radha

Swami Shivapadananda Daily Reading - Day 21

SWAMI SHIVAPADANANDA DAILY READINGS Taken from Mother Radha's notes.

In the Chandogya Upanishad [one of the Hindu philosophical treatises] it says, 'Utter the words and know the meaning. He does n...

Swami Shivapdananda Daily Reading - Day 16

SWAMI SHIVAPADANANDA DAILY READINGS Taken from Mother Radha's notes.

An excerpt from a book by Swami Yatishwarananda

[biographical detail on Swami Yatishwarananda at end of post] As a sadhaka [spiri...

Swami Shivapadananda Daily Reading - Day 13

SWAMI SHIVAPADANANDA DAILY READINGS Taken from Mother Radha's notes.

Submit to Him and be carefree.

Humble yourself before Him. Say, 'I am nothing, Thou art all. I am nothing, Thou art all. I ...

Swami Shivapadananda Daily Reading - Day 11

SWAMI SHIVAPADANANDA DAILY READINGS Taken from Mother Radha's notes.

God's Grace

The bird laid its eggs on the shore and the sea came and took them away. The bird was angry with the sea and b...

Swami Shivapadananda Daily Readings - Day 9

SWAMI SHIVAPADANANDA
DAILY READINGS
Taken from Mother Radha's notes.

Your Shrine

Have a little shrine in your home, otherwise you are like a person without a heart, without life blood, who has...

Swami Shivapadananda Daily Readings - Day 8

SWAMI SHIVAPADANANDA
DAILY READINGS
Taken from Mother Radha's notes.

In a Hindu home, when devotees want to be happy, when the family wants to be happy, it cannot come without unity. The whole un...

Swami Shivapadananda Daily Readings - Day 1

SWAMI SHIVAPADANANDA
DAILY READINGS
Taken from Mother Radha's notes.

A person must never think he is a sinner, he must always think he is pure, that he is the creation of God. God cannot create som...

Holi Celebration Highlights Tradition, Spirituality, Legends

AUSTIN, TEXAS, March 5, 2007: An array of colors covered students' faces, clothes and the grass of the South Mall in celebration of the Hindu festival of colors, Holi, sponsored by the Hindu Students Council Sunday. The national day of Holi, which was officially Saturday, celebrates the coming of spring, said Anupama Alturu, event organizer and a business honors sophomore. The festival included games, contests, music and students running around throwing rung, or colored powder, at each other. Students were covered from head to toe in the powder, one of the festival's traditions. The festival is also usually accompanied with music that includes a dhol, an Indian drum. The festival comes from Hindu tradition. The colors come from Hindu deities Radha and Krishna, and the spreading of colors represents equality and harmony between people.


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