Adhyāya 287 — Janaka’s Inquiry on Śreyas, Abhayadāna, and Asaṅga
Non-attachment
यत्र संलोडिता लुब्धै: प्रायशो धर्मसेतव: । प्रदीप्तमिव चैलान्तं कस्तं देशं न संत्यजेत्,जहाँ लालची मनुष्योंने प्राय: धर्मकी मर्यादाएँ तोड़ डाली हों, जलते हुए कपड़ेकी भाँति उस देशको कौन नहीं त्याग देगा?
yatra saṁloḍitā lubdhaiḥ prāyaśo dharmasetavaḥ | pradīptam iva cailāntaṁ kastaṁ deśaṁ na santyajet ||
Ở nơi bọn tham lam phần nhiều đã phá vỡ các ranh giới và hàng rào bảo hộ của dharma, ai lại không rời bỏ xứ ấy—như chiếc áo đã bốc cháy, chỉ đáng quăng đi?
नारद उवाच
When greed becomes dominant and the protective limits of dharma are routinely violated, the society itself turns dangerous and morally “burning”; distancing oneself from such a place is presented as a sensible ethical choice.
Narada is offering counsel in the Shanti Parva’s didactic setting, using a vivid simile—an already-burning cloth—to describe a land where dharma’s safeguards have been broken by the greedy, implying that such a place should be abandoned.