Here is a video of Spirit Fest artist Nirinjan Kaur reading Japji very slowly. This is a great way to help you improve your pronunciation during the 40 Day Global Sadhana! Nirinjan's recitations are beloved...check out her version of So Purkh and be transported!
Ramdesh Kaur, MA, is an IKYTA Certified Kundalini Yoga teacher trained by Gurmukh.
She is the Director of Marketing and Public Relations for Spirit Voyage, the Editor of Spirit Voyage's blog, and writes extensively on yoga, spirituality and mantra. She hosts the show "Spirit Voyage Radio with Ramdesh" on Unity FM and leads Spirit Voyage's 40 Day Global Sadhanas.
Before working with Spirit Voyage, she was the residential Kundalini yoga teacher at Parmarth Niketan in Rishikesh, India and has a Master's Degree from the Courtauld Institute in London. Her name "Ramdesh" means "one who sees God's Land everywhere, in all places and in all people".
Her first book "Yoga and Mantras for a Whole Heart" with Karan Khalsa is available on SpiritVoyage.com. She tours extensively with Harnam on the "Living with a Whole Heart Tour."
This is exactly what I’d been searching for before I gave up the sadhana.
It wasn’t the pronunciation that stopped me, more that there was something else I had begun and abandoned a while ago that was calling me to focus on it as a daily practice (it’s working out really well). The pronunciation was a factor, in that, although I ploughed on through on my own because recordings were just too fast and confusing for me, deciding that it was best to relax and do it even if it sounded wonky, there was always the niggle that I was getting into bad pronunciation habits which might come back to haunt me later.
Is there a way of downloading this? I know it can be emailed or embedded, though I can’t find a way to save it. It’s a great resource.
This is exactly what I’d been searching for before I gave up the sadhana.
It wasn’t the pronunciation that stopped me, more that there was something else I had begun and abandoned a while ago that was calling me to focus on it as a daily practice (it’s working out really well). The pronunciation was a factor, in that, although I ploughed on through on my own because recordings were just too fast and confusing for me, deciding that it was best to relax and do it even if it sounded wonky, there was always the niggle that I was getting into bad pronunciation habits which might come back to haunt me later.
Is there a way of downloading this? I know it can be emailed or embedded, though I can’t find a way to save it. It’s a great resource.
Thank you so much! As Karen asked, is there a way of downloading this? Would be so grateful.
There is no way of downloading, so I suggest bookmarking the webpage and returning when you need. Blessings to you!