I have taken my mundane education through thr doctorate level and never have i heard a better teacher of a complex subject than this man in this wonderful video
You have wonderful knowledge. Hare Krishna. I wanted to provide a tiny fact that Indonesia was a Hindu country before the king was converted to Islam. Hence the people there contain Sri in their names as they were forcibly converted after their king.
Amazing discourse!...it is a shame & a marker of the times, that this video has only 300+ likes....!!! It should have been millions!!!...thank you for this!
it really depend on the teacher my Sri Karunamayi recommends Sri Suktam for daily practice , abundance on all levels spiritual educational material health innumerable benefits !
Srimathi Srinivasa Vanakkam. Why shouldn’t it be? Such questions should not come out of a Sri- female. Even males are considered sri. Both females and males are ‘consorts’ of Him- Narayanaaa! Get my drift?
Rasdhae Krishna.. Sir i have a question. I accept that You and Me are made by purusha only, and purusha resides inside us. But why i have a worst character but you have a good one. Please Explain.
Kardama is one of the three sons (Maanasa Putras) of Sridevi. The others are Ananda and Chikleeta. Because of Kardama, Sridevi became a mother, by having him as her son (prakrishtam apatyam yasyaaH saa suputravatii ityarthaH). Mayi sambhava - the Sadhaka requests Kardama to stay in his house forever and to be graceful to him. Maataram shriyam padmamaaliniim - Here Sridevi is described using two adjectives. `Maataa' means mother. Since this mantra is addressed to Kardama, Sridevi is referred to as the mother of Kardama. This may be read as `tava maataram' - `your mother', referring to Kardama alone. However, `tava' is avoided here to indicate the universal motherhood of Sridevi. She is not only Kardama's mother, but also of the myriads of universes that originate from her. The Rahasya Naama sahasra has given the utmost importance to the motherhood of goddesses by having the very first name as `Srimata'.
With all due respects to you sir/madam, you may kindly ignore the portions you didn't understand, but please don't try to limit the speaker. Neither am I a native Tamilian nor do I understand Tamil, but the act of engaging his mother Tongue (or the language he loves) with Deva bhasha is inspiring. Moreover, remember he is addressing a Tamil audience with more than 90% of the lecture in English, for which we are surely blessed. Whenever he's speaking in Tamil, he's referring the person who stated those words, by which one can learn about some great ancient Saints, be it Tamil. thanks.
@@vishwanathgajavelly6856 my intention is not to limit the speaker. I am thinking perhaps any valuable meaning is missing cz i wanna imbibe his interpretation. Nothing else.
Vaswati Sastri I have listened to his Purusha Sukta talk and am a Tamil speaker as well. I can confirm you are not really missing much. I understand there are a couple of instances where an English explanation could have been helpful but we also need to remember his main audience are the folks in the room who most probably all understand Tamil. I am guessing they published this on RU-vid to ensure it reached a wider audience.