from milwaukee to mayapur HH Jayapataka Swami on Pundarika Vidyanidhi, Haridas Thakur & Srinivas Acarya ,steven j. rosen

h h jayapataka swami


Mahajano Yena Gatah Sa Pantah – Eid Weekend Festival 2020

We have organised a wonderful 2 days of sravana festival on the Glories of the Vaisnava Acaryas! We are very fortunate to have the presence of sadhus like Jayapataka Swami, Kadama Kanana Swami, Agnideva Prabhu, Krishna Kirtan Prabhu, Amarendra Prabhu & Shabdahari Prabhu. These sessions are special & unique and will help us dive deep into the ocean of the lives of the Vaisnava Acaryas.

SUNDAY 24th May 2020

Time:
9.30AM UAE time
11.00AM India time

Please join us and sing along. Don’t forget to share, subscribe and tune into all our videos.

#kirtan #mahamantra #meditation #dubai #bhakti #chant #dance #eat #vegan #mantra #kirtanrasa20 #kirtanrasa #middleeast #krishna #music #immersive #heart #stream #kirtanoasis #love #focus #vaisnavabhajans #stayhomestaysafe #bhajans #vaisnava #acarya #sampradaya #guru #spiritualmaster #example

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Steven J. Rosen, also known as Satyaraja Dasa (born 1955), is an American author. He is the founding editor of The Journal of Vaishnava Studies and an associate editor of Back to Godhead, the magazine of the Hare Krishna Movement. He authored more than 20 books on Vaishnavism and related subjects.including Black Lotus: The Spiritual Journey of an Urban Mystic (2007), which is the life story of Bhakti Tirtha Swami.

Steven J. Rosen has a strong view on vegetarianism and has written Diet for Transcendence: Vegetarianism and the World Religions (1997, previously published as Food for the Spirit) and Holy Cow: The Hare Krishna Contribution to Vegetarianism and Animal Rights (2004). In the former volume, he systematically explains the practice of vegetarianism in various religious traditions, such as Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism and Judaism, with special attention to the philosophical schools of India. In the latter, citing the devotee-scholar Bhaktivinoda Thakur (1838–1914) and the Hindu savant Sivaya Subramuniyaswami (1927–2001), he looks at early Vedic tradition, animal sacrifices, and the innovative contributions of the Hare Krishna movement.

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