Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
This mantra is composed of three Sanskrit names – "Krishna", "Rama", and "Hare". [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Since the 1960s, the mantra has been widely known outside India through A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada and his movement, International Society for Krishna Consciousness (commonly known as the Hare Krishnas or the Hare Krishna movement).
The Rama Raksha Stotra (Sanskrit: ... romanized: rāma-rakṣā-stotram) is a Sanskrit stotra, a hymn of praise dedicated to the Hindu deity Rama. [1] ...
First chapter is known as Tattva-Nirūpaṇam, deals with the Tattva Trayam, i.e. Prakriti, Jiva and Parmatman. [6]Second chapter is known as Japyanirdhāraṇanirūpaṇam, deals with three main mantras in the lineage of Sri Rama Mantraraja, i.e. Rama Shadakshara Mantra (rāṃa rāmāya namaḥ), Dvaya Mantra (śrīmadrāmacandracharaṇau śaraṇaṃ prapadye, śrīmate rāmacandrāya ...
Hanuman advocates the importance of reciting the six syllabled Rama Mantra, Rama Ramaya namah. In section 1.13, states Lamb, Hanuman informs Vibhishana that constant recitation of the Ramanama (Rama's name) mantra removes the bad karma of a person accrued from committing the sin of killing his father, his mother, his guru, or a Brahmin. [6]
' Rama's worship of Shakti ') is a poem in Hindi by Suryakant Tripathi 'Nirala'. It was published in 1937 in the second edition of Nirala's poetry collection Anamika . This long poem consists of 312 lines composed in Nirala's tailored poetic meter , Shakti Puja - a rhyming meter of twenty-four syllables.
The text is one of the Vaishnava Upanishads, [8] completed before about 1500 CE, [9] and includes two verses called the Maha-mantra. [2] The modern era Kali-Santarana Upanishad is the earliest known Hindu text where this widely known mantra appears. [9] It was popularized by one of the Bhakti movement leaders Chaitanya Mahaprabhu in the 16th ...
Devoted to Rama, Bhadra later met the sage Narada, who initiated an upadesam (instruction) of the Rama Taraka mantra. Bhadra mediated and chanted the mantra on the banks of the Godavari River for several years. Pleased, Rama promised to return to meet Bhadra when he had found Sita, who had been abducted by the demon king Ravana. However, Rama ...
Mantra japa. 21–24: Salutations to Āditya. 25–30: A description of the results of this prayer, the method of recital, and the procedure followed by Rāma to successfully invoke Āditya to bless him with the requisite strength for the victory on the battlefield.