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Towards inner harmony

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New Delhi; B.Jain pub.; 1992Description: 179pSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • 158.12 MAH
Summary: It is fascinating to observe how Sri Yuvacharya Mahaprajna' s most thought-provoking and breath-takingly lucid books come into being. At the appointed hour, a lean tall man with a calm, smiling face enters the hall where the shivrasthis are gathered to practise dhyana. After initiating them into the precise mode and conduct of the day's meditation, he takes up a pad and jots down a few points- an outline of the discourse he would deliver an hour later. All through his writing, he is aware of the passage of time, glancing at the clock every now and then and giving further instructions to the sadhaks. At the conclusion of the meditation session, he smiles at his audience and asks, "How did it go?" There is a short intermission for tea or lemon water and the great man returns and begins his discourse, without once looking at the pad on which he had earlier jotted down certain points. He speaks for nearly an hour in fluent and chaste Hindi, At the end of the discourse he answers questions. He does so every day for the duration of the shivir. At the conclusion of the shlvir, a new book is born, for it is his daily discourses duly recorded which are later edited and printed.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books Gandhi Smriti Library 158.12 MAH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 91657
Total holds: 0

It is fascinating to observe how Sri Yuvacharya Mahaprajna' s
most thought-provoking and breath-takingly lucid books come
into being. At the appointed hour, a lean tall man with a calm,
smiling face enters the hall where the shivrasthis are gathered to
practise dhyana. After initiating them into the precise mode and
conduct of the day's meditation, he takes up a pad and jots down
a few points- an outline of the discourse he would deliver an
hour later. All through his writing, he is aware of the passage of
time, glancing at the clock every now and then and giving
further instructions to the sadhaks. At the conclusion of the
meditation session, he smiles at his audience and asks, "How did
it go?"
There is a short intermission for tea or lemon water and the
great man returns and begins his discourse, without once looking
at the pad on which he had earlier jotted down certain points. He
speaks for nearly an hour in fluent and chaste Hindi, At the end
of the discourse he answers questions. He does so every day for
the duration of the shivir. At the conclusion of the shlvir, a new
book is born, for it is his daily discourses duly recorded
which are later edited and printed.

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