” These Guys were offered to act in a Big Film …” See What happens next …?

India’s first superstar Prank, Where is an opportunity for everyone to become a superstar !. But Do you really want to become that Superstar ???? Check out the video !!

How can you say no to a film which releases on silver screen along with films starring Shah Rukh Khan, Amitabh Bachhan, Aamir Khan etc. These guys went around the street offering people an audition for a very popular role, and people couldn’t help but show interest in what they were saying. After they had their full attention, they revealed something unexpected which took people by surprise.

PrankBaaz has come up with a very innovative way to spread a social messages because no one listens when you directly tell them to not do anything. I’m frankly impressed with the idea. I’m sure you will be too.

Well done PrankBaaz! :)

 

Source…..www.storypick.com

Natarajan

29 Indian-Americans among 43 Semifinalists @ National Spelling Bee competition …

Indian-Americans have dominated most of the prestigious spelling awards in the United States for several years now, and this year is no different. Out of 49 semi finalists of the annual Scripps National Spelling Bee, 25 are of the Indian origin dominating another prestigious annual event.

The semi finals which are scheduled on Friday will have all 49 contestants competing for a place in the finals of 88th Scripps National Spelling Bee.

S-1

14 years old Gokul Venkatachalam who finished third in 2014 is performing fairly well this year and is one of the best contenders for the prize. Another good contender is 13 years old Vanya Shivashankar, who is making a fifth appearance in the Spelling Bee. Vanya’s elder sister Kavya won the 2009 Championship. Sriram Hathwar and Ansun Sujoe were the joint winners in 2014.

The National Spelling Bee has been going on since 1925. It started with 9 contestants and this year it received participation from all 50 states. This year’s winner will be awarded with a cash prize of $ 35,000.

News Source: The Hindu

 

Source….www.storypick.com

natarajan

Bai Sangli….An Unsung Hero…Who Helped More than 300 Poor Students …

This Unsung Hero is one hero provided financial help to poor students. But this is no millionaire — he made a living by pedalling a pedicab. Bai Fangli donated a total of 350,000 yuan to help more than 300 poor students continue with their studies. In 2005, he passed away at the age of 93.

For almost twenty years, to save up for his donations, Bai Fangli peddled his pedicab everyday.

His devotion started in 1987 when he was 74 years old. Bai had prepared to retire and say goodbye to his job.

Bai Fangli: Selfless donation to poor students

But after coming back to his hometown, a group of children working in the field aroused his attention.

Bai’s daughter, Bai Jinfeng said:” He asked why the children didn’t go to school. And our relatives told him that it was because they were too poor to afford tuition. My father was worried so he decided to donate 5,000 yuan to the schools in our hometown. But for him, it was all he owned.”

As soon as he returned to Tianjin, Bai went back to work. All of his earnings went to support the needy students.

His sons and daughters tried to persuade him to change his mind, as they wanted him to enjoy a relaxing life. But the father turned a deaf ear to them.

Bai Jinfeng also said:” At that time, he went out at dawn and wouldn’t return until darkness fell. He earned 20 to 30 yuan each day. After returning home, he put his earnings in a place carefully.”

Bai had always felt regretful that he was illiterate. So he hoped the next generation could change their destiny with education.

Later on, to increase his effort to assist students in need, Bai moved to a simple room near the Tianjin Railway Station. He waited for clients 24 hours a day, ate simple food and wore discarded second-hand clothes he found.

At the age of 82 years old, to his children’s surprise, Bai made another decision.

He founded an education support fund with the help of loans.

But his life driving a pedicab continued.

Xu Xiuxiang, one of the workers of Education Support Fund, said:” He never forgot when to give money to the schools and often urged us to give his earnings to the school. Each time he gave the money he felt very happy and said he had completed his mission again.”

In 2001, he drove his pedicab to Tianjin YaoHua Middle School, to delivering his last installment of money. Nearly 90 years old, he told the students that he couldn’t work any more. All of the students and teachers were moved to tears.

Bai Fangli said:” I hope the students could study hard and get a good job, and then make contributions to our country.”

A long journey of supporting and aiding students lasted two decades.

In 2005, he was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer.

Although he had kept none of his earnings for himself, he was left with his selfless spirit and love.

