Kuru's Consecration — Kuru’s Consecration and the Sanctification of Samantapañcaka (Kurukshetra)
तथैवोरुयुगं प्रादान्मया छिन्नौ च तावुभौ ततः स मे शिरः प्रादात् तेन प्रीते ऽस्मि तस्य च वरदो ऽस्मीत्यथेत्युक्ते कुरुर्वरमयाचत
tathaivoruyugaṃ prādānmayā chinnau ca tāvubhau tataḥ sa me śiraḥ prādāt tena prīte 'smi tasya ca varado 'smītyathetyukte kururvaramayācata
Cũng như thế, ông dâng đôi đùi, và ta chặt cả hai. Rồi ông dâng đầu mình cho ta; nhờ vậy ta hài lòng với ông. Khi nói: “Ta là bậc ban ân huệ,” thì Kuru (nhà vua) đã cầu xin một ân huệ.
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The climax is the offering of the head—symbolically the seat of identity and pride—showing that the highest dāna is self-surrender. Divine pleasure (prasāda) arises not from the quantity given but from the completeness of relinquishment.
This is didactic-carita within Vamśānucarita: a king in the Kuru line (or addressed as ‘Kuru’) exemplifies dharma, culminating in divine boon-bestowal—typical Purāṇic moral narrative rather than genealogical listing or cosmogenesis.
Thighs represent stability/support; the head represents ego and selfhood. The sequence (arms → thighs → head) maps a progressive stripping of power, foundation, and identity, ending in grace: when the self is surrendered, the Lord becomes ‘varada’ (boon-giver).