बन्धयन्पशोः / सर्वकृच्छ्रं निपानेस्यात्कान्तारे गृहदाहतः
kṛtapāpaścaredrodhe dvau pādau bandhayanpaśoḥ / sarvakṛcchraṃ nipānesyātkāntāre gṛhadāhataḥ
جو گنہگار غصّے میں جانور کے دونوں پاؤں باندھ دے، وہ ‘سروکِرِچھر’ کا کفّارہ کرے؛ اس کی حالت پانی کے پاس پیاس سے تڑپتے، بیابان میں بھٹکتے اور گھر جل جانے سے ستائے ہوئے شخص جیسی ہو جاتی ہے۔
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Cruel acts done in anger generate intense duḥkha; sarva-kṛcchra penance is prescribed to counteract the karmic stain.
Vedantic Theme: Krodha as rajas-driven bondage; purification through tapas to restore sattva and ethical clarity.
Application: Cultivate anger-management and non-violence toward animals; if harm occurs, accept disciplined corrective practice and reparative action rather than rationalization.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: liminal landscape (water-source; forest)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: repeated linkage of hiṃsā (especially toward cows/animals) with heavy prāyaścitta; Garuda Purana: catalogues of kṛcchra and sarva-kṛcchra as standard expiations
This verse shows that specific harmful acts—especially cruelty done in anger—create karmic burden that should be countered through defined expiations like sarva-kṛcchra, restoring dharmic balance before one faces post-death consequences.
By prescribing sarva-kṛcchra for binding an animal’s feet in anger and describing intense hardship (thirst, wilderness, house-burnt misery), the verse frames animal-cruelty as a serious sin that produces severe suffering unless purified.
Avoid anger-based harm or restraint of animals, practice compassion (ahiṃsā), and when one has caused harm, take responsibility through repentance, corrective service, and disciplined self-restraint aligned with dharma.