Maybe Madri did not commit sati in the Mahabharata?

Incongruences in the events of the Mahabharata cast significant doubt on its depiction of sati. In most cases, the heart of the epic had little to do with justifying this cruel practice

The practice of sati was known in the Sanskrit world as sahagamana, or travelling together to the afterlife. The first time we come upon this ritual in Hindu scriptures is in the Mahabharata. In the Adi Parva, we have reference to the death of Pandu, following which Madri performs sati. The curious thing is that the epic informs us that Madri and Pandu are cremated twice:
How can a body be cremated twice? Is it a reference to the secondary cremation of the leftover bones? Most scholars assume so, but they do not pay attention to the story carefully.
shimmer

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