patiá¹ tyaká¹£yanti nirdravyaá¹
bhá¹›tyÄ apy akhilottamam
bhṛtyaṠvipannaṠpatayaḥ
kaulaá¹ gÄÅ› cÄpayasvinīḥ
patim - a master; tyaká¹£yanti - they will abandon; nirdravyam - lacking property; bhá¹›tyÄḥ - servants; api - even; akhila-uttamam - most excellent in personal qualities; bhá¹›tyam - a servant; vipannam - incapacitated; patayaḥ - masters; kaulam - belonging to the family for generations; gÄḥ - cows; ca - and; apayasvinīḥ - which have stopped giving milk.
In India, the cow is considered sacred not because Indian people are primitive worshipers of mythological totems but because Hindus intelligently understand that the cow is a mother. As children, nearly all of us were nourished with cow’s milk, and therefore the cow is one of our mothers. Certainly one’s mother is sacred, and therefore we should not kill the sacred cow.