[GHHF] Ayodhya Ram Temple stickers are being posted on Hindu Houses and Vehicles to make Hindus proud of their culture.

15 Mar 2024 149 Views

The Prana Pratishta of Ram Lalla Vigraham in the newly built Rama Temples is a historical movement Hindus have been waiting for nearly 500 years. There has been a struggle for more than 75 years even after India got its Independence. Neven ending battles came to closure two years ago which enables the construction of Rama Temple. No other country would have waited for this many years. A small group of minority religion have tested the patience of Hindus for so many years.
    Hindus have so much respect for Lord Rama, even after the demolition of Rama Temple, they never wavered, forgotten, ignored the national historical figure. Millions of Hindus across the globe worship Lord Ram with an intense belief that chanting his name in times of adversity will bring peace and prosperity, and most of those who practice Hinduism keep idols of Ram in their homes. Festivals like Dussehra and Diwali are associated with the historical tales of Ram extolling the virtues of truth, dharma, sacrifice, and ethical governance.
    Lord Ram is revered as the seventh incarnation of Lord Vishnu, the cosmic protector. His life and the profound lessons imparted through the epic Ramayana serve as a moral guiding light for countless Hindus. The temple stands as a sacred sanctuary where adherents gather to beseech blessings, seek wisdom, and find spiritual serenity in the benevolence of Lord Ram.
Why Rama is so popular and receives so much respect for centuries from Hindus. “Sri Rama is well versed in the tenets of Dharma, firm in his commitments, an epitome of propriety, uncritical, forgiving, compassionate to the poor and miserable, soft-spoken, grateful, in control of His senses, kind-hearted, endowed with a steady intellect, ever engaged in universal good, non-calumnious, agreeable in His speech to all beings and truthful.” (Valmiki Ramayana, Ayodhya Kanda: 2.31, 32)
Rama is known for his politeness, respect for parents, and passion for preserving dharma. Protecting his subjects. His name is given the same importance as that of Pranava mantra OM. It is said that the word Rama is divided into syllables Ra + Aa + Ma; Ra means Rudra; Aa means Brahma; Ma means Vishnu and the confluence of the three deities - Lords Brahma, Vishnu and Maheswar.
The word Rama is a confluence of two letters Ra + Ma. It is believed and said that these two letters are Jivaakshara (life giving letters) carved out of the most significant Mantras the Narayana Astakshari and Shiva Panchakshari. The letter Ra is carved out of Narayana Astakshari (Om! Namo! Narayanaya!) and the letter Ma is carved out of Shiva Panchakshari (Om! Namah Shivaya!).
Rama is considered an ideal son, ideal husband, ideal brother, ideal friend, and even ideal enemy. As an ideal son, he never disobeyed his father. His respect, deference, honor, and love toward her parents were unmatched. He never blamed either his father or his stepmother Kaikeyi. Tulasidas himself praised Rama by saying that “No father nor mother can get a son like Rama.” He never identified himself as Rama; he only identifies as Dasaratha’s son.  After he broke Lord Shiva’s bow during Sita Swayamvar ceremony, he told Janaka that, “I am the son of Dasaratha, king of Ayodhya. I cannot accept her until my parents accept her and find her suitable for me. So kindly send your messenger to get their approval.”  When Dasaratha was trying to stop Rama from going to exile, Rama said, “I cannot break my family tradition of keeping promise … If I must do whatever action is dearer to my revered father, that action is just done in all respects even by renouncing life. There is not indeed anything of greater performance of duty than doing service to father or than doing what he commands." (II:20: 21-22).
Your donations are appreciated;
By Zelle: ghhfusaorg@gmail.com
BY PayPal: savetemples.org
By Check: Or you can send a check payable to GHHF, 14726 Harmony Lane, Frisco, TX 75035.
It is tax-deductible.
By Rupees: call 601-918-711; +91 83096 43979

Categories:

Hinduism India Posts Temples

Discuss:

Related Posts