The Explanation of the Post-funeral Rites (Aurdhvadehika) and Related Matters
(३५।४४) स्नानं दानं जपो होमस्तर्पणं सुरपूजनम् / ग्राममध्ये स्थिते प्रेते शुद्ध्यर्थं ज्ञातिधर्मतः
(35.44) snānaṃ dānaṃ japo homastarpaṇaṃ surapūjanam / grāmamadhye sthite prete śuddhyarthaṃ jñātidharmataḥ
جب گاؤں میں پریت (مُردہ کی حالت) ہو تو پاکیزگی کے لیے، رشتہ داروں کے دھرم کے مطابق غسل، دان، جپ، ہوم، ترپن اور دیوتاؤں کی پوجا کرنی چاہیے۔
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinatā-putra)
Afterlife Stage: Pretayoni
Beneficiary: Pitr
Timing: During aśauca/when the dead lies within the village; performed as śuddhy-artha (for purification)
Concept: Jñāti-dharma: relatives must perform purificatory and expiatory-leaning acts—bath, charity, mantra, fire-offering, ancestor-libations, and deity worship—when death lies within the village.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-yoga orientation: obligatory acts (nitya/naimittika) purify the mind and environment, supporting sattva and dharmic continuity.
Application: In a death context, prioritize snāna and cleanliness, give dāna, maintain japa, perform homa where appropriate, do tarpaṇa for pitṛs, and continue devapūjā as purification under guidance of tradition/family priest.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Type: settlement/community space
Related Themes: Garuda Purana śrāddha and aśauca passages prescribing śuddhi-kriyā for jñātis; Neighboring 2.35.42 on prohibitions and 2.35.44 on sin of neglect
This verse states that when a deceased person lies within the village, relatives should perform purifying acts—bath, charity, japa, homa, tarpaṇa, and deva-worship—to restore ritual cleanliness (śuddhi) in accordance with family duty (jñāti-dharma).
While not describing the soul’s route directly, it sets the ritual context: proper observances by the family support dharmic order after death and align the household/community with prescribed post-death duties connected to preta-related rites.
Maintain respectful, dharmic conduct after a death: personal cleanliness, prayer/mantra practice, charitable acts, and traditional offerings/worship as appropriate to one’s lineage and local custom, emphasizing purification and responsibility of the family.