Pānīya-dāna and Anna-dāna: The Primacy of Life-Sustaining Gifts (पानीयदान-प्रशंसा / अन्नदान-प्रशंसा)
प्राणवांश्वापि भवति रूपवांश्व तथा नृप । अन्नद: प्राणदो लोके सर्वद: प्रोच्यते तु सः
prāṇavāṁś cāpi bhavati rūpavāṁś ca tathā nṛpa | annadaḥ prāṇado loke sarvadaḥ procyate tu saḥ ||
那罗陀说道:“噢,国王,施食之人将具足生命之力,亦得容貌之美。在此世间,施食者被称为赐命者,确也被称作施与一切者。”
नारद उवाच
Food-giving (anna-dāna) is portrayed as the highest practical charity because it sustains life itself; therefore the donor is praised as a ‘giver of life’ and even ‘giver of all,’ and is said to gain vitality and beauty as fruits of that merit.
In Anuśāsana Parva’s instruction on gifts and dharma, Nārada addresses a king and extols the ethical and spiritual significance of giving food, framing it as life-sustaining generosity worthy of the highest praise.