Yudhiṣṭhira’s Remorse and Vyāsa’s Teaching on Impermanence (Śoka-nivāraṇa)
जातिष्वन्यास्वपि यथा न भवेयं कुलान्तकृत् आपलोग मुझ गुरुघातीको आमरण अनशनके लिये बैठा हुआ समझें, जिससे दूसरे जन्मोंमें मैं फिर अपने कुलका विनाश करनेवाला न होऊँ
jātiṣv anyāsv api yathā na bhaveyaṃ kulāntakṛt | āpāḥ loko māṃ gurughātikaṃ ā-maraṇam anaśanāya upaviṣṭaṃ manyeta, yena dvitīyeṣu janmasu punar ahaṃ na bhaveyaṃ svakulavināśakṛt ||
尤提士提罗说道:“为使我即便在他生他世也不再成为灭族之人——愿世人将我这弑长害师者,看作已坐下绝食至死之人;如此,在未来诸生中,我便不再一次给自己的家族带来毁灭。”
युधिछिर उवाच
The verse frames moral responsibility after catastrophic violence: Yudhiṣṭhira seeks expiation for the grave fault of harming revered elders/teachers and fears the karmic tendency to repeat such lineage-destroying acts in future births. Atonement is presented as both ethical accountability and a means to break harmful karmic patterns.
In Śānti Parva, after the war, Yudhiṣṭhira is overwhelmed by remorse. Here he expresses a wish that people recognize him as undertaking a fast unto death as penance, so that he will not again become a ‘kulāntakṛt’—a destroyer of his own family line—in other births.