Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sri Ekkirala Bharadwaj written Telugu-language book Sri Sai Leelamrutham is one of the famous book (Parayana Grandam). [1] Sri Ekkirala Bharadwaja later translated the book to English with the name Sai Baba The Master which is also a popular one. He also wrote "Sri Guru Charitra" in English and Telugu.
The name Sai was given to him by the temple priest Mahalsapati when he returned to Shirdi in 1858. The word Sai refers to a religious mendicant but can also mean God . [ 12 ] In several Indian and Middle Eastern languages the term Baba is an honorific signifying grandfather, father, old man or sir.
Shri Guru Charitra contains 53 chapters in total. 1 to 24 chapters are considered as ‘Gyana Kaand’ 25 to 37 chapters are considered as ‘Karma Kaand’ 38 to 53 chapters are considered as ‘Bhakti Kaand’ Chapter 4 celebrates the birth of Lord Dattatreya. From this chapter on the biography of Datta avatars start.
Narasimha Saraswati, [1] Manik Prabhu, [2] and Swami Samarth [3] [4] Sai Baba of Shirdi believed to be other incarnations of Dattatreya that followed Sripada Sri Vallabha. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Sripada Sri Vallabha was born and lived in Pithapuram , formerly known as Pitikapuram, a town in present-day Andhra Pradesh in India. [ 7 ]
He was initially shunned by both Hindus and Muslims, especially by Hindu Bal Bhate. Sai was a Muslim and Bal Bhate forbade him to enter any Temple. Rohila, a Muslim, who thought Sai was desecrating the local Masjid by performing Hindu prayers and incantations, attempted to kill Sai. Then he saw both the Allah and Bhagwan in Sai and became a ...
A photo of the Charitropakhyan Pothi (volume of pages) in the hand of Guru Gobind Singh. In a literal sense, Charitropakhyan is a plot created by the author in which there is a frame story which has the wise minister narrating stories to his King (ਮੰਤ੍ਰੀ ਭੂਪ ਸੰਬਾਦੇ).
English: "The Open Technology Specialist at the University of Toronto Libraries: A Comprehensive Approach to Wikimedia Projects in the Academic Library" from Wikipedia and Academic Libraries: A Global Project, edited by Laurie M. Bridges, Raymond Pun and Roberto A. Arteaga
Kancharla Gopanna (Telugu: కంచర్ల గోపన్న) (c. 1620 – 1688), popularly known as Bhakta Ramadasu or Bhadrachala Ramadasu (Telugu: భద్రాచల రామదాసు), was a 17th-century devotee of the Hindu god Rama, a saint-poet and a composer of Carnatic music.