Kṣātra-Dharma, Daṇḍanīti, and Social Order
Indra–Māndhātṛ Dialogue
नष्टा धर्मा: शतधा शाशभ्षृतास्ते क्षात्रेण धर्मेण पुन: प्रवृद्धा: । युगे युगे ह्यादिधर्मा: प्रवृत्ता लोकज्येष्ठं क्षात्रधर्म वदन्ति
naṣṭā dharmāḥ śatadhā śāśabhṛtās te kṣātreṇa dharmeṇa punaḥ pravṛddhāḥ | yuge yuge hy ādi-dharmāḥ pravṛttā lokajyeṣṭhaṃ kṣātra-dharmaṃ vadanti ||
因陀罗说:“达摩曾百次毁灭,只以零散碎片被携带流传;然而凭借刹帝利之法(kṣātra-dharma),它又被复兴而昌盛。每一时代,原初之法都会再度发动;因此世人称此刹帝利之法为世间职责之最。”
इन्द्र उवाच
The verse argues that when moral order repeatedly collapses, it is the disciplined exercise of kṣātra-dharma—protective rulership, enforcement of justice, and defense of society—that revives and stabilizes dharma. Hence it is praised as a foremost worldly duty because it safeguards the conditions in which all other dharmas can function.
Indra is speaking within the Shanti Parva’s discourse on governance and duty, emphasizing to his listener that the warrior-king’s role is not mere violence but the restoration and maintenance of righteousness across ages, especially when society falls into disorder.