"Om Jai Shiv Omkara" - Lord Shiva Aarti


Shiva is one of the main gods in the Hindu pantheon and, along with Brahma and Vishnu, is considered a member of the o trinity (trimurti) of Hinduism. A complex character, this individual may represent goodness, benevolence and serve as the Protector but he also has a darker aspect as the best choice of wicked spirits, ghosts and ghosts and as the grasp of thieves, villains and beggars. He is also associated with Time, and particularly as the destroyer of things. Nevertheless, Shiva is also associated with creation. In Hinduism, the universe is thought to regenerate in cycles (every 2, 160, 000, 500 years). Shiva destroys the universe at the conclusion of each cycle which then allows for a new Creation. Shiva is also the truly amazing ascetic, abstaining from all varieties of luxury and pleasure, concentrating alternatively on meditation as a means to find perfect happiness. He is the most crucial Hindu god for the Shaivism sect, the consumer of Yogis and Brahmins, as well as the protector of the Vedas, the sacred text messages.


 

SHIVA, PARVATI & GANESHA

Shiva's wife was Parvati, often incarnated as Saat and Durga. She was in fact a reincarnation of Sati (or Dakshayani), the daughter of the god Daksha. Daksha would not approve of Sati's marriage to Shiva and even went further and held a special sacrificial ceremony to all the gods except Shiva. Annoyed at this slight, Sati threw herself on the sacrificial fire. Shiva responded to this tragedy by creating two demons (Virabhadra and Rudrakali) from his hair who wreaked chaos on the ceremony and beheaded Daksha. The other gods appealed to Shiva to conclusion the physical violence and, complying, he helped bring Daksha back to life but with your head of a ram (or goat). Sati was eventually reincarnated as Parvati in her next life and the girl re-married Shiva.

With Parvati, Shiva had a kid, the god Ganesha. The boy was in truth created out of ground and clay to keep her company and protect her while Shiva gone on his meditative wanderings. However, Shiva returned one day and, finding the boy guarding the room where Parvati was baths, he enquired who this individual was. Not believing the boy was his child, and thinking him an impudent beggar, Shiva called up the bhutaganas devils who fought the son and eventually managed to distract him with the appearance of the beautiful Maya and, whilst this individual admired the wonder, they lopped off his head. By the commotion, Parvati raced from her bath and screamed that her boy had been killed. Understanding his error, Shiva then sent for a new head with which to make the boy total again but the nearby currently happening was of an elefant. Therefore Ganesha, the elephant-headed god, was born. Various other sons of Shiva are Skanda or Karttikeya, the god of war and Kuvera, the god of treasures.

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