Which beings are directed to a hellish planet?
All those who seize a woman's money, or other people's property.
All those who order the killing of land and water animals in order to consume their flesh.
All those who deceive another and seduce his wife are subject to particularly infernal conditions.
All the insane who, absorbed in a corporeal conception of existence, ensure their subsistence as well as that of their wives and children by being guilty of violence towards other living beings, humans, animals and/or plants. There the animals they killed are reborn in the form of creatures called “rurus”, and inflict great suffering on them.
All those who do not observe the precepts, the divine commandments, the regulative principles and the scriptural injunctions, but prefer to act capriciously by following some evildoer.
The head of government, magistrate or even judge, who renders justice badly or who punishes an innocent person, is taken there by the assistants of Yamaraja, the lord of death and judge of the guilty, to be mercilessly beaten there as a punishment.
God has endowed human beings with an evolved conscience, so that they are sensitive to the sufferings and joys of other beings. However, the man deprived of this conscience tends to make others suffer, without qualms.
Yamaraja's servants take such a person to the region known as “hell”, where his own victims punish him as befits.
Thieves, and anyone who has illegitimate sexual relations, except marriage.
Those born into an aristocratic or high-ranking family, but who do not act accordingly, are plunged into an infernal river of blood, pus and urine.
Everyone who lives like animals.
Anyone who ruthlessly kills forest animals without permission.
Anyone who kills animals on the pretext of religious sacrifices.
The man who forces his wife to drink his seed.
Anyone who ignites one or more fires, or administers poison to someone to kill him.
The one who makes a living by giving false testimony.
Anyone who indulges in drinking.
Those who violate etiquette by not showing proper respect to their superiors.
Those who sacrifice human beings to Bhairava (a deity worshipped by Hindus and Buddhists).