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Brahmachari. Brahmachari (transl. Celibate) is a 1938 black and white Marathi film.The film was directed by Master Vinayak and written by Pralhad Keshav Atre and starred Master Vinayak himself along with Meenakshi Shirodkar in lead roles.The film was also made in Hindi language.
The film travels back and forth between two characters. Magadevan is a cab driver in Chennai and also works as a thug for a corrupt politician named Muthurajan. Muniraj is a Good Samaritan and organic farmer who believes in Swami Vivekananda's teachings, thinks the world of Tamil literature, and lives in a village near Erode.
Badi Maa (Hindi pronunciation: ['bə.ɽiː 'mɑ̃ː]; transl. Elder Mother), also called Bari-Ma, is a 1945 Indian Hindi-language war drama film. [1] It was produced and directed by Master Vinayak . Made under the banner of Prafulla Pictures, Kolhapur, it had story written by V. S. Khendekar. [ 2 ]
Vinayak, a 2011 work which is considered by many as an extension of his first novel, fetched him the Sahitya Academy Award in 2014. [5] [8] Years earlier, the Government of India honoured him with the civilian award of Padma Shri. [7] Shah survives his wife, Jyotsna Milan, [14] a Mumbai born writer [15] who died in 2014. [4] He lives in Bhopal ...
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Virat decides to hide Vinayak's truth from Sai and Patralekha to save Patralekha's life and tells the orphanage manager not to tell anything to Sai. Sai decides to find out whether Vinayak is alive and she sneaks into the orphanage but is caught by Virat. Sai decides to do a puja on Vinayak's death anniversary. Virat feels worried after hearing ...
They received the darshan (divine vision) of the saint Kapila Mahamuni. With his blessings, they revived the naga tradition, officially naming it Mahanirvani Akhada near Neel Dhara in Haridwar . Even today, the chief deity (upaasyadev) of the Mahanirvani Akhada is the legendary saint Kapila Mahamuni.
The Ashvalayana Grihya Sutra mentions him as Mahabharatacharya.He is also mentioned in the Taittiriya Aranayaka and the Ashtadhyayi of Pāṇini. [3]Vyasa is regarded to have taught the Mahabharata of 100,000 verses to Vaishampayana.