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Puran Bhagat (Puran Bhakt) is a 1933 Hindi devotional biopic film from New Theatres Ltd. Calcutta. [1] The film was Debaki Bose 's debut direction in Hindi. [ 2 ] The film starred K. L. Saigal , Uma Shashi, Kumar , Molina Devi , K. C. Dey and Tarabai. [ 3 ]
Puran also known as Baba Sahaj Nath Ji, is the supreme head of the Jandiyals, a Hindu caste.The Jandiyals gather twice a year on Guru Purnima and worship Puran Bhagat. The temple of Bawa Sahaj Nath Ji is located in Pakistan, but after partition, the Jandiyals constructed a temple in Jandi near Heeranagar, Jammu, and in Talab tillo (Jammu), another temple is in Taragarh near Dinanagar where ...
Qadir Yar (1802–1892), born Qadar Baksh, was a Muslim Sandhu Jat [1] [2] and a poet of the Punjabi language. Born in Gujranwala , he wrote Punjabi Qissa like Qissa Purana Bhagat , Raja Rasal . [ 3 ]
Raja Sálbán (also known as Salivahan) [1] was a legendary Indian monarch who is said to have founded the city and the Sialkot Fort in Punjab. [note 1] [2] [3] According to Punjabi folklore, he was father of Puran Bhagat and Raja Rasalu, the protagonist of the Adventures of Raja Rasalu.
Pingalwara was founded informally in year 1924 by a then 19-year-old Ramji Das who later became famous as Bhagat Puran Singh Dr. Inderjit Kaur Pingalwara and Harbhajan Bajwa Pingalwara is officially registered as the All India Pingalwara Charitable Society under the Act 1960, Reg. No. 130.
Bhagat Puran Singh on a 2004 stamp of India. Bhagat Puran Singh (4 June 1904 – 5 August 1992) was an Indian writer, environmentalist, and philanthropist.As a young man he decided to dedicate his life to humanitarian work, and in 1947, he established Pingalwara, a home for the sick and disabled in Amritsar.
The story of Raja Salban and his two sons, Puran and Rasalu, has been popular in Punjab for several centuries. However, the earliest tales were written down in the 19th century, and display visible Islamic influences.
He is the son of the sage Vyasa and the main narrator of the scripture Bhagavata Purana. Most of the Bhagavata Purana consists of Shuka reciting the story to the king Parikshit in his final days. Shuka is depicted as a sannyasi, renouncing the world in pursuit of moksha (liberation), which most narratives assert that he achieved. [4]