Source…..http://english.cntv.cn/program/china

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Handover your wealth of Love to God…”

Youth today are becoming exceedingly greedy and totally selfish, harboring feelings of hatred and jealousy. Their lifestyle of enjoying worldly and carnal pleasures (bhoga) will result in diseases (roga).In ancient times, youth and saints alike, lead a life of sacrifice and sense control (tyaga and yoga) and enjoyed peace and joy. When going on a tour, people like to carry sufficient money for expenses and when they finish the journey or reach the goal, they deposit or hand over the remainder to a trustworthy friend and sleep soundly. All of you are blessed with the wealth of love from the moment of your birth. In this field of worldly activity (Karmakshetra), it is very difficult to safeguard the treasure of love (Prema). Therefore you need to find a faithful friend to hand it over – and the only true friend is God. So hand over the wealth of your love to God, and lead a secured life filled with peace and joy.

Sathya Sai Baba

” ‘Ugly Indian’ is Cleaning up Dirty Cities….”…An Inspiring story…

Bangalore is inspiring people across India to transform the cities they live in, one mile at a time, finds Indulekha Aravind.

It is perhaps the best kind of uprising – without banners, newsroom debates or vehement netas.

Instead, what it does have is a simple but effective slogan: “Kaam Chalu, Mooh Bandh!” (roughly translated as ‘Stop Talking, Start Working’).

The residents of Bangalore might be familiar with the work of The Ugly Indian, an anonymous group born in 2010 with the aim of making the city cleaner.

When you pass a recently painted red wall near a surprisingly clean pavement, for instance, you know it is their handiwork. Four years after the movement kicked off, it seems to be inspiring similar “risings” in other cities and spin-offs in Bangalore itself.

Image: A subway cleaned and decorated with paintings. Photograph, courtesy: The Ugly Indian

On August 15 this year, a group of 200-odd volunteers turned up at MG Road in Bangalore to create a ‘model mile’ by cleaning up the pavement, planting saplings and painting road dividers.

The volunteers were employees of various companies in Bangalore who had come forward to take part in Adopt A Mile, an initiative launched by five friends working in tech companies.

“We were wondering what we could do to change things in the cities. So, we decided to take a stand in their transformation at an individual level by bringing about change one mile at a time. We talked to the companies where we work as well as CEOs of other firms to get their employees involved in adopting a mile,” says A Ramachandran, one of the founders and an executive in an IT company.

They are currently in talk with few companies to include them in the movement . They could either beautify and maintain the mile or even build skywalks and other infrastructure in partnership with civic agencies.

“We are not talking about picking up garbage or filling potholes, which is the job of the Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike,” says Ramachandran.

By involving companies, the group also hopes to bring in the rigour of the corporate sector into the programme by publishing quarterly results on the website www.adoptamile.in and by conducting audits of the adopted stretches of road independently.

“For instance, if a company is found to have failed in its responsibility in maintaining that “mile” the agreement with it can be cancelled,” explains Ramachandran. The volunteering could also become a team-building exercise for the employees who participate. The entire effort, he says, has been in partnership with The Ugly Indian.

And it’s not just Bangalore. On Friday, photographs appeared on The Ugly Indian Facebook page about ‘Rajahmundry Rising’, where a ‘spot’ in the Andhra town filled with garbage, near a decrepit wall which was being used as a urinal, has been transformed into a clean, bright quarter with a bench and potted plants.

The Facebook page of the Andhra Pradesh group chronicles its efforts through at least a couple of other ‘spot fixes’ and it would warm the cockles of even a cynic’s heart.

In August, it was Mumbai’s turn, when a bunch of enthusiasts got busy on a Sunday morning and spruced up, what seems to have been, an eyesore in Worli. Bhubaneswar too has a group that calls itself “Stopp Us”, reports Times of India.

It has already cleaned up four walls in the city and have plans for many more. “Risings’ have also taken place in Vijayawada, Meerut, Salem, Gurgaon, Kanpur and Visakhapatnam, among others.

The Ugly Indian started off with a simple enough premise. If you want to make a change, begin by doing something instead of just sitting back and blaming the government or “the system”.

The modus operandi is ‘spot fixes’, where a particular area in a city is chosen and a group of volunteers, usually brought together via email, turn up to clean and beautify it. People in the vicinity are asked to monitor it to help ensure it is maintained. As a volunteer at two such spot-fixes a couple of years ago, I can vouch that the emphasis is on working, not socialising.

