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Bhaja Govindam — Benefits & How to Chant

भज गोविन्दम्

Complete guide to chanting correctly for maximum benefit

Benefits of Chanting Bhaja Govindam

Profound wake-up call for the mind lost in material pursuits

Cultivates vairagya (detachment)

the foundation of spiritual progress

Written by Adi Shankaracharya

the greatest philosopher-sage of India

Each verse is a complete meditation on the nature of life and death

Frees the mind from attachment to wealth, body and relationships

One of the most quoted philosophical texts in all of Hinduism

How to Chant Bhaja Govindam

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Repetitions
1 times
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Best Time
Any time of deep reflection, or during satsang/spiritual gatherings

Instructions

Bhaja Govindam is best read slowly, contemplating each verse deeply. It is not a mantra for rapid repetition but a philosophical meditation. Read one verse, close your eyes, and let its meaning penetrate. It is traditionally chanted in groups during satsang. The refrain 'Bhaja Govindam' should be felt as a direct call from the guru to your own wandering mind.

Spiritual Significance

Shankaracharya himself demonstrated the teaching of Bhaja Govindam through his life. Despite dying at age 32, he established four mathas (monasteries) across India, wrote commentaries on the Upanishads, Brahma Sutras and Bhagavad Gita, composed dozens of devotional hymns, and defeated every philosophical opponent in debate. His life proves that one who worships Govinda (turns to the Divine) accomplishes more in a short life than those who spend decades in material pursuits.

Origin & History

Source: Composed independently by Adi Shankaracharya

Author: Adi Shankaracharya

According to tradition, Shankaracharya was walking through the streets of Varanasi (Kashi) with his disciples when he saw an aged scholar laboriously memorizing Panini's Sanskrit grammar rules. Moved by compassion, Shankaracharya spontaneously composed 'Bhaja Govindam' — urging the old man that grammar rules would not save him at the hour of death and that he should instead turn his mind to God. Each of his 14 disciples then added one verse, making it a collective composition. The work is also called 'Moha Mudgara' — the hammer that shatters delusion.

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