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Soulfinder

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  1. Listen at 26:35 where Sant Gurbachan Singh Ji Bhindrawale talks about Hanuman's curse. Also mentioned is the full shabad which you have posted veer ji https://gurmatveechar.com/audios/Katha/01_Puratan_Katha/Sant_Gurbachan_Singh_(Bhindran_wale)/Guru_Granth_Sahib_Larivaar_Katha/Volume_08_Ang_0660-0761/031--Sant.Gurbachan.Singh.(Bhindran.wale)--Raag.Dhanaasri--Ang-695.(Bhagat.Bani).mp3
  2. Interesting find veer ji but this is a different book from that dass uploaded pages from. But i can be wrong as well
  3. Here it is veer ji the facebook link to the video posted on the PBC Tv Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/PanjabBC/videos/248105354360654/?mibextid=rS40aB7S9Ucbxw6v
  4. Here it is veer ji the facebook link to the video posted on the PBC Tv Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/PanjabBC/videos/248105354360654/?mibextid=rS40aB7S9Ucbxw6v
  5. Well everyone is different when it comes to doing bhagati simran. Some prefer reading gurbani first some may prefer simran first. I think its to do with connects the mind with Waheguru Guru Sahib Ji as an example if i miss my nitnem banis i feel like nothing inside. But doing paath nitnem first helps with the connection.
  6. Its not only music its movies as well that can make a person cry as well. I can give examples if anyone wants.
  7. Wjkk wjkf bhen ji no its not a silly question at all. Dass is currently not working at the moment due to health issues so i love spending time with the banis nitnem as its a such a beautiful experience. Dass does help with chores at home with mum especially in the kitchen. About Gurbani vichaar dass hasn't really done that much research on the arth of the banis just research on the timings and marayda of the banis.
  8. @Shaheed4lifeyesterday veer ji was a really good day. As dass for the first time with Waheguru Guru Sahib Ji's kirpa Drishti read both Chandi Chirtars 1 & 2 together along with Chandi di vaar. Nowdays with Guru Sahib Ji's kirpa dass can read Chandi Chirtar 1 without audio tracks. But yesterday used audio track for Chandi chirtar 2. So yesterday this is how dass did paath of the banis. First read Chandi Di Vaar then Chandi Chirtar 1 followed by Chandi Chirtar 2 then 28 pauris of shastar naam mala then in chunks Sri Sukhmani Sahib Ji. After that Jap Ji Sahib then finally Satta Balwand di vaar ramkali. So it was a quite long stretch of a day but dass loved every minute of it. Especially the Bir Ras feeling from the banis.
  9. They should be veer ji as too much money is being spent on adding gold to the ancient Gurdwara sahib nishanis
  10. Thats what i am thinking as well veer ji.
  11. Terrible news veer ji i can't believe it
  12. Sure veer ji i will translate it but its gonna take a bit of time as a lot of information is in the audio track.
  13. Happy Vasakhi best wishes of the day to everyone !!
  14. Thanks very much for the lovely message Veer Ji.
  15. @Shaheed4lifeveer ji i am next thinking about reading the full entire paath of Sri Shastar Naam Mala as everyone mostly reads the first 28 pauris of the bani. According to Dass's research the full paath is upto 1318 pauris which is spilt into 5 chapters in Sri Dasam Granth Sahib Ji. So now dass has got to make a timetable of when and how to read it as hoping to read alongside my current Chandi banis
  16. Plus i also heard that how the council was asking for £50k for holding the Nagar Kirtan. Now thats a lot of money for one day. But yes i agree with you veer ji it became a literal jaloose.