 

The entire operation was supervises by a small group of people, who also chipped in.Volunteers are given gloves, masks, paint and brushes and roll up their sleeves and plunge in.

After cleaning and painting, small dustbins, or TereBins, are placed so that litterbugs no longer have an excuse. The materials are bought with Rs 100-200 contributed by each volunteer at the spot fix, usually numbering 10 to 15.

Unfortunately, The Ugly Indian’s “moo bandh” principle also extends to media queries and email requests for interviews were met with “we do not respond to the media”. This would also be in keeping with its principle of anonymity and no single person taking centre stage.

 

A wi-fi hotspot & pavement cafe at a former dirty spot on MG Road, Bangalore

But the group does add: “All we can say is that all the growth around the country is totally spontaneous and ‘inspired’ – nobody from Bangalore is going to other cities, or even talking to anyone.”

The exception seems to have been an ‘Ask Me Anything’ on Reddit, where a volunteer clarified: “We are trying to move from an underground guerilla-type movement to one where citizens collaborate with elected officials.”

Requests for “spot fixes” and “risings” have been coming in even from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Indonesia and a few other countries, adding “Our only agenda is to convert despair to hope.”

To volunteer for a spot fix or learn how to organise one, send an email to theuglyindian@gmail.com. More details on www.facebook.com/theugly.indian

Indulekha Aravind ln  

Source…..www.rediff.com

Natarajan

 

 

How this Aussie Girl Won Sir Richard Branson Over …

Isley Hermansen has dyslexia. Her video about the condition inspired billionaire Richard

Isley Hermansen has dyslexia. Her video about the condition inspired billionaire Richard Branson, who also has dyslexia. Source: Supplied

WHAT does this 12-year-old girl from northern NSW have in common with Sir Richard Branson, the charismatic entrepreneur with a net worth of $US4.9 billion?

They both have dyslexia.

It’s an unlikely pairing, but Isley Hermansen caught the attention of the Virgin Group founder through a heartwarming video she made about the struggle dyslexics face.

Isley started high school this year and was struggling to keep up in class, her mother Julie Hermansen told news.com.au.

“She was suffering a lot from anxiety, which goes hand in hand with dyslexia, and I was trying to think of a way to build her self esteem and empower her,” Julie said.

One Saturday afternoon, Isley Googled ‘famous dyslexics’ and discovered a long rollcall of high profile men and women, including Stephen Hawking, Cher, Roald Dahl and Jamie Oliver.

“She decided to put all these famous faces together in a PowerPoint presentation. She did all the animation and everything on her own, we found a powerful song and we put the video on YouTube,” said Julie.

In the video, Isley explains what it’s like to live with the condition.

“Right now it seems like you have got it all over us … because being in a classroom is not our strong point. Sitting for tests, writing essays and reading are all a struggle for us. You don’t see us put our hand up for answers much, and we might try and hide in the classroom,” she writes.

“One day I’m going to fly like a dyslexic,” the video says, accompanied with images of Branson and other dyslexic celebrities including Keira Knightley, Orlando Bloom and Michael Jordan.

Julie shared the video on a dyslexic support Facebook group and was overwhelmed with the response.

“We were contacted by other families who said they cried when they saw it. It got shared in the US and the UK. We got so much feedback from people saying they found it inspirational and from teaching advocates who wanted to use it in schools,” she said.

 

Sir Richard Branson is the UK’s seventh richest man. Photo: Rob Kim.

Sir Richard Branson is the UK’s seventh richest man. Photo: Rob Kim. Source: Getty Images

Julie and Isley then went “went straight to the top” and contacted Branson’s team around five weeks ago.

“We didn’t think we’d get anywhere. We thought, ‘Oh well, we tried’. But then last week I received an email from Richard’s team and it all spiralled from there. It’s incredible to have his support and to have the issue out there in the public eye.”

Branson shared the video on his Facebook page and wrote a blog post about Isley.

‘Every now and then you come across something so inspiring that you can’t help but share it. This was certainly the case with this wonderful idea from 12-year-old Isley, who has severe dyslexia,” Branson wrote.

“Isley’s mum wrote to me saying that one of the main problems with dyslexia is a misunderstanding of the condition, which leads to people feeling ashamed to be dyslexic.

