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      • He lived at Arunachala, a holy mountain, where many people, including those from India and from Western countries, came to learn from him. He died in 1950, but his teachings have continued to influence many people. His key teaching was to ask oneself, ‘Who am I?’ to gain deeper insight into one’s identity and the nature of existence.
      www.ramana-maharshi.org/the-life-and-legacy-of-ramana-maharshi/
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  2. Ramana Maharshi was born Venkataraman Iyer on 30 December 1879 in the village Tiruchuzhi near Aruppukkottai, Virudhunagar District in Tamil Nadu, India. He was the second of four children in an orthodox Hindu Brahmin family.

    • Birth
    • Early Years
    • Arunachala
    • The Great Awakening
    • Leaving Home
    • The Journey
    • Advent at Arunachala
    • Life in Tiruvannamalai
    • Mother's Plea
    • Mother's Return

    About thirty miles south of Madurai is a village — Tiruchuli by name — with an ancient Siva temple about which two great Tamiḷ saints, Sundaramurti and Manikkavacakar, have sung. In this sacred village there lived in the latter part of the nineteenth century an uncertified pleader, Sundaram Aiyar with his wife Alagammal. Piety, devotion and charity...

    There was nothing markedly distinctive about Venkataraman's early life. He grew up just an average boy. He was sent to an elementary school in Tiruchuli, and then for a year's education to a school in Dindigul. His father died when he was twelve years old. This necessitated moving to Madurai with the family to live with his paternal uncle, Subbaiya...

    It was apparently by accident that Venkataraman heard about Arunachalawhen he was sixteen years of age. One day an elderly relative called on the family in Madurai. The boy asked him where he had come from. The relative replied 'From Arunachala'. The very name 'Arunachala' acted as a magic spell on Venkataraman, and with evident excitement he put h...

    The spiritual experience for which Venkataraman was now devoutly wishing came to him soon, and quite unexpectedly. It was about the middle of the year 1896; Venkataraman was seventeen then. One day he was sitting up alone on the first floor of his uncle's house. He was in his usual health — there was nothing wrong with him. But a sudden and unmista...

    Venkataraman's elder brother observed the great change that had come upon him. On several occasions he rebuked the boy for his indifferent and yogi-like behaviour. About six weeks after the great experience came the crisis. It was the 29th of August 1896. Venkataraman's English teacher had asked him, as a punishment for indifference in studies, to ...

    There was a curse on Venkataraman's family — in truth, it was a blessing — that one out of every generation should turn out to be a mendicant. This curse was administered by a wandering ascetic who, it is said, begged alms at the house of one of Venkataraman's forbears, and was refused. A paternal uncle of Sundaram Aiyar's became a sannyasin; so di...

    On the morning of the 1st of September, 1896, he boarded the train to Tiruvannamalai. The travel took, only a short time. Alighting from the train, he hastened to the great temple of Arunachalesvara. All the gates stood open — even the doors of the inner shrine. The temple was then empty of all people — even the priests. Venkataraman entered the sa...

    The first place of Ramana's residence in Tiruvannamalai was the great temple. For a few weeks he remained in the thousand-pillared hall. But he was troubled by urchins who pelted stones at him as he sat in meditation. He shifted himself to obscure corners and even to an underground vault known as Patala-lingam. Undisturbed he used to spend several ...

    The mother went to Tiruvannamalai accompanied by her eldest son. Ramana was then living at Pavalakunru, one of the eastern spurs of Arunachala. With tears in her eyes Alagammal entreated Ramana to go back with her. But, for the sage there was no going back. Nothing moved him — not even the wailings and weepings of his mother. He kept silent giving ...

    But not long after she returned to Tiruvannamalai; a little later followed her youngest son, Nagasundaram who had in the meanwhile lost his wife leaving a son. It was in the beginning of 1916 that the mother came, resolved to spend the rest of her life with Ramana. Soon after his mother's arrival, Ramana moved from Virupaksa to Skandasramam, a litt...

  3. Aug 5, 2024 · Ramana Maharshi (born Dec. 30, 1879, Madurai, Madras states, India—died April 14, 1950, Tiruvannamalai) was a Hindu philosopher and yogi called “Great Master,” “Bhagavan” (the Lord), and “the Sage of Arunachala,” whose position on monism (the identity of the individual soul and the creator of souls) and maya (illusion) parallels ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Where did Ramana Maharshi live most of his life? Ramana Maharshi lived most of his life at the ashram located at the base of the sacred mountain Arunachala in Tiruvannamalai, South India. 2

  5. It was so powerful that he decided to leave his family in 1896 and go on a spiritual journey to Arunachala, a holy mountain in Tiruvannamalai, where he settled for the rest of his life. While living there, Ramana Maharshi spent a lot of time thinking deeply and meditating.

  6. Ramana Maharshi was born Venkataraman Iyer on 30 December 1879 in the village Tiruchuzhi near Aruppukkottai, Virudhunagar District in Tamil Nadu, India. He was the second of four children in an orthodox Hindu Brahmin family.

  7. Apr 5, 2016 · Early Life. Sri Ramana Maharshi. Arudra Darshanam, a festival that commemorates the manifestation of Lord Siva as Nataraja, the Lord of Cosmic Dance, was being celebrated with great ardor in the Bhuminatha temple in Tiruchuzhi, South India, on December 29, 1879.