  17. Dass was browsing Facebook and saw this. Feel really sad as they were a very good Kirtani
  18. https://gb.budhadal.org/traditions/jhatka/ Skip to content Menu Search for: Jhatka Jhatka Weapons for Guru Gobind Singh Ji and in turn the Khalsa are given the utmost respect and status, akin to the respect afforded to Sri Akaal Purakh. The poetic compostion of Sri Shastar Naam Maala is in itself evidence of this. Traditionally, according to the ancient warrior kshatriya traditions of India, in order for weapons to be treated with the respect which they deserve, they were annointed with blood, a form of tilak, as they are today in the Nihang Singh tradition. One way in which the Tilak was applied was through Jhatka as we shall explore in greater detail below. Integral to the traditional way of Shastar Pooja (the Worship of Weapons through amongst other things applying tilak in the form of blood), is the carrying out of Jhatka of an animal preferably a male bakra (goat), whilst Chandi di Vaar, a bani from Sri Dasam Guru Granth Sahib Ji, is recited. On hearing the final words of this bani (Fir Na Jooni Aiya) the head is decapitated in one strike (Jhatka-Gatka) Furthermore, in relation to Jhatka, there is a Sakhi located within the Sri Gurpartap Suraj Parkash Granth, where the Joganiya (battlefield spirits) came to Sahib Sri Guru Hargobind Sahib Ji and asked for langar. Maharaj offered them Guru Ka Langar which they declined but instead respectfully requested that they consume their langar on the battlefield. In respect of the above sakhi and in order to fully place this in context via the tradition and maryada of Jhatka and why it is integral to shastar pooja and in turn mandatory for the Khalsa, we must take in to consideration the fact that Sri Dasam Guru Granth Sahib Ji was known as the Vishav Kosh (the knowledge of all granths) in puratan times. Sri Dasam Guru Granth Sahib Ji is a Granth dedicated to socio-political awareness, an awareness which comes from within this Granth and as such and in order to fully obtain this awareness an invocation to the highest Jogani is mandatory. In days of old the Singhs, prior to going to war, used to perform Akhand Paaths of Sri Dasam Guru Granth Sahib Ji in order to ask these joganis to assist them in the battlefield-assistance which would ultimately secure victory for the Khalsa on the battlefield. The belief was, therefore, by invoking them – to have them in your presence whilst engaging on the battlefield, you will attain victory over your enemy. Henceforth when an Akhand Paath Sahib or continuous Jaaps of the Sri Dasam Guru Granth Sahib Ji (or the banis within), the Jhatka is mandatory for the Joganiya, linking in to the sakhi of Sahib Sri Guru Hargobind Sahib Ji. In various forms of Shastar, we recognise these shastars to be a representation of the supreme Jogani (Chandi) therefore in Sri Hazoor Sahib Takhat Abchal Nagar, one of the very few remaining Gurdwara Sahibs that uphold Sri Guru Gobind Singh Ji’s original Maryada, the Shastars are annointed with a Tilak. Jhatka is not for fulfilling one’s desire or taste. Maharaj illustrates this as a characteristic of the supreme Jogani (Chandi) within Ath Chandi Charitar Ustat Barananan. The concept and understanding, along with the philosophy regarding Jhatka is seen as a rather advanced philosophy, and it must be read and discussed with utmost acceptance and the will to be able to think on a grander scale. Within the Sri Adi Guru Granth Sahib Ji, it states: The Sri Adi Guru Granth Sahib Ji also states: Guru Nanak Dev Ji writes in the Guru Granth Sahib Ji: The Sri Adi Guru Granth Sahib Ji is a universal message. The Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji does not promote or demote any food as it puts emphasis on Giaan. If a deer is a herbivore or a lion is a carnivore, their diet will not give them a direct link to liberation from rebirth, it is the actions that they perform that destines their spiritual outcome. The Sri Adi Guru Granth Sahib Ji is a universal message and it appeals to all, with whatever ideology that they entrust. The Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji explains the characteristics of a lion, and the name Singh was given to the Khalsa by Sri Guru Gobind Singh Ji. It is to be understood that many people use certain Tuks from Bhagat Kabir Ji’s Bani to attack the concept of Jhatka, however the Sri Adi Guru Granth Sahib Ji is here to help us spiritually, and to keep us in a saintly way. However when the Gurgaddi was passed from Sri Guru Gobind Singh Ji, the Sri Adi Guru Granth Sahib Ji, the Sri Dasam Guru Granth Sahib Ji (Vishav Kosh) and the Sri Sarabloh Granth Sahib Ji (Sri Manglacharan Puran) were made Guru. It should be noted that the Sri Dasam Granth Sahib Ji and Sri Sarabloh Granth Sahib Ji offer knowledge on socio-political affairs, and how to live life. The Khalsa was not a Nirmala institute, and people nowadays must not use the Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji as a menu to attack others, but to respect the 3 Granths and to view knowledge from all Guru Granths. Sri Guru Gobind Singh Ji wrote in the Sri Bachittar Natak: Sri Guru Gobind Singh Ji used to hunt. It was a common Khalsa practice that has been documented in Puratan Rehitnameh. Within the Bhai Daya Singh Ji (Panj Pyare) Rehatnama, it states: It serves to condition the warriors mind with what it is like to kill something, something which is alive one