“She said that some kids prefer to fail rather than admit to the shame of being dyslexic. While awareness about dyslexia is growing, it can still hold so many people back.

The note that inspired Richard Branson

sley’s letter to Sir Richard Branson. Source: Supplied

“But with videos like Isley’s, the word is spreading that dyslexics can ‘Shake the Shame’ and see all of the positives of being dyslexic. I see my condition as a gift, not a disability. It has helped me learn the art of delegation, focus my skills, and work with incredible people,” he wrote.

Isley says she’s stoked with the worldwide response to her video.

“It makes me feel very special,” she told news.com.au. “She’s really happy,” her mum added.

Julie says dyslexia is a “hidden disability”.

“There’s no funding for it. Teachers aren’t trained to deal with it and they don’t know how to identify it.

“It’s got nothing to do with intelligence — Richard Branson is a highly intelligent man. It’s just that dyslexics learn differently. They need to be taught differently and we need the school system to change,” she said.

Dyslexia is hereditary and affects an estimated 10 per cent of all Australians, according to the Australian Dyslexia Association.

Source……..www.news.com.au

natarajan

Message For the Day…”GOD sees your Devotion , Not your Power…HE Looks at your heart and not your wealth….”

There are three aspects in human beings called Mala, Vikshepa andAvarana. Of these, Mala represents the fruits of actions done in previous births and is the cause of ashanthi (mental disquiet). Until you eliminate this, it will give rise to trouble and sorrow. When you get rid of the burden of the evil effects of karma or past action, you can attain peace. To get rid ofMala, you must engage yourself in sacred tasks. The Lord judges you by the sincerity of your thoughts, not by the forms of your worship. The Lord sees your devotion (bhakthi) and not your power (shakti). He cares for your qualities (gunas) and not your caste, creed or lineage (kula). He looks at your heart (chittam) and not at your wealth (vittham). You must strive to purify your heart and engage yourself in righteous action, with devotion and integrity. No spiritual discipline (sadhana) will serve its purpose if you are involved in sinful deeds.

Sathya Sai Baba

“The Amazing town Home to thousands of Buddhist Monks and Nuns…”

Talk about crammed. Thousands of red houses are jammed together at the Seda Larong Wuming\

Talk about crammed. Thousands of red houses are jammed together at the Seda Larong Wuming Buddhist Institute in China. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

STACKED one on top of the other, thousands of red houses completely cover the hillside they are built on. At around 4000 metres above sea level, these log cabins are the homes of thousands of Buddhist monks and nuns.

Founded in 1980, the Seda Larong Wuming Buddhist Institute in the Larung valley, Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, China, is the largest centre for the study of Tibetan Buddhism in the world and is home to around 40,000 people.

40,000 Buddhist monks and nuns live at the Institute. Photo: William Yu / Solent News

40,000 Buddhist monks and nuns live at the Institute. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

Photographer William Yu spent time with them and photographed their daily lives and their homes. He said, “It’s an awesome experience to photograph here, the landscape is shockingly beautiful and unique. The people, most of them monks and nuns, are friendly.

“It’s a remote place and tough to get to, but worth all the efforts to be there. I wish I could have stayed there longer.”

The largest centre for the study of Tibetan Buddhism in the world. Photo: William Yu / So

The largest centre for the study of Tibetan Buddhism in the world. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

Mr Yu observed many of the monks’ and nuns’ daily rituals such as the need to remove shoes before entering a building. He said, “It’s unhygienic to wear shoes indoors and if everyone wears shoes in the hall, it quickly becomes dirty and it may damage or mark the floor coverings. Buddhists like to have things last for a long time.

“While Buddhists are pretty easygoing and will let most things slide, you will simply not be allowed in wearing shoes.

“It is also a mark of respect and simply a cultural and religious convention of etiquette. And it is in their monastic code for monks and nuns that they are not allowed to teach Buddhism to anyone wearing shoes. Although this technicality is widely ignored, it has influenced the practices of the devout.”

Photo: William Yu / Solent News

Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

All of the monks and nuns wear traditional Buddhist monastic robes.

Mr Yu, from San Francisco, said: “The robe is so versatile that it can be used not just as clothing, but as things like a blanket and a groundsheet. It is easy to clean and repair and is perhaps the oldest style of dress still in fashion after 2,500 years.”

