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Gauri Ma
A Monastic Disciple of Sri Ramakrishna
GLOSSARY
ARATI. Worship of the deity accompanied by the offering of
lights.
ASANA. Seat.
ASHRAM. A hermitage or monastery for religious-minded
people. Also, a place for practicing or studying religion.
AVIDYA. Ignorance, cosmic or individual, which is
responsible for the non-perception of Reality.
BABA. Father.
BABU. A title like Mr., used at the end of the name of a
gentleman.
BHAGAVAN. God.
BIGHA. A measure of land.
BILVA. Sacred leaves offered in worship.
BRAHMACHARINI. A novice nun or student who is serving her
teacher or preceptor and observing the vow of
continence and austerity.
CHAITANYA MAHAPRABHU. A saint and scholar of great fame,
born in 1485 A.D. at Navadwip in Bengal and
worshipped by many Vaishnavas (worshippers of Vishnu)
as an incarnation of Krishna and Radha together.
DADA. Elder brother.
DAKSHINESWAR. A sacred place on the Ganges, nearly six
miles north of Calcutta, where, in the famous temple
garden of the goddess Kali, Sri Ramakrishna lived for
many years.
DAMODAR SHILA. A round stone that represents Krishna.
(Damodar is another name for Krishna.)
DIDI. Elder sister.
DURGA SAPTASHATI (also known as the Chandi), A sacred
book of the Hindus in which the Divine Mother is
described as the Ultimate Reality.
GOPIS. The milkmaid companions of Sri Krishna, symbols
of one-pointed devotion.
GURU. Spiritual master or teacher.
HOMA. A Vedic sacrifice in which oblations are offered into
a fire.
ISHTA DEVATA. The form of God or spiritual ideal that the
devotee chooses to follow.
JAPA. Repetition in prayer of the name of one's chosen
deity or some holy name.
KAISTHA. A caste in the Indian system, below the highest.
KALI. The Divine Mother.
KALI BARI. A temple garden where the chief deity in the
temple is the goddess Kali.
KRISHNA. An incarnation of Vishnu, one of the three
gods – Brahma, Vishnu, and Mahesh – who
represent the powers of the creator, preserver, and
destroyer.
LAKSHMI. The consort of Vishnu and the goddess of
fortune.
MA. Mother.
MAHABHARATA. One of the two great epics of India,
narrating the story of the five Pandava brothers and their
hundred cousins; part of which is the Bhagavad Gita,
which consists of a dialogue between Krishna, who
expounds spiritual truths, and Arjuna, one of the
Pandava brothers.
MAHASAMADHI. Literally, "the great samadhi," the final
merging of a saint's consciousness into the Absolute
at the time of his or her passing.
NAHABAT. A place where an orchestra is played; also, a
small building at Dakshtneswar attached to the
temple there and formerly used for that purpose, but now
the place where Sri Sarada Devi lived when she
stayed at Dakshineswar.
PRANAMS. Salutations offered to a holy person, where the
devotee bends down to touch the feet of the holy
person.
PURANAS. Books of Hindu mythology.
RAAS PURNIMA. A full-moon day in October or November
when Lord Krishna sported and danced with His
playmates and devotees on the bank of the Jamuna
River in Brindavan.
RADHESHYAM. Another name for Krishna.
RAMAKRISHNA. A nineteenth-century sage who spent most
of his life at a temple garden at Dakshineswar near
Calcutta, practicing many spiritual disciplines and
sharing the fruits of his practices with all who came
to him. (Ramakrishna Math is a monastic order
founded in the name of Sri Ramakrishna, with many
branches in India and across the world.)
RAMAYANA. One of the two great epics of India, telling the
story of Rama and his wife Sita, who are believed to
be incarnations of Vishnu and his consort, Lakshmi,
and who came to earth to reestablish ethical conduct
in a society that had become decadent.
RANCHODJI TEMPLE. A famous temple in Dwarka on the
west coast of India. (Ranchodji is another name for
Krishna.)
SADHANA. The practice of a particular spiritual discipline
for the attainment of enlightenment.
SADHU. A monk.
SAMADHI. Absorption in the Spirit, a trance-like state.
SANNYASIN. A man who renounces the world in order to
realize God.
SANNYASINI. A woman who renounces the world in order to
realize God.
SARADA DEVI. Sri Ramakrishna's wife, also known to
devotees as Holy Mother.
SATCHIDANANDA. Literally, "Existence-Knowledge-Bliss
Absolute." A name of Brahman, the Absolute Reality.
SHAKTI. The energy of the Divine as it manifests in the
material world. Shakti is regarded as feminine.
SHALIGRAM. A round stone symbol of Vishnu.
SHYAMA. Literally, "the dark one." A name of Kali, the
Divine Mother.
STOTRAS. Hymns in verse describing the glories of the
various gods and goddesses.
SUPREME PURUSHA. Supreme Person, God.
SWAMI. A title of the monks belonging to the Vedanta
school.
TAPASVINI. A woman who has undertaken intense tapasya.
(Masculine form is tapasvin or tapasvi.)
TAPASYA. Religious austerity.
THAKUR. A term of respect, meaning Master.
TILAK. A red or white mark on the forehead, usually having
religious significance.
TULSI. The basil plant, which is sacred to the Hindus. Its
leaves are used for worship.
VIDYA. Knowledge leading to liberation, i.e., to the Ultimate
Reality.
VIVEKANANDA, SWAMI. Sri Ramakrishna's most famous
disciple, who participated In the first Parliament of
World Religions held in Chicago in 1893.
YAJNA. A ritualistic ceremony in which oblations are
offered into a fire.
YASHODA. The foster mother of Krishna.
YOGI, YOGINI. One who practices yoga or spiritual
disciplines.
ZAMINDAR. Landlord.