Hari Om Namah Shivaya Om chanted by Group Mudita
Mantra, Kirtan and Stotra: Sanskrit Chants - A podcast by Sukadev Bretz - Fridays
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This song is performed by Group Mudita and was part of a concert held in Bad-Meinberg, Germany. More mantra kirtan mp3 recordings can be listen at y-v.de/mantra-kirtan - or as videos at my.yoga-vidya.org/members/Mantras/videos Hari Om is sometimes used as a greeting, but can also be chanted. It could be loosely translated as "I greet the divine in you. I turn to you with love." OM comes from the Vedanta tradition and stands for Cosmic Unity. By greeting each other with Om, one is aware that both are ultimately one. The selves of both who greet each other are one. And the whole world you are in is a cosmic whole. Hari comes from the Bhakti tradition, especially Vaishnavism. Hari is an epithet of Vishnu and also of Krishna. Hari stands for a personal reference to God. By including Hari in the greeting, one expresses: May God's blessing be on our connection. May we dedicate everything to God. God dwells in your heart. He meets me in you. Follow us on our other online channels: Facebook: www.facebook.com/YogaVidya/ Instagram: www.instagram.com/yogavidya_de/