All of the monks and nuns wear traditional monastic robes. Photo: William Yu / Solent New

All of the monks and nuns wear traditional monastic robes. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

A sight to be seen. Photo: William Yu / Solent News

A sight to be seen. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

Buddhist monks and nuns are not allowed to wear shoes indoors. Photo: William Yu / Solent

Buddhist monks and nuns are not allowed to wear shoes indoors. Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

Photo: William Yu / Solent News

Photo: William Yu / Solent News

Photo: William Yu / Solent News Source: Picture Media

 

Photo: William Yu / Solent NewsPhoto: William Yu / Solent News

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

“அது இருக்கட்டும் …இந்த ரோட்டில் போனா கிண்டி வந்திடுமா …”?

கலியுகத்தில் நம் ஊனக்கண்களுக்கும் காட்சி அருளும் அவதார மூர்த்தி – காஞ்சி முனிவர் – பெரியவாள் என்றிந்தப் பார் புகழும் தவசிரேஷ்டன் தடுத்தாட்கொள்ளும் தயையால் சென்னையில் முகாம் இட்டிருந்த புண்ணிய மாதங்கள். பிரதானமாக மயிலாப்பூர் ஸம்ஸ்க்ருதக் கல்லூரியில், அன்று இளவரசரான புதுப் பெரியவாள் ஸ்ரீ ஜயேந்திரருடன், தங்கியிருந்த அருளாளன் திருவல்லிக்கேணி, நுங்கம்பாக்கம், தொண்டையார்ப்பேட்டை, மாம்பலம் என்று மாநகரின் பல பகுதிகளிலும் தனது புனிதத் திருவடிகளைப் பதித்து, பண்டு தருமம் மிகுந்திருந்த சென்னையில் மீண்டும் தருமப் பயிர் தழைக்க அருள் மழை பெய்து மக்களை அனுக்ரஹித்தார்.

ஒரு நாள் அதிகாலையில் மாம்பலம் சிவா-விஷ்ணு ஆலயத்திலிருந்து ஸ்ரீ திரிபுரசுந்தரி அன்னையுடன் ஸ்ரீமருந்தீஸ்வரர் கோயில் கொண்டுள்ள திருவான்மியூருக்கு அண்ணல் பாதயாத்திரை புறப்பட்டிருந்தார். உடன் செல்லும் பாக்கியம் பெற்ற பக்தர் குழாமில் அடியேனும் இடம் பெற்றிருந்தேன். அன்று முதலமைச்சர் திரு பக்தவத்ஸலம் என்று நினைவு. காவல் துறையாளர் இரண்டு மூன்று பேரும் கூட நடந்தனர்.

சிறிது தூரம் சென்றதும் எதிர்திசையிலிருந்து வந்த ஒருவன் ஸ்ரீ பெரியவாளை நெருங்கினான். செருக்கு மிகுந்த நோக்கு. செருப்புகளைக் கழற்றாத பாதங்கள். அலட்சியமும் அவமரியாதையும் அன்வயமாகியிருந்தன அவனது தோற்றத்தில், தோரணையில்.

முனிபுங்கவர் மீது அவனது ஸ்பரிசம் படாது தடுக்க விரைந்த பக்தர்கள், கைகளால் அரண் கட்டினர். காவல் துறையாளரும் முன் வந்தனர். ஆனால் கருணாமூர்த்தி அவர்களை விலகச் சொல்லிவிட்டு கனிவோடு “உனக்கு என்ன வேண்டும்” என்று வினவினார்.

“எனக்கொண்ணும் வேண்டாம். சங்கராச்சாரியார் பெரியவர்ன்னு பேசிக்கிறாங்களே, அது நீங்கதானே?” என்று வினவினான்.

“அதிருக்கட்டும். உன்னோட பேரென்ன? இந்த விடியக்காலத்துலே எங்கே போயிண்டிருக்கே?” – சரணாகத வத்ஸலனின் பரிவான விசாரணை.

அவன் தன் பெயரைச் சொல்லிவிட்டு, “எனக்கு ஜோலியில்லையா? வேலைக்குப் போய்க்கினு இருக்கேன்” என்று அஸ்திரம் ஏவுவது போல் கூறினான். “நீங்கள் மடாதிபதிகள் சோம்பேறிகள். பயனுள்ள காரியம் ஏதும் செய்யாதவர்கள்” என்ற ஏளனம் – கண்டனம் – அவன் பதிலில் தொனித்தது.

