Ambashtakam with south Indian dance:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhcVngL0-QU
Ambashtakam with south Indian dance:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhcVngL0-QU
This is download link of all the patriotic songs in sanskrit, deicated to either Mother India or sanatan dharm, some of my favourites are :- Bodh itva sangh bhavam, manasa satatam smaraniam, vande twam bhudevim aryamatram, jayatu jagati hinduta.
http://www.geetganga.org/audio/by/language/sanskrit
@sahashranama
Thanks for that video, I love that rajarajeshwari strotram very much. There is also a storam , amba pancharatnam, I liked that very much sung in a male voice, sadly I have lost that version now.
When the light has risen, there is no day, no night, neither existence nor non-existence; Siva alone is there. That is the eternal, the adorable light of Savitri, - and the ancient wisdom proceeded thence (Svetasvatara Upanishad IV-18). :)
Brahmamokate
Gave me non-dual horripilations
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YAbvlFw8mJo
Lyrics
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDJufx8LiUs
Bhajare Yadunatham
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vIVq2...eature=related
Lakshmi Shankar - Mirabai Meerabai Bhajan - Janama Marana
Must listen!
Sahasranama ji,
How it is possible to post a link to "Bhajan"
Truely "Bhajan" is not ment by any Devotional song,
"Bhajan" means, trying to stop the "Mind" from running in the outside world & concentrate in "God" or God's name.
"Bhaj = running
an" = stopping
Combine both means: To stop the mind from running,
Any action, which helps in the concentration of the attention and promotes love for the Lord can be called as "Bhajan"
Contrarily any action, which keeps the attention away from the eye centre or third eye, can be called as running of "Mind"
jasdir.
For all practical purposes I will use bhajan to mean devotional song. Language is not perfect, if we needed an exact word for every concept we would need millions of words. But because of indexicality language is very efficient and we need only a few thousand words. The meaning of a word depends largely on the context.
Consider the following sentence:
"The man saw the woman with a telescope."
Can you see the ambiguity without knowing the context?
I am no Sanskrit scholar, but the root bhaj has the following meaning: bhaj to worship; to honour, to divide; to be attached to, to serve;
It's possible your meaning of the word is perfectly valid, but my use of the word is not wrong. Let's not get caught up in semantics. I opened this threads to share Hindu devotional music also known as bhajans.
Last edited by Sahasranama; 09 November 2010 at 07:18 PM.
This is the bhajan I wanted to post today:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0BvjnigL44&feature=related
Shri Krishna Aarti
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