HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 52Shloka 79
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Vamana Purana — Merit of Shravana Dvadashi, Shloka 79

The Merit of Śravaṇa-Dvādaśī and the Liberation of a Preta through Gayā Piṇḍa-Rites

दासीदासांश्च भृत्यांश्च गृहं रत्नं परिच्छदम् समर्थेषु द्विजेन्द्रेषु प्रयच्छस्व महाभुज

dāsīdāsāṃśca bhṛtyāṃśca gṛhaṃ ratnaṃ paricchadam samartheṣu dvijendreṣu prayacchasva mahābhuja

{"has_teaching": true, "teaching_type": "dharma", "core_concept": "nindā-doṣa and ajñāna-born hubris before Bhagavān", "teaching_summary": "The verse presVamana Purana,52,83,VamP 52.83,kṛtvā ca rūpaṃ ditijāṃśca hatvā praṇamya carṣin prathamakrameṇa mahīṃ mahīdhraiḥ sahitāṃ sahārmavāṃ jahāra ratnākarapattanairyutām,कृत्वा च रूपं दितिजांश्च हत्वा प्रणम्य चर्षिन् प्रथमक्रमेण महीं महीध्रैः सहितां सहार्मवां जहार रत्नाकरपत्तनैर्युताम्,Vamana–Bali Narrative (Trivikrama Episode),Avatar Narrative / Cosmic Conquest (Trivikrama’s Three Strides),Adhyaya 52 — Trivikrama-krama (Bali’s subjugation through the three strides),52.83,kṛtvā ca rūpaṃ ditijāṃśca hatvā praṇamya carṣin prathamakrameṇa mahīṃ mahīdhraiḥ sahitāṃ sahārmavāṃ jahāra ratnākarapattanairyutām,kṛtvā ca rūpaṃ ditijāṃś ca hatvā praṇamya carṣin prathama-krameṇa | mahīṃ mahīdhraiḥ sahitāṃ sahārmavāṃ jahāra ratnākara-pattanaiḥ yutām ||,Assuming (his cosmic) form and having slain the Daityas

Vāmana (Viṣṇu) instructing the Asura ruler (addressed as mahābhuja) to redirect wealth through dāna.
Vishnu (Vāmana)
Dana (Charity)Merit through gifting to worthy recipientsDetachment from household possessionsBrahminical recipient-ethics (pātra)

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FAQs

Purāṇic dāna theory stresses pātra (worthy recipient). ‘Samartha’ signals fitness—learning, conduct, and capacity to use gifts dharmically—so that the donor’s act yields stable merit rather than being squandered or misused.

Within Purāṇic moral rhetoric it functions as an extreme exemplar of non-attachment: even what is most ‘owned’ (household, dependents, valuables) should be relinquished when dharma demands. Historically, such lists also serve as conventional catalogues of wealth to indicate total renunciation/complete donation.

In the Vāmana–Bali cycle, the Asura ruler’s possessions are shown to be ultimately non-sovereign before Viṣṇu. The verse reframes inevitable loss into voluntary dharmic transfer—transforming precarious wealth into religious merit and aligning the ruler with dharma despite impending dispossession.