“உனக்கு எங்கே வேலை?” தயாநிதியின் தொடர்ந்த விசாரணை.

“கிண்டியில்” என்று கூறியபின் “ஒண்ணு கேக்கறேன். இந்த இந்து மதத்தை யாரு உண்டாக்கினாங்க?” எனக் கேட்டான்; வினாவில் ஞானம் தேடும் விநயமோ அறிவு வேட்கையோ கடுகளவும் இல்லை.

ஸ்ரீபெரியவாளின் – ஞான மேருவின் – “தெரியாதப்பா” என்ற மறுமொழி ஏதோ வாதத்தில் வெற்றி கொண்ட இறுமாப்பை அவனுக்குத் தந்தது போலும்.

“தெரியாதுங்கிறீங்க; அப்புறம் சாத்திரம் அப்படிச் சொல்லுது, இப்படிச் சொல்லுது’ சிலைமேலே பாலை ஊத்து, நெருப்பிலே நெய்யை ஊத்துண்ணு சொல்றீங்களே? எப்படி, இதெல்லாம் நல்லதுக்குன்னு நம்பறது?” எனக் கணை தொடுத்தான்.

கொஞ்சமும் சலனமுறாமல் தயாபரன் “அதிருக்கட்டும், கிண்டிக்குப் போகணும்னியே, இந்த ரோடுல போனா கிண்டி வந்துடுமா?” என்று வீணை ஒலித் தண்குரலில் வினவினார்.

“அதானே நான் போய்ட்டிருக்கேன்” என்ற பதிலில் “இதென்ன அநாவசியக் கேள்வி” என்ற உதாசீனம்.

“ஆமா… இந்த ரோடு யாரு போட்டது?…” அந்தப் பாமரனின் இதய வீணையை மீட்ட முற்பட்டுவிட்டார் முனிபுங்கவர்.

“இது என்னோட பாட்டன், முப்பாட்டன், அவுங்களோட முப்பாட்டன் காலத்துலேருந்து இருக்கற ரோடு… இதை யார் போட்டிருந்தா என்ன? கிண்டிக்குப் போவுது; அம்புட்டுத்தானே வேணும்?”

“இது கிண்டிக்குப் போற ரோடுன்னு நிச்சயமாச் சொல்றியே”

“இதிலே என்னங்க சந்தேகம்? தினமுந்தான் போய்க்கினு இருக்கேனே… மேலாலும் உசரப் பாருங்க… எந்தெந்த சாலை எங்கே போவுதுன்னு கைகாட்டி போர்டு போட்டிருக்காங்களே சர்க்காரிலே”

மான் அன்பு வலையில் சிக்கிவிட்டது. ஆனால் இது சிறைப்படல் இல்லை; மீட்சி!

“நானும் உன்னைப் போலத்தாம்பா… இந்த ரோடு யாரு போட்டதுன்னு அலட்டிக்காம, மேலே இருக்கிற கைகாட்டி போர்டையும் நம்பி நீ போற மாதிரி, நான் இந்து மதம் யாரு உண்டாக்கியதுன்னு விசாரப்படாமே போறேன்… நீ இந்தக் கைகாட்டிய நம்பறே… அது கூட காத்துலே மழையிலே தெசை மாறலாம்; கீழே விழலாமே.. நானும் இந்த சாஸ்திரம், வேதம்ங்கிறதையெல்லாம் அப்படியே நம்பிப் போறேன். அதெல்லாம் என்னைவிட எவ்வளவோ பெரியவா, முப்பாட்டனில்ல ஆயிரம் ஆயிரம் வருஷங்களா நெலச்சிருக்கிறதை நம்பறேன்; நம்பச் சொல்றேன்” என்று பரிவு ததும்பும் குரலில் கூறிய தயாநிதி,
“சரி, உனக்கு ஜோலியிருக்கே…. என்னைப் போலயா?… ஜாக்ரதையாப் போய்ட்டு வாப்பா” என்று அபயக்கரம் உயர்த்தினார்.

