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Shabad Hazare is a title given to collection of these Shabads, with Hazare meaning "one thousand". [3] Though it is not present in main text and the meaning is not too clear but traditionally it is believed that each Shabad has the merit of a thousand. [9] Some scholar link the word "hazare" word to the Persian word "Hazra" (lit. present). [10]
Shabad Hazare (ten shabads) Swayyae (33 stanzas) Khalsa Mehma (the praises of the Khalsa) Shaster Nam Mala (a list of weapons) Triya Charitar (the character of humans whose fall in deeply and mentally sexual desire ) Zafarnamah (epistle of victory, a letter written to Emperor Aurangzeb) Hikayats (stories)
The central Sikh sacred text, the Guru Granth Sahib, contains 6,000 shabads, with most of them arranged methodically to music and authorship by their title, known as the sirlekh. [1] Within the shabads, there are musical notations contained within them, known as rahāu (chorus) and ank (verse). [ 1 ]
2.4 English translation. 2.5 Latin script. ... Shabad Hazare; 33 Swayyae; Khalsa Mahima; ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
Shabad da abhiaas karnaa – Practice and rehearse the shabads. 9. Sat Saroop Satgur daa dhian dharnaa – Contemplate and assimilate the beautiful truth of the True Enlightener. 10. Guru Granth Sahib Jee noo Guru mananaa – Believe in and accept Guru Granth Sahib as the Guide to enlightenment. 11.
The Gurus' word, called shabad, is taken as the mystic experience of the Guru. In the words of Bhai Gurdas, a great scholar of the Guru's time, "In the word is the Guru, and the Guru is in the word (shabad). In other words, the human body was not the Guru, but the light of the word (shabad) within the heart was their real personality." When the ...
This book mentioned two shabads of Rama Avtar [23] and from 33 Swaiyey. [24] It also mentioned that Guru Gobind Singh had written Zafarnamah and stories in Hikaaitaan during his lifetime. [25] This serves as evidence of existence of these hymns and composition during the early 18th century and its spread among scholars and common people of that ...
A page from the "Datta Avtar" (Dattareya) chapter of the Rudra Avtar composition within the Dasam Granth, in Guru Gobind Singh's hand. Rudra Avtar (Punjabi: ਰੁਦਰ ਅਵਤਾਰ, pronunciation: [ɾu:d̪ɔ: äːʋt̪aɾ]) is an epic poem under the title Ath Rudra Avtar Kathan(n). [1]