Dharma–Adharma Marks; Daśāha, Piṇḍa Formation, Śrāddha Calendar, Śayyā-dāna, and Sapiṇḍīkaraṇa Rules
एकादशाहे यः पिण्डस्तं दद्यादामिषेण तु / सिद्धान्नं तस्य दातव्यं कृशराः पूपकाः पयः / प्रक्षाल्य विप्रचरणावर्घ्यं धूपञ्च दीपक्रम्
ekādaśāhe yaḥ piṇḍastaṃ dadyādāmiṣeṇa tu / siddhānnaṃ tasya dātavyaṃ kṛśarāḥ pūpakāḥ payaḥ / prakṣālya vipracaraṇāvarghyaṃ dhūpañca dīpakram
گیارہویں دن جو پِنڈ پیش کیا جائے، وہ آمِش (گوشت) کے ساتھ دینا چاہیے۔ اس کرم میں پکا ہوا کھانا—کِرشرا، پوپک اور دودھ—بھی نذر کیا جائے۔ برہمنوں کے پاؤں دھو کر اَर्घ्य پیش کریں، پھر دستور کے مطابق دھوپ اور دیپ کا क्रम ادا کریں۔
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda/Vainateya)
Afterlife Stage: Pretayoni
Ritual Type: Ekoddishta
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: 11th day after death (ekādaśāha)
Concept: Eleventh-day śrāddha prescribes specific foods and honor to brāhmaṇas; proper sequence and generosity stabilize the preta’s condition.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma as yajña-like reciprocity; offering to worthy recipients as a means of subtle benefit transfer (adr̥ṣṭa-phala).
Application: On the 11th day, perform piṇḍa with prescribed naivedya, honor brāhmaṇas (wash feet, offer arghya), and complete dhūpa-dīpa in correct order.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.34 (śrāddha day-wise prescriptions; 11th-day specifics); Garuda Purana: brāhmaṇa-satkara as śrāddha limb in adjacent ritual passages
This verse treats the eleventh day as a specific śrāddha milestone where a designated piṇḍa is offered with defined foods and honor-rites, reinforcing the structured ritual support given to the departed in the Preta stage.
By prescribing piṇḍa, cooked foods, and the formal honoring of brāhmaṇas (feet-washing, arghya, incense, lamp sequence), the verse frames śrāddha as an ordered dharmic act believed to aid the preta through correct post-death rites.
Follow a disciplined, respectful sequence in memorial rites—offer food with sincerity, honor qualified priests/elders properly, and keep the ritual orderly (arghya, incense, lamps), emphasizing reverence and dharma rather than mere formality.