Ramesh Oza

Ramesh Oza popularly known by the Pujya Bhaishri Rameshbhai Oza is a Hindu spiritual leader. He is a singer-preacher of Vedanta philosophy.[1]

Pujya Bhaishri Rameshbhai Oza
Personal
Born (1957-08-31) 31 August 1957
ReligionHinduism
NationalityIndian
SectVaishnavism
PhilosophyVedanta, Bhakti
Religious career
Websitewww.sandipani.org
HonorsAcharya, Bhaishri

Early life

Ramesh Oza was born on 31 August 1957 at Devka village[2] near Rajula, Saurashtra, Gujarat, India. He was born in Unewal Brahmin family of Vrajlal Kanjibhai Oza and Laxmiben Oza. He completed his initial education at Tatvajyoti, a Sanskrit school at Rajula. Eventually, he moved to Mumbai, where he completed his primary education and completed graduation in commerce.[3] He was inspired by his uncle, Jeevaraj Oza who was narrator of the Bhagavata Purana. His uncle noticed his interest that led him to study and practice religious scriptures.

Career

He held his first discourse on the Bhagavata Purana at the age of 13 at Gangotri. At the age of 18, he held Bhagavata Purana recitation in central Mumbai. He has conducted numerous recitations across the world since then.[4]

He founded religious and educational institutes namely Devka Vidyapith and Sandipani Vidyaniketan near Sandhavav village and Porbandar Aerodrome.[1][2][3] Hindu Smitoday, in recognition of his social and spiritual contributions, awarded him Hindu of the Year in 2006.[5]

gollark: You could do it by adding some new FS functions and patching the existing ones, sure.
gollark: Skynet uses it a bit stupidly by redownloading it every run, I must say, and I may need to fix that.
gollark: It's actually just a random CBOR library from the internet (well, the only pure Lua one I could find).
gollark: That sounds like a bit of a design flaw with the rest of the program, honestly.
gollark: While the magic of metatables and random fiddling does allow you to *mostly* make tables zero-indexed, table literals will still be stupid and 1-indexed.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.