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He was also sent to Dodara Village near Nanaksar where there were many good and well versed “ragis”. He got special training for harmonium and tabla (kirtan) for two years under the guidance of Giani Kehar Singh who was a very proficient ragi. Here he was given the duty of reciting “Sukhmani Sahib Path” by Baba Isher Singh Ji. At the age of twelve he moved permanently to Nanaksar Dera (Centre). He started to visit Nanaksar Darbar, Kalera Village at Jagraon of Ludhiana District, Punjab (India) with his paternal uncle.
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He was only eight years of age when his parents died. He was originally named as Sarup Singh but after partaking “Amrit” the “Panj Piaraes” changed it to Amar Singh. His father was Sardar Bakhtawar Singh while his mother was Mata Bhagwan Kaur. Your browser does not support the audio element.Was born on the 1st November, 1942 at Chakar Village, in the District Ludhiana of Punjab, India.
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Recitation of Sukhmani Sahib Path by S.Surinder Singh Matharoo (Kuwait Wale) for Listening online and Free Download in MP3 Format. It is simple in syntax and structure, through its essential meaning will elude one not attuned to the spiritual experience and the idiom and phraseology of gurbani.
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Recited by the Sikhs as a part of morning prayer, it is one of the easier texts in the Guru Granth Sahib. Sukhmani Sahib is a theological statement of the major tenets of Sikhism expressed in devotional poetic form. This brings bliss, peace and approval at the Divine Court. The following six astpadis dwell on the advantages of remembrance, in a spirit of love, devotion and surrender, of the Holy Name which results in linking up one's consciousness with the Divine. In this four-line sloka, the Supreme Being is remembered as adi gure (Primal Preceptor), jugade gure (Preceptor from the beginning of time existing), sat gure (The Truth Preceptor) and sri gurdeve (Preceptor Divine). The Sukhmani Sahib opens with a manglacharan or invocation to the Supreme Being. One of the fundamental texts of the Sikh faith, the Sukhmani presents a complete scheme of the teachings of the Sikh faith. This structure is maintained throughout and through, from canto to canto, there may not be traceable progression of thought as in a philosophical work, there is a continuing unity of spiritual and ethical tone. The first seven stanzas of the astpadi explore the theme stated in the preceding sloka and the eight sometimes sums up the astpadi but, more often, becomes a paean of praise lacing the theme in the context of an overall vision of Eternal Reality. A sloka or couplet precedes each astpadi. The Sukhmani Sahib comprises twenty-four astpadis or cantos, each comprising eight stanzas.
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Sukhmani Sahib Sukhmani, titled Gauri Sukhmani in the Guru Granth Sahib after the musical measure Gauri to which it belongs, is a lengthy composition by Guru Arjan Dev Ji composed around AD 1602-03 on the bank of Ramsar pool in the city of Amritsar.