Nanak : the correspondent of the ultimate
By: Sumeet D. Aurora.
Publisher: New Delhi Bloomsbury India 2017Description: .xii,227p.ISBN: 9789386349859.Subject(s): Sikh Guru -- Philosphy -- Nanak, Guru 1469-1538 -- IndiaDDC classification: 294.6092 Summary: Guru Nanak, the founder of the Sikh religion, walked the earth to restore love and humanity lurking in the doldrums. His early communion with the Ultimate drew him to far-fetched places to inculcate the scent of unity and equality among people. He sang the divine praises along the way and persuaded people towards the spiritual essence of the Lord. He made an intriguing manifestation that the Lord is One and there exists no other besides Him. Most of what Nanak professed was apparently derived from the Ultimate. As mentioned in the Janamsakhis, he often directed his companion Mardana to play on his rabab as he vividly sang the Bani or Divine Word descending upon him from the skies. With an unrelenting desire to spread enlightenment among the masses, he became an itinerant preacher to eradicate the upsurge of erroneous beliefs and the moss of differences propelled by caste and creed. This exquisitely illustrated book explores the life of Guru Nanak at length and offers an insight into his timeless teachings which are marvelously ingrained in his divine hymns - the Japji, Asa di Var and Barah-maha.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Special Collection- M.K. Gandhi, Guru Nanak Dev ji | NASSDOC Library | 294.6092 AUR-N (Browse shelf) | Available | 50853 |
Browsing NASSDOC Library Shelves Close shelf browser
294.6 SIN-S Songs of the Gurus | 294.6 TAK-S Sikh identity: an exploration of groups among sikhs | 294.6082 SIK- Sikhism and women: history, texts and experience | 294.6092 AUR-N Nanak | 294.6092 KHA-G Guru Nanak Devji and Sikh history in murals | 294.6092 SIN-D Divine master: | 294.60954 JAK-R Relocating gender in Sikh history: transformation, meaning and identity |
Included Bibliography
Guru Nanak, the founder of the Sikh religion, walked the earth to restore love and humanity lurking in the doldrums. His early communion with the Ultimate drew him to far-fetched places to inculcate the scent of unity and equality among people. He sang the divine praises along the way and persuaded people towards the spiritual essence of the Lord. He made an intriguing manifestation that the Lord is One and there exists no other besides Him. Most of what Nanak professed was apparently derived from the Ultimate. As mentioned in the Janamsakhis, he often directed his companion Mardana to play on his rabab as he vividly sang the Bani or Divine Word descending upon him from the skies. With an unrelenting desire to spread enlightenment among the masses, he became an itinerant preacher to eradicate the upsurge of erroneous beliefs and the moss of differences propelled by caste and creed. This exquisitely illustrated book explores the life of Guru Nanak at length and offers an insight into his timeless teachings which are marvelously ingrained in his divine hymns - the Japji, Asa di Var and Barah-maha.
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