

Narasimha Swami’s Self-Realization as edited by Arthur Osborne for his book The Mind of Ramana Maharshi.Venkataraman Iyer, (known later as Ramana, Ramana Maharshi, Bhagavan Ramana or simply Bhagavan), was born on 30 December 1879, in Tiruchuzi, a small town in Tamil Nadu, South India. Photos of Ramana Mandiram and present-day Chokkapa Naicken Street by Paul K., taken Feb. I used to go alone and stand motionless for a long time before an image of Siva or Meenakshi or Nataraja and the sixty-three saints, and as I stood there waves of emotion overwhelmed