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Balak Ram [3] (Sanskrit: बालकराम, lit. 'child Rama', IAST : Bālakarāma ), also known as Ram Lalla , is the presiding diety of the Ram Mandir , a prominent Hindu temple located at Ram Janmabhoomi , the birthplace of the Hindu deity Rama in Ayodhya , India .
The ceremony involved the pran pratishtha of the primary temple deity, Ram Lalla (childhood form of Rama), also known as Balak Ram, and subsequent opening of the temple for visitors. [3] [4] The temple stands in the ancient city of Ayodhya, which has also been a disputed site of the 16th-century Babri mosque which was destroyed in 1992.
Balak Ram, who has an evil eye on the Raghuveer Singh property and wants to acquire it as well as wants to kill Professor Vijay Thripati's son named Mahavir Singh, also adopted by Thakur. Mahavir is specially blessed by Bhagwan Bajrangbali and possesses special powers, and he devotes god Hanuman .
Balak Ram, the 5-year-old form of Rama, is the principal deity of the Ram Mandir in Ram Janmabhoomi The ancient epic Ramayana states in the Balakanda that Rama and his brothers were born to Kaushalya and Dasharatha in Ayodhya , a city on the banks of Sarayu River .
Therefore, the most accurate phonetic transcription of the Hindi धर्मशाला into Roman script for common (non-technical) English usage is either 'Dharamshala' or, less commonly, 'Dharmshala', [4] both of which render the sh (/ʃ/) sound of श in English as 'sh' to convey the correct native pronunciation, 'Dharamshala ...
Fatima Jinnah Medical University (Urdu: جامعہ طبی فاطمہ جناح), previously known as Balak Ram Medical College, is a public medical university located in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan.
Renaming suggestions can Balak Ram (Ram Mandir deity) or Balak Ram (Ram Janambhoomi deity) or Balak Ram of Ram Mandir (Ayodhya) or more suggestions.RogerYg 05:08, 25 May 2024 (UTC) Oppose The article is about Bala Ram, meaning Infant form of deity Ram. Hence, as an Encyclopedia it is very necessary to retain and expand this article.
Mallinson became interested in India by reading Rudyard Kipling's novel Kim as a teenager; the book describes an English boy travelling India with a holy man. [3] He was educated at Eton College and the University of Oxford, where he read Sanskrit and Old Iranian for his bachelor's degree, and studied the ethnography of South Asia for his master's degree at SOAS University of London.