Durga Charan Nag(দুরগা চরণ নাগ)Bother Mahasaya (Durga Charan Nag), a nineteenth-century holy person from East Bengal and a householder devotee of Ramakrishna Paramahansa, Born Durga Charan Nag 1846, Deobhog, Narayanganj district, Bengal Presidency, British India, Bangladesh, Died 1899, Deobhog village, Bangladesh
Master Ramakrishna Paramahansa , Philosophy Vedanta, Bhakti
Citation It is less demanding to procure popularity than to repudiate it. He who can repudiate it is an extremely awesome man
Durga Charan Nag (Bengali:দুরগা চরণ নাগ) also called Nag Mahasaya (Maha Asayah in Sanskrit or “of incredible ownership”), conceived in 1846 and passed on in 1899 in Deobhog town (Munshiganj locale) of past East Bengal and now Bangladesh, was one of the householder pupils of Sri Ramakrishna Paramahansa. Sri Ramakrishna called him “a blasting flame” when he first observed him. As indicated by alternate followers of Sri Ramakrishna, most prominent among them being Swami Vivekananda, he was a sparkling case of renunciation and love for God. He evaded material riches and viewed each person as God on earth. As indicated by his history, in spite of the fact that he was a decent homeopathic specialist, he surrendered his training just because Sri Ramakrishna had said that it is troublesome for specialists to gain profound ground as they blossom with the evil strength of the others. He lived on a pitiful wage yet spent a large portion of it in serving poor, his visitors and priests and monkish life.
Sarat Chandra Chakravarty, an immediate devotee of Swami Vivekananda and the writer of the book “Journal of a Disciple” (Swami-Sishya Sangbad in Bengali) composed the memoir on Nag Mahasaya. There isn’t much writing accessible on Nag Mahasaya and a large portion of the data on him can be gotten in works related to Sri Ramakrishna, his educator and ace, and Swami Vivekananda, the principal supporter of Ramakrishna.
@page { margin: 2cm } th p { margin-bottom: 0cm } td p { margin-bottom: 0cm } p { margin-bottom: 0.25cm; line-height: 120% } a:link { so-language: zxx }
Swami Vivekananda mentioned to Sarat Chandra in a discussion about Nag Mahasaya – “Every one of the attributes of the most astounding sort of talked about in the sacred texts, have themselves in Nag Mahashaya. It is just in him that we really observe satisfied the generally cited content, “Trinadapi Sunichena”. (“Lowlier at that point the humble stalk of grass.”) Blessed surely is your East Bengal to have been holy by the pinch of Nag Mahashaya’s feet!” In the place where he grew up in Bangladesh, an establishment runs a beneficent foundation bearing his name
|
|---|
@page { margin: 2cm } p { margin-bottom: 0.25cm; line-height: 120% } a:link { so-language: zxx }