Harikrsna Vina Duhkha Kona Hare __link__ -
In a world that feels increasingly chaotic, this teaching offers a perspective shift from external struggle to internal sanctuary.
Bhaktivinoda Thakura
When chanted, it is a request to be engaged in the loving service of the Divine, which automatically removes one from the illusion of the material world (and thus removes or suffering).
The phrase "Harikrishna Vina Duhkha Kona Hare" is a profound Sanskrit/Bengali expression commonly found in Gaudiya Vaishnava philosophy. It translates to: harikrsna vina duhkha kona hare
(Note: The phrase "duhkha kona" from your prompt does not appear in the standard mantra. If you heard this in a song, it may have been a translation line meaning "Remover of sorrow," but it is not part of the core Sanskrit mantra.)
Short poetic paraphrase (English) No solace if Hari is gone; sorrow walks where Krishna's absent; only His name heals the heart.
"The bird of my heart does not know what past sinful activities it has committed to cause this inability to chant Hare Krishna properly." "O bird! Come, let us go to the spiritual world... It is the place where the imaginary man of my mind will never again come and go on the revolving cycle of birth and death." In a world that feels increasingly chaotic, this
from the Srimad Bhagavatam discussing this topic Audio recordings of the maha-mantra
The "Harikrsna" in this context often refers specifically to Bhagwan Swaminarayan, the supreme deity worshipped in the Swaminarayan Sampraday. He is worshipped as the fountainhead of all avatars, Ghanshyam, the savior who frees devotees from the cycle of birth and death. 2.
Understanding the Essence of "Harikrsna Vina Duhkha Kona Hare" It translates to: (Note: The phrase "duhkha kona"
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To understand why only Hari can remove suffering, we must first recognize the nature of that suffering. According to the Bhagavad-gita, this material world is duhkhalayam asasvatam —a place of misery and temporary [1].