अहल्याशापमोक्षः
The Release of Ahalya and Indra’s Restoration
तस्मात्सुरवरास्सर्वे सर्षिस्सङ्घास्सचारणा: ।सुरसाह्यकरं सर्वे सफलं कर्तुमर्हथ।।।।
tasmāt suravarāḥ sarve saṛṣi-saṅghāḥ sa-cāraṇāḥ |
sura-sāhyakaraṃ sarve saphalaṃ kartum arhatha ||
“因此,诸天之最胜者啊——连同众仙与迦罗那诸众——既然我为诸天之利而行,你们都应使我得以复原圆满。”
Amidst sounds of celestial kettle-drums, devatas showered flowers, gandharvas sang and apsarasa danced. There was a great assemblage (of divinities).
The verse raises the dharmic question of restitution and responsibility: even if one claims a public purpose, adharma cannot be excused, and ‘deserving’ compensation is ethically contested.
After suffering the curse’s consequence, Indra urges the assembled divine and semi-divine beings to restore him, arguing that his act was for the gods’ cause.
The implied virtue is discernment (viveka) in leadership—whether a community should reward actions that violate righteousness, even if framed as beneficial.