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Kavi Pradeep was born Ramchandra Narayanji Dwivedi in 1915 into a middle-class Audichya Brahmin family in the small central Indian town of Badnagar near Ujjain.Since his early student days and later while pursuing graduation from University of Lucknow, [5] he had a passion for writing and rendering Hindi poetry.
"Char Dham Ki Aarti" Surinder Kohli Nand Lal Pathak Suresh Wadkar Chhota Chetan "Parody Song" Laxmikant–Pyarelal Javed Akhtar Shabbir Kumar "Billi Boli Miyaoon" Anand Bakshi Devta "Chunri Bana, Mujhe Odh Le" Dilip Sen–Sameer Sen Dev Kohli, Anwar Sagar, Satyaprakash Udit Narayan "Ek Toota Tara Hoon" Sonu Nigam, Hema Sardesai Doli Saja Ke Rakhna
The organizations also distributed a cassette named as Jai Shri Ram, containing songs like "Ram ji ki sena chali" (transl. the army of Rama is on the move) and "Aya samay jawano jago" (transl. the time has come for the martial youth to arise). All the songs in the cassette were set to the tunes of popular Bollywood songs. [45]
The word Bhagavan (Sanskrit: भगवान्, romanized: Bhagavān; Pali: Bhagavā), also spelt as Bhagwan (sometimes translated in English as "Lord", "God"), is an epithet within Indian religions used to denote figures of religious worship.
Sachai Ki Taqat: 218 "Aisa Ab Tak Hua Nahin" Laxmikant-Pyarelal: Anand Bakshi: Amit Kumar Scandal: 219 "Naam Mera Inglistani" Kirti Anuraag: Suresh Wadkar Shehzaade: 220 "Dheere Dheere Haule Haule" Laxmikant - Pyarelal: Solo 221 "Ek Chhora Ek Chhori" Alka Yagnik; Amit Kumar; Shabbir Kumar Shiv Ganga: 222 "Kya Kahoon Kaise Kahoon" Chitragupt ...
Pyaar Hua Ikraar Hua Shree 420: Shankar–Jaikishan: Manna Dey & Lata Mangeshkar: Hindi: Bhairavi: Ramiya Vastaavaiya Shree 420: Shankar–Jaikishan: Lata Mangeshkar & Mohammed Rafi & Mukesh (singer) Hindi: Bhairavi: Suno Chhoti Si Gudiya Ki Lambi Kahani Seema (1955 film) Shankar–Jaikishan: Lata Mangeshkar: Hindi: Bhairavi: Sab Kuch Sikha ...
The name Kāla appears in the Shiva Sahasranama, where it is translated by Ram Karan Sharma as "(the Supreme Lord of) Time". [256] Bhairava "terrible" or "frightful" [257] is a fierce form associated with annihilation. In contrast, the name Śaṇkara, "beneficent" [36] or "conferring happiness" [258] reflects his benign form.
The Shiva Purana contains chapters with Shiva-centered cosmology, mythology, and relationship between gods, ethics, yoga, tirtha (pilgrimage) sites, bhakti, rivers and geography, and other topics. [ 10 ] [ 2 ] [ 11 ] The text is an important source of historic information on different types and theology behind Shaivism in early 2nd-millennium ...