Traditional Manglacharan

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This Manglacharan [invocation for beginning a task] salutes the Sikh Gurus and would be recited across various scholarly lineages before performing kathā [discourse]. Written in 1823 CE by the Great Poet Santokh Singh, this passage concludes the Nānak Prakāsh, a Brajbhāsha poetic account of Guru Nānak's history. This can be found in the Utarāradh [setting sun / second section] of the Nānak Prakāsh in Chapter 57.

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Started doing katha of pracheen panth prakash at my local gurdwara...its an amazing experience reciting this in the start ...my favorite part of doing katha

jaipreetsingh
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The background song is "For the Love of a Princess" from Braveheart

deltaxsingh
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From where did you get this old authentic photos of Guru Sahibs 🙏🙏

joshimukul
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Thank you - this is just beautiful. Which page exactly is it to be found so we can re-read it? The subtitles in the video miss some words of the audio.

YogaJapa
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Oh prabhu, I'm like your child why don't you just kill my sins 🙏

aryansinvasion
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This is insulting to Sikhs.
Sikhs believe satguru is the destroyer of sins. Nowhere in baani did Amardas proclaim to be the destroyer of sins.

These writings are against Sikhism.

AmritSingh-mjbt