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KRISHNA Tarangam

A Political and Sciences Website

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Welcome to krrisha.com!

By Vivek Sharma


The site is a small classroom to help you understand what has been confusing you so far. There are so many texts in Bharat that it needs a lifetime to go through them all. But, there is a shortcut. Read the Gita and you will read all.

Want to know how the Gita is relevant for the modern mind? What really it is but Krishna Tarangam which rises in the Mahabharat and reaches its infinite depths in the Gita. The Gita is also called the heart (hriday in Sanskrit) of the Mahabharat. The word hrida also means the sea. As all the rivers flow into the sea and all blood streams pour into the heart, so do all the streams of wisdom—political, spiritual and material—collect into the depths of the Gita and rise like a composite powerful, uplifting and eternal vibration.  I have named this vibration—Krisha or Krishna Tarangam. In fact, the Gita also means the eternal vibration emanating from the source—Creator, God, Ishwar, Bhagwan. The old rishis (researchers of truth) say, Ya swayam Padmanabhasya mukhpadmadwinihsritaa (which has vibrated out of God’s mouth). Therefore, the Gita is a vibration (tarangam) of the Creator (Krishna). Why have I named the Creator Krishna? Because, Krishna is not a person but a principle. What Krishna stands for? The word Krishna means mystical, black, unseen, overpowering and prevailing. This comes from the sanskrit root  कृष्, which means to draw, to pull and to plough. What pulls everything should be powerful. What draws everything out should be irresistible and what ploughs through the unseen should be mystically creative. Therefore, principally Krishna means the unseen magnetic vibration which is pulling the world along the dug lines, drawing the best out and mystically creating the world of the time, space and causation. What else the cosmos is but a representation of this principle. The principle applies equally to material, non-material and spiritual dimensions of existence-- maybe beyond that too but it is still unexpressed. What is unexpressed is Krishna and what is expressed is Krishna tarangam. The Gita is the dominant note of that tarangam, the Mahabharata is the expansion of that tarangam and other shastras are also the expressions of the same. The rishis identified this unseen tarangam, absorbed it and expressed it as the Vedas eternal. The same tarangam vibrates in the Bible, in the Quran, in the Puranas, in the Smritis, in the Shrutis, in the Vedanta, in the Yoga Shastra, in the Tantra Shastra and so on and so forth.

The first human expression of this tarangam is swara (primordial vibration). The secondary expression of this tarangam is vyanjan (the medium of vibration). The tertiary expression of this tarangam is shabda (the resultant sound--word). This blog will identify the eternal vibration's extensions  in the modern life.

So, just keep track of the website and carry home the usable tips.

 

What is Krishna tarangam?

The Gita is a vibration (tarangam) of the Creator (Krishna). Why have I named the Creator Krishna? Because, Krishna is not a person but a principle.

The word Krishna means mystical, black, unseen, overpowering and prevailing. This word comes from the Sanskrit root  कृष्, which means to draw, to pull and to plough. What pulls everything should be powerful. What draws everything out should be irresistible and what ploughs through the unseen field should be mystically creative. Therefore, principally Krishna means the unseen magnetic vibration which is pulling the world along the dug lines, drawing the best out and mystically creating the world of the time, space and causation and making it go on. What else is the cosmos  but a representation of this principle. The principle applies equally to material, non-material and spiritual dimensions of existence-- maybe beyond that too, but it is still unexpressed. What is unexpressed is Krishna and what is expressed is Krishna tarangam. The Gita is the dominant note of that tarangam, the Mahabharata is the expansion of that tarangam and other shastras (books of codes of conduct and wisdom) are also the expressions of the same. The rishis (the researchers of universal principles) identified this unseen tarangam, absorbed it and expressed it as the Vedas eternal. The same tarangam vibrates in the Bible, in the Quran, in the Puranas, in the Smritis, in the Shrutis, in the Vedanta, in the Yoga Shastra, in the Tantra Shastra and so on and so forth.

Our Mission

We are a non-profit organization of researchers who have dedicated their life to giving contemporary relevance to the rishi wisdom in day-to-day life.

Our aim is to draw out scientific basis of the rishi wisdom and communicate it to the masses as principles of a healthy, wealthy and progressive life.

Our research centres on The Bhagavad Gita but seeks to bring out the underlying unity idea among various books of religion.

We firmly believe in the idea of oneness and therefore seek to demolish all the separators in the way of one creator idea.

Site Members

Editor-in-Chief -Vivek Sharma

Site Manager : Kalyani Sharda

Site Coordinators- Umesh Gaur and Manoj Gaur

Site Editor- Deeksha Sharma

Content Editor- Shivangi Sharma

Facebook Co-ordinator- Shivaji Natrajan and Umesh Gaur

Twitter Manager- Sanmukh Mukhuphadhyay

Instagram Handler- Bhavini Dubey