Pitṛ-Stuti, Tarpaṇa, and the Ritual Power of Recitation in Śrāddha
नमो गणेभ्यः सप्तभ्यस्तथा लोकेषु सप्तसु / स्वायम्भुवे नमस्यामि ब्रह्मणे योगचक्षुषे
namo gaṇebhyaḥ saptabhyastathā lokeṣu saptasu / svāyambhuve namasyāmi brahmaṇe yogacakṣuṣe
سات گنوں کو سلام، اور اسی طرح سات لوکوں کو بھی۔ میں سْوَیَمبھو برہما کو—جو یوگ چکشو (باطنی نظر) سے دیکھتا ہے—سجدۂ تعظیم پیش کرتا ہوں۔
Narratorial/ritual voice within the Garuḍa Purāṇa’s discourse (commonly framed in the Viṣṇu–Garuḍa dialogue context)
Concept: Reality is layered (lokas) and governed by ordered hosts (gaṇas); higher seeing arises through yoga-cakṣuḥ (inner vision).
Vedantic Theme: From multiplicity to the seer: cultivating sāttvika insight that perceives underlying order; knowledge supported by disciplined contemplation.
Application: Use contemplative practice (dhyāna, prāṇāyāma, svādhyāya) to develop ‘inner sight’ before judging or acting; reflect on one’s place within larger systems.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: cosmic tiers
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.89.54-55 (preceding cosmic salutations); Garuda Purana 1.89.57-58 (Pitṛ and Agni-Soma metaphysics)
It functions as a cosmological salutation—honoring the divine hosts and the full structure of the universe—so the teaching/rite proceeds with completeness and auspicious alignment.
By invoking the sapta-lokas and Brahmā’s yogic vision, it situates the discussion within the multi-world framework through which souls are described as moving according to karma, guided by higher cosmic order.
Begin study, recitation, or ritual with a brief invocation that cultivates reverence, a sense of cosmic perspective, and mindful intention—key supports for dharmic living.