moment and dead the next, something which bleeds and breathes the same as us. If one is expected to go to war and fight for Dharam Yudh as the Khalsa is duty bound to do, one must try and get their head around this important concept. To kill is not for everyone, hence why this maryada is for the Khalsa only in order to condition the warriors and prepare them for the horrors of war. The question must be considered that if one is unable to handle a goat being hunted, then how could you fight on the battlefield where bloodshed is inevitable? By killing the goat from a blow from a bladed weapon it also served the Khalsa with important military/ fighting/training skills. To kill a man by decapitation in the wars of yesteryear was the best way for the Khalsa to fight as it meant a quick death, it meant the victim could not get up and attack you or your kin again and it also saved time for the already outnumbered Khalsa warriors who had to inflict quick and deadly blows in order to fight effectively against their massive enemy armies. The neck of a goat is known to be equal in size and construction to that of humans. So by killing the goat through Jhatka it enabled the Khalsa warriors to gage exactly how much force was required when killing their enemy so as to help preserve energy in the battlefield. It was and still is an effective training excercise for Khalsa Warriors. Once the Bakra has been Jhatkad the blood from the animal [which is now considered as being not dirty but pure as it has been killed by a bladed weapon and therefore, akin to being blessed by Sri Akaal Purakh, as Guru Gobind Singh Ji refers to the Kirpan and Khanda as his masters, a metaphor for the almighty] is used as Tilak to be placed upon the weapons of war as has been the ritual practice of Kshatriya Warriors. For the Khalsa the weapons of war are not just merely weapons they are a manifestation of Akaal Purakh’s Energy- Guru Gobind Singh Ji beautifully elaborates on this in his bani within Sri Dasam Guru Granth Sahib Ji. The meat from the Jhatka’d animal is then used as Mahaa Parshad and distributed as Langar to the Khalsa in order to provide them with the requisite protein needed to build muscle and provide energy when engaged in warfare. At a time before protein shakes and whilst living in the jungles, swamps and caves the Khalsa ate the meat of a Jhatka’d animal. It was and still is a necessary facet of the Khalsa Warrior Maryada. Again by eating meat it is considered that the mentality of the eater is affected. For the Khalsa Warriors, this was a necessary and desirable outcome as the Khalsa had to become “unsaintly” in order to wage war in the name of dharma. Guru Ji recognised that no saint had ever been to war and therefore, the Khalsa had to be moulded in to Sant – Sipahi, a complete change of psyche to that of the imbalanced and weak state of affairs of the Sants and Brahmins both individually and as a collective community within India. The skin of the goat was further used for making tabla and nagara (Kettle Drum) skins, and also the bases of stringed instruments. They also served as skins for water carriers which all soldiers were permitted to have. Therefore, we can now see a practical side to why Jhatka was performed, along with the spiritual aspects of this topic. Finally Jhatka also breaks the transmigration cycle and liberates the goat’s soul. This practice not only keeps the warrior spirit alive within the Khalsa Panth as sanctioned by Guru Gobind Singh Ji but also contrary to some misinformed views which scream of animal cruelty etc serves to liberate the soul of the animal, as is outlined in Guru Gobind Singh Jis Bani, Chandi Di Var. The Sarab Loh Granth emphasises on Khalsa Raaj with the use of Bir Raas. Just as the physical body requires food/clothes/assests, the Khalsa Raaj requires Maya (illusion). The physical body needs to survive and to satisfy these needs, Maya is required, to buy food/clothes, and fund the empire etc. The Sarab Loh Granth (Author Guru Hargobind Sahib Ji, mostly compiled by Guru Gobind Singh Ji) highlights the fact that Guru Nanak Dev ji is the manifestation of Parbrahm Parmeswar unlike the other avtaars who were incarnations of Vishnu. Sarabloh Granth ji also emphatically states that no one including Durga can know the limits of Hari. However Mahraaj also mentions that without Maya (illusion) and Laxmi (money) one cannot achieve anything in this world without money (Maya Laxmi) one will suffer. Guru Gobind Singh Ji clearly instructs that the Khalsa Panth should recite and worship Akaal (timeless/deathless) only, the Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji also confims this by stating “Sri Maya Jag Mohani”. Traditions Ik Oankaar Jhatka Who Is The Guru? Who Is A Sikh? budhadal Follow on Instagram Disclaimer Copyright © 2023 Shiromani Panth Akali Budha Dal. All Rights Reserved.
  19. Usually they bathe the animal first then do paath of Chandi di vaar then perform jhatka in the nihang dals
  20. Thanks veer ji its all Waheguru Guru Sahib Ji's kirpa Drishti.
  21. Dass is extremely happy as it took 4 days to complete the full paath of Sri Zafarnama Sahib Ji with the audio tracks. Dass completed it yesterday with Waheguru Guru Sahib Ji's kirpa Drishti and it was such a beautiful feeling that the sampuran paath has been done. Dass would like to encourage the sangat to read the whole paath as dass did
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