युधिछिर उवाच देवतातिथिभृत्यानां पितृणामात्मनश्न यः । न निर्वपति पज्चानामुच्छवसन् न स जीवति
Yudhiṣṭhira uvāca: devatātithibhṛtyānāṃ pitṝṇām ātmanaś ca yaḥ | na nirvapati pañcānām ucchvasan na sa jīvati ||
یُدھِشٹھِر نے کہا— جو دیوتاؤں، مہمانوں، خادموں/زیرِکفالت لوگوں، پِتروں اور اپنے آپ— اِن پانچوں کے واجب حصے ادا نہیں کرتا، وہ سانس لیتا ہوا بھی حقیقت میں زندہ نہیں۔
युधिछिर उवाच
True life is defined by dharma: one must regularly discharge the five fundamental obligations—toward gods (worship/offerings), guests (hospitality), dependents (care and support), ancestors (rites and remembrance), and oneself (right self-maintenance). Mere breathing without these duties is ethically empty.
In the Vana Parva’s dharma-discourse setting, Yudhiṣṭhira articulates a moral standard for household and social life, emphasizing that a person’s worth is measured by fulfilling essential reciprocal duties rather than by mere survival.