Monday, March 17, 2014

होली की हार्दिक शुभकामनायें

आपका जीवन राममय बने। आपको व  आपके परिवार को होली की शुभकामनायें। पेश है मेरे द्वारा लिखी कुछ लाइनें।

जीवन के कैनवास पर
सुन्दर चित्र बनाइये
कुछ अबीर कुछ कबीर
कुछ सुर्ख कुछ पीले
कुछ गुलाब कुछ नीले
छाप छोड़ें
कल ये एहसास ना हो हम ब्लेक एंड व्हाईट रह गये
लोग HD विद Surround Sound तर गए
जिंदगी में लाइफ  डालें
रंग भरें उजले
औरों के जीवन
में
रंग जाओ एक रंग में
जो सब रंगों के मेल से बनता हैं
नाचो गाओ हंसो हंसाओ
जीवन एक उत्सव है
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होली मुबारक।

विनीत रसाइली 'रामानंद'

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Kabira Rocks: Moko Kahan Dhundhe Re Bande

Kabir Das, a mystical poet and great Saint of India, was born in the year 1440 and died in the year 1518. The name Kabir comes from Arabic Al-Kabīr which means 'The Great' – the 37th name of God in Islam. Kabir Panth is the huge religious community which identifies the Kabir as the originator of the Sant Mat sects. The members of Kabir Panth are known as the Kabir panthis who had extended all over the over north and central India. Some of the great writings of the Kabir Das are Bijak, Kabir Granthawali, Anurag Sagar, Sakhi Granth etc.

मोको कहां ढूढे रे बन्दे -कबीर दास 
मोको कहां ढूढे रे बन्दे
मैं तो तेरे पास में
ना तीर्थ मे ना मूर्त में
ना एकान्त निवास में
ना मंदिर में ना मस्जिद में
ना काबे कैलास में
मैं तो तेरे पास में बन्दे
मैं तो तेरे पास में
ना मैं जप में ना मैं तप में
ना मैं बरत उपास में
ना मैं किर्या कर्म में रहता
नहिं जोग सन्यास में
नहिं प्राण में नहिं पिंड में
ना ब्रह्याण्ड आकाश में
ना मैं प्रकति प्रवार गुफा में
नहिं स्वांसों की स्वांस में
खोजि होए तुरत मिल जाउं
इक पल की तालाश में
कहत कबीर सुनो भई साधो
मैं तो हूँ विश्वास में
Translation by Rabindranath Tagore
O servant, where dost thou seek Me?
Lo! I am beside thee.
I am neither in temple nor in mosque:
I am neither in Kaaba nor in Kailash:
Neither am I in rites and ceremonies,
nor in Yoga and renunciation.
If thou art a true seeker,
thou shalt at once see Me:
thou shalt meet Me in a moment of time.
Kabîr says, "O Sadhu! God is the breath of all breath."

Saturday, March 8, 2014

What is Vedanta?

India 's culture is based on a body of knowledge known as the four Vedas. This knowledge came from rishis, seers, who in states of deep meditation visualised this teaching in the form of mantras, many thousands of years ago. Much later, a great sage known as Vyasa arranged the Vedic mantras into four specific texts known as Rig-Veda, Yajur Veda, Sama Veda and Atharva Veda. This knowledge, which is said to be not of human origin, formed the blueprints for humanity in terms of how it should live and interact with its environment and the world at large.

The end portions of the four Vedas are known as Upanishads which are teachings of a more subtle nature. The Upanishads teach in infinite detail that there is one consciousness that is in and through the universe and every form of life. It is Brahman. It is awareness. There is nothing else. This is Vedanta.

There are one hundred and eight known Upanishads in existence today. There are thought to have been many more. Of these, ten are considered to form a nucleus for the teaching known as Brahmavidya - the knowledge of Brahman.

A post-Buddhism-era sage called Shankara popularised these ten Upanishads and wrote extensive commentaries on them and the Bhagavad Gita, which contains the essence of the Upanishadic teaching. For in these Upanishads is the clear knowledge of who I am.

The Upanishads show through the knowledge of Brahman that immortality and freedom from the cycle of life and death are the true nature of humanity and of every form of life.
 
Courtesy: dayananda.org