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Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Extremely important small manthra for all students who want to shine in their studies


Extremely important small manthra for all students who want to shine in their studies

TRanslated by
P.R.Ramachander

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Chant the 14th stanza of Samkshepa Ramayanam, the first chapter of Valmki Ramayana would give students intelligence

( a great scholar DR. Visvanatha Krishnamurthy suggests that the student should repeat this stanza daiily, as many times as possible,He assures that the student would come top in the class .Thanks sir .My Namaskarams sir)

रक्षिता स्वस्य धर्मस्य स्वजनस्य च रक्षिता।
वेद्-वेदाङ्ग-तत्त्वज्ञो धनुर्वेदे च निष्टितः॥
सर्व-शास्त्रार्थ-तत्त्वज्ञः स्मृतिमान् प्रतिभानवान्।
सर्वलोकप्रियः साधुः अदीनात्मा विचक्षणः॥

Rakshithaa swasya dhar5masya swajanasya cha Rakshithaa
Veda vedanga tharthwajno ., dhanur veda cha nishtitha
Sarva sasthrartha thathwajna smruthimaan prathihanavaan
SArva loka priya saadhi adheenathmaa vichakshana.

Protector of his own Dharma, Protector of his own people,
Expert in essence of Vedas and Vedangas, completely given himself to science of archery,
Expert in meaning of Sastras, expert is laws , a great genius,
Liked by all the world, saint and expert examiner of the soul with him

THe great scholar wrote in his comments (very important , please read )
Visvanatha Krishnamurthy
Visvanatha Krishnamurthy Well, if you want a first hand experience of mine with this mantra,the following para from my blog will give you an idea: (You will get a fuller idea by reading the whole page of my blog http://lifeflashesvk.blogspot.com/2015/09/ Well, matters were really discouraging. My father had left in his many handwritten notes certain mantra tips for various kinds of redresses and benefits. One of them was a pair of shlokas from the Valmiki Ramayana Balakanda very first sarga. The prescription says: If you repeat these two shlokas 256 times everyday morning facing east for six months you will become master of all learning. I embarked on this project around January 57, but by the time I reached April 57 my tempo of studies became so intense and time-consuming that I had no more any time for this ritual of mantra repetition. Thus the six-month japa stopped almost midway. I was able to submit a paper in the area of Entire Functions to the Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society. It got published in April 58. And this became my first of two papers constituting my MSc thesis, submitted to the University in September 1957 exactly one year after registration.

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