Karma, Varṇa-Dharma, and Dāna as the Soul’s True Companion on the Path to Yama
यः क्षात्त्रदेहन्तु विहाय शोचते रणाङ्गणे स्वामिवधे च गोग्रहे / स्त्रीबालघाते पथि सार्थहेतवे मया स्वकोशं न हतं न पातितम्
yaḥ kṣāttradehantu vihāya śocate raṇāṅgaṇe svāmivadhe ca gograhe / strībālaghāte pathi sārthahetave mayā svakośaṃ na hataṃ na pātitam
جو جنگجو کا بدن چھوڑ کر بھی یوں افسوس کرے—“میدانِ جنگ میں، آقا کے قتل میں، گائے-مال چھیننے میں، عورتوں اور بچوں کے قتل میں، یا راستے میں قافلے کی لوٹ کے لیے—میرا اپنا جسم نہ مارا گیا نہ گرایا گیا”—وہ خونریز اعمال کی یادوں میں جکڑا ہوا، فریبِ وہم میں روتا ہے۔
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue instructing Garuda in Preta Kanda context)
Afterlife Stage: Pretayoni
Concept: Attachment to violent identity and recollection (smṛti) binds the departed; lament rooted in adharma reveals moha and perpetuates suffering.
Vedantic Theme: Saṃskāra-bandha: impressions of cruelty persist beyond death; moha and ahaṅkāra sustain subtle-body distress until purified by higher knowledge/devotion.
Application: Cultivate remorse and reform while alive; seek purification through confession, restitution, charity, and devotion; practice mental discipline to avoid glorifying violence and plunder.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Type: battlefield/roadway
Related Themes: Garuda Purana Pretakalpa themes: preta bound by cravings/memories; suffering due to saṃskāras; Garuda Purana discussions on adharma-yuddha and its consequences
This verse highlights that violent acts—battle killing, betrayal of a lord, cattle-raiding, and harming innocents—leave powerful impressions that can bind the departed mind to grief and delusion after death.
It suggests the departed consciousness may fixate on unresolved deeds and memories; such clinging becomes a cause of post-death suffering, shaping the preta’s experience before further judgment and rebirth.
Avoid harm to innocents, reject exploitation and robbery, and practice dharmic livelihood; purify remorse through repentance, charity, and restraint so the mind is not burdened at death.