View allAll Photos Tagged harekrishna
Feel free to download in original size and use it.
I am uploading low res photos because of the bandwidth and upload limitations. If you need full size for any purpose please contact me . They are FREE.
Thank you very much. Hari Bol !!
La devoción de los Hare Krishna se está expandiendo por todos los rincones de Colombia. Registro de la visita de Srila Bhakti Aloka Paramadwaiti Swami al municipio de Pamplonita. Allí se encontró con su colega espiritual Lwntana Nakoggi.
La devoción de los Hare Krishna se está expandiendo por todos los rincones de Colombia. Registro de la visita de Srila Bhakti Aloka Paramadwaiti Swami al municipio de Pamplonita. Allí se encontró con su colega espiritual Lwntana Nakoggi.
Kirtanananda dressed as a king. Radhanatha Swami couldn't see anything wrong with his behaviour. He insisted that Bhaktipada was a pure devotee even as late as 1993.
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/11197184075
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This is an ox from Rajasthan.
Those Indian cattle with distinctively large horns are the Kankrej breed. For more info, read en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kankrej_cattle_and_Guzerat_cattle.
Those oxes with very large horns belonged to the ISKCON Ashram (aka the "Hare Krishna"). They were used to pull their cart around the Kumbh Mela grounds.
Photo taken at the Kumbh Mela 2013 festival near Allahabad (India)
Kumbh Mela is the largest festival on Earth, taking place once every 12 years, with more than 50 million Hindu pilgrims gathering to pray and bathe in the holy Ganges river.
For more photos and info about the Kumbh Mela festival, read the album description.
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
Absolutely stunning gilded details of one of the various altars at the Palace of Gold, a Hare Krishna temple complex in West Virginia.
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/11197205536
Share this photo on: facebook • twitter • more...
This is an ox from Rajasthan.
Those Indian cattle with distinctively large horns are the Kankrej breed. For more info, read en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kankrej_cattle_and_Guzerat_cattle.
Those oxes with very large horns belonged to the ISKCON Ashram (aka the "Hare Krishna"). They were used to pull their cart around the Kumbh Mela grounds.
Photo taken at the Kumbh Mela 2013 festival near Allahabad (India)
Kumbh Mela is the largest festival on Earth, taking place once every 12 years, with more than 50 million Hindu pilgrims gathering to pray and bathe in the holy Ganges river.
For more photos and info about the Kumbh Mela festival, read the album description.
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
# 36 someone meditating. A little piece of Hungary that will forever be Indian
Tenuous link- checkered floor
”I was asked to sit cross-legged on the floor and face to face directly in front of Baya Baba who was seated in the same fashion. He held my hands and closed his eyes for a while, then he placed my hands on his thighs and tilted my head towards him and breathed the mantras in my ears. Baya Baba’s body trembled and I could feel his tears dripping on my thighs as he infused me with his bhava-sakti.”
Disciple of Baya Baba (See Below)
Feel free to download in original size and use it.
I am uploading low res photos because of the bandwidth and upload limitations. If you need full size for any purpose please contact me . They are FREE.
Thank you very much. Hari Bol !!
Feel free to download in original size and use it.
I am uploading low res photos because of the bandwidth and upload limitations. If you need full size for any purpose please contact me . They are FREE.
Thank you very much. Hari Bol !!
I was at Hove Lawns today for the Rathayatra festival, a spiritual event that originates in Jagannatha Puri on the East Coast of India and dates back over 2,000 years. During the festival everyone chants the Hare Krishna mantra and dances as Krishna, a Hindu deity, is pulled along on a huge wooden cart/chariot.
Most people were there to take part in the festival, pull the cart, dance and chant but I managed to engage in a conversation with one of the followers, there to pass on the message. Meet Dipak a lovely guy who did not stop smiling. I asked him to stand in front of the wheel for the portrait as this gave some idea of the enormity of the cart they were pulling.
My first question was where Dipak was born. He told me he was born in India and then his family moved to Nairobi before coming to live in the UK. In his words Dipak says "He now lives next to heaven on earth". He went on to explain that he lives with his family in Watford just 12 miles from Bhaktivedanta Manor, the UK headquarters of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness. He proudly told me that the property was donated to the Hare Krishna movement in February 1973 by George Harrison, from the Beatle. Dipak explained when he goes there time stands still and he becomes peaceful and calm. He was 18 when he joined the Krishna movement and became a devotee. He is now 35 years old and Hare Krishna is his life. I had to ask how he supports himself financially and he said he earns his living as a software developer.
Thank you for taking the time to talk with me Dipak and tell me about the Hare Krishna movement. I hope you like your portrait.
Check out the rest of the stranger portraits in my project at Chris's 100 Strangers Project:
www.flickr.com/photos/chris_marina/sets/72157644764299551/
And find out more about the project and see pictures taken by other photographers at the 100 Strangers Flickr Group page: www.flickr.com/groups/100strangers/
Fazenda Nova Gokula - Pindamonhangaba, SP - 1998
CONHEÇA P PROJETO "CADEIAS PRODUTIVAS" - www.flickr.com/photos/cadeiasprodutivas
Kirtanananda leaving the court house on his final trial. No longer dressed as a Swami, with most of his disciples having rejected him. His face looks different from earlier photos. He is older and no longer has the belief that he is invincible.
View above wallpapers in difference sizes visit - harekrishnawallpapers.com/sri-sri-radha-krishna-iskcon-ph...
.... Smiling participants of Hare Krishna festival & parade, making their way down Yonge Street in downtown Toronto ....
September 3rd is Sri Krishna Janmastami Festival, and the Radha Krishna Temple in London Soho, were getting ready for the auspicious event.
View above wallpapers in difference sizes visit - harekrishnawallpapers.com/radha-krishna-artist-wallpaper-...
Kirtanananda singing and giving class while holding onto young boys. The boy in the front wants nothing to do with him and wants to get away. Radhanatha Swami couldn't figure out this person was a pedophile? How many people give class while holding onto young boys.
Seen these chanting groups with their bells and drums all over the world. However this group had a POD (point of difference): using a piano accordeon for instrumental support. © Henk Graalman
53/100 Madhurika
Yes, at this pace I may never finish 100 strangers. This is OK by me. I don’t press, and I only shoot people that intrigue me.
Meet Madhurika. She intrigued me. While waiting for an out-of-town friend on Sunday I happened upon a Hare Krishna festival. Madhurika’s peaceful demeanor and stunning costume immediately caught my eye. I asked her name, and she explained that Madhurika is her spiritual name, and that Mikano is her given name. She sings and plays tambura in a band, and was preparing to begin a concert. She agreed to let me shoot a few photos before taking the stage. I hope I captured her serene spirituality.
Hare Krishna, Madhurika!
This picture is #53 in my occasional “100 strangers” project. Find out more about the project and see pictures taken by other photographers at the 100 Strangers Flickr Group page.
This happy woman is still sitting in the tent where a volunteer artist has just finished decorating her forehead with these beautiful "gopi dots."
"Gopi-dots are beautiful designs traditionally painted on the eyebrows and down the sides of the eyes. They are named after the gopis - young and simple village girls who are often revered as the most spiritually deep representatives of bhakti yoga: the yoga of love."