Tag Archives: Bharatavansha

 Living Lineage Of Eternal Duty

The Kindle eBook घर पर शिक्षा घर से काम — available now on Amazon India — opens not only by ascertaining your karma as a business plan but by upholding your heritage stretching back to the founder family of Bharatvarsh. Learning this story is essential to understanding why Sangkrit’s eternal duty works for your family program.

Sangkrit Gotra

The Sangkrit gotra traces back its origin to Rajarshi Sankriti — the royal sage of the Bharat family, son of King Nara, nurtured in the lineages of three greatest Vedic sages: Angira, Atri, and Vashistha. Because he was shaped and refined by all three core traditions, he came to be known as Sankriti, and the gotra that bears his name became Sangkrit.

Sankriti’s two sons defined the dual legacy of Sangkrit:

  • The elder son, Guruveerya (Gauravit Shaktya) — who contributed to many mandalas of the Rigveda and established the Shaktya tradition
  • The younger son, Rantidev — who became the most celebrated dutiful emperor of all time and established the Sangkrit tradition.

Beginning with Raja Rantideva

The story of Raja Rantideva, recorded in the twenty-first chapter of the ninth canto of the Shrimad Bhagavat Mahapurana, is the moral foundation of Sangkrit.

During a historic famine — rain stopped by Indra, water absorbed by Surya — Rantideva gave away every last thing he owned. After forty-eight days without food or water, he finally received a small offering of food and water. Before he could eat, a Brahmin arrived and received half. Then a Shudra received half of what remained. Then his dog received what was left of the food. When only water remained, a Chandal came in distress, and Rantideva gave away his water too.

When Brahma, Vishnu, and Mahesh appeared and offered him any boon, Rantideva politely refused them by saying:

“न तो मुझे राज्य की कामना है, न स्वर्ग की, न ही मोक्ष की। मैं तो शोकसन्तप्त प्राणिमात्र के कष्टों के निवारण की कामना करता हूँ।”

“Neither I desire kingdom, nor heaven, nor liberation as I only wish to end the sufferings of all distressed beings.”

This is the mool mantra of the entire Sangkrit programme — and the reason Sangkrit’s technology portal Sangkrit.net remains free for all, sustained by sponsorship rather than fees.

Establishing Eternal Duty

Just as the ancient rishis compiled all knowledge useful to civilisation into the Vedas and made daily Vedic recitation the educational practice of their students, Sangkrit’s modern Vedic ashram compiles all knowledge needed for civilisation’s benefit into this curriculum — and makes its continuous study the regular educational practice of its students.

The course is a living book, continuously updated on Amazon Kindle, so that every student always has access to the most current edition. Some institutions claim some heritage while Sangkrit lives one.

Centenary Edition

The concurrent edition of complete course is published on the occasion of the birth centenary of Pandit Matabheekh Pandey (14 January 1925 – 14 January 2025), along whose path now this most ancient tradition continues.

👉 Read the Full eBook on Amazon India

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