000 01899nam a22002057a 4500
999 _c10250
_d10250
003 OSt
005 20201211104741.0
008 150903b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9788176211888
040 _cKinley Yangden
082 _aNF 294.56 OSH
100 _aOsho.
245 _aBehind a thousand names :
_btalks on the Nirvan Upanishad /
_cOsho.
260 _aNew Delhi :
_bFull Circle,
_c2010.
300 _a417 p. :
_c21 cm.
520 _aOsho loves the Nirvan Upanishad because it is so revolutionary - revolutionary because it insists that the only way to experience true awareness is to go beyond all systems of morality. Maybe this startling message is the reason why Osho's commentary on this Upanishad is the first that has ever been made. Speaking at a meditation camp in Mount Abu, Rajasthan, Osho shows that the real experience of truth is something way beyond the many names we may call it or claim to know it by. It is only to be found behind a thousand names, only to be found by those prepared "to bow down to that which you wish to become." This book is an inspiration to start that quest. "There is no statement as revolutionary as this to be found anywhere else, in any scripture." Osho - Osho is in a category all of his own and as he states: "I am nobody. I don't belong to any nation, I don't belong to any religion, I don't belong to any political party. I am simply an individual, the way existence created me. I have kept myself absolutely uninfluenced by any idiotic ideology - religious, political, social, financial. And the miracle is that because I am not burdened with all these glasses on my eyes and curtains before me, I can see clearly." "I am sharing this with you in the hope that you will also begin your own journey to nirvana, that you will continue to flow towards it."
650 _aSpiritual life.
650 _aNirwana.
942 _2ddc
_cNF