Lokah Samasta by Miten and Deva Premal
Lokah Samasta Sukino Bhavantu… Om Shanti Shanti Shantihi…
I wanted to make a video that showed our universal common ground. We all experience birth and death, we celebrate new beginnings and mourn our losses, we all labor in some way and we all feel a deep urge to create, we have a deep seated need for beauty and dread of what is not… Children, Women, Marriages, Births, all manner of Work, all manner of Art, all manner of Worship, Spiritual Elders and simple peasants, Death and Mourning… silent moments of prayer or thought… Somehow these ways in which we share our most human emotions and experiences – that which becomes archetypal and mythic – these form the seeds of our Divinity. May those seeds bear fruit in your spirit. Peace to all, happiness to all, Grace be in your heart, no matter your path!
An original home-made video for the sacred chant Lokah Samasta as recorded by Miten and Deva Premal:
From the cd “Soul in Wonder” from White Swan Records copyright 2007
Shurangama Mantra Meditation Dharma Talk 000 Lines 1-9 – Refuge in Triple Jewel of Buddhism
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OM NAMAH SHIVAYA BY KRISHNA DAS
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Below are the Sanskrit verses and its English translation.
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Krishna Das travelled to India in the 1960s where, along with Ram Dass, he studied with a Hindu guru named Neem Karoli Baba (Maharaj-ji). Krishna Das has studied Buddhist meditation practices,
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namo ratnatryaye namah aryajnana sagar vairocana vyuharajaya tathagatayah arhate samyaksambuddhayah;
namah sarva tathagatebhyah arhatebhyah samyaksambuddhebhyah;
namah arya avaoliketshvaraya bodhisattvayah mahasattvayah mahakarunikakayah;
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Gâyatrî Mantra
this page last updated on 18-Oct-2005
We meditate on the glory of the Creator;
Who has created the Universe;
Who is worthy of Worship;
Who is the embodiment of Knowledge and Light;
Who is the remover of all Sin and Ignorance;
May He enlighten our Intellect.
Introduction:
The Gâyatrî Mantra is first recorded in the Rig Veda (iii, 62, 10) which was written in Sanskrit about 2500 to 3500 years ago, and by some reports, the mantra may have been chanted for many generations before that.
The word Gâyatrî (mw352) is a combination of Sanskrit words, although there is some disagreement in various texts about the exact derivation.
One suggestion is that the word Gâyatrî is made from these two words:
– gâyanath (mw352) what is sung, giving of praise
– trâyate ( mw457, root trai) preserves, protects, gives deliverance, grants liberation