அடுத்த வினாடி அவன் பாதரட்சைகளை உதறி விட்டு நெடுஞ்சாண்கிடையாக விழுந்து நமஸ்கரித்தான்.

“என்னை மன்னிச்சுடுங்க” என்று நாத்தழுதழுக்கக் கூறினான். கன்னங்களைக் கண்ணீர் நனைத்தது.

Those who came to scoff remained to pray (ஏளனம் செய்ய வந்தவர் பிரார்த்தித்து வணங்க அமர்ந்தனர்) என்ற ஆலிவர் கோல்ட் ஸ்மித்தின் (The village Preacher) (கிராம பூஜாரி) கவிதை வரிகள் நினைவுக்கு வந்தன.

அதன் பின் ஸ்ரீ பெரியவாளின் பல முகாம்களிலும் தரிசனத்துக்கு வந்தான் அந்தப் பரம பக்தன், ரஸவாதப் பரிணாமத்தால்!

ஜெய ஜெய சங்கர! ஹர ஹர சங்கர!!

Source…..Smt.Uma Shankar in http://www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan
Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/5287/common-mans-change-heart-devotion#ixzz3bA0LOyoo

Teachings of Guru Nanak that Make Sense Even Today….

Five centuries after the passing of Guru Nanak, his words still resonate with his followers.  Let’s take a look at 10 of his teachings that make sense to this day.

1. Never forget the poor.

Poverty in India

Arvind Balaraman | Flickr

This mantra was relevant in 1500 when there was no concept of poverty alleviation, and is just as relevant now, when poverty hasn’t left the world.  When Nanak was 12, his father gave him Rs. 20 to set up a business. Nanak bought food worth Rs. 20 and gave it away. When his father asked him about this investment, Nanak told him it was a “true business”.

Today, a Gurudwara named Sacha Sauda (true business) exists, where Guru Nanak fed the poor.

2. There is one God

sikh boy

sikhhelpline

Using religion to segregate people into categories is awful. In the Guru’s own words, “There is neither Hindu nor Muslim.”

On his visit to Hardiwar, he saw people offering the water of the Ganges towards the sun in the east, as an offering to their ancestors in heaven. He began to throw water towards the West. When others ridiculed him, he said: “If Ganges water will reach your ancestors in heaven, why should the water I throw not reach my fields in the Punjab, which are far less distant?

3. Women are equal to men.

sikh woman

csmonitor

At a time when other Indian religions wanted quiet, demure women in the temple and no women in the mosque, he permitted women to join religious gatherings and openly sing their praises of God.

4. Running away to a forest won’t give you enlightenment.

Gurudwara

santabanta

“…Remember the essence of religion/ Is meekness and sympathy/ But a life of goodness and purity/ Amid the world’s temptations…” (Guru Nanak)

Maybe one could achieve enlightenment in forests centuries ago, but we’re not capable of that today. And Guru Nanak doesn’t even require you to do that. He believed that living as a householder was better than going away for a divine truth. Nanak himself was a farmer even after achieving enlightenment.

5. These five evils are probably ruining your life.

suffering

pmaurer

a. Ego b. Anger c. Greed d. Attachment and e. Lust.

Most, if not all, suffering of big city life comes from these five evils.

6. Find your own guru

Sikh warrior

You need a mentor to guide you on how to live right. In Guru Nanak’s words, living right is much superior to visiting pilgrimage destinations.

7.  Be selfless.

Sikh langar

The Punjab Golden Temple feeds over a 100,000 people of all religions every single day. Not because there is some divine gain, but because it is a sacred duty. For Nanak, the concept of selfless service was a way of life.

8.  Fight superstition of any kind.

superstition

Nanak devoted his life to attacking formal rituals, caste, and practices that didn’t make any sense. This is the simplest way you can find meaning and purpose in your own life – cutting out the clutter of what society dictates you should do.

9. Simplicity is beautiful.

sikh language

hindustantimes

It is not hard to practice the tenets of Sikhism. There are only 3!

Vand Chako: Sharing with others
Kirat Karo: Making an honest living
Naam Japna: Remembering God at all time

10. Travel!

Taj mahal beautiful

 

There is much to be gained from your journeys.  At a time when religious leaders never ventured out of their villages, Guru Nanak walked, yes, walked, to Iraq, Ladakh, Tibet and Saudi Arabia!

Source……www.indiatimes.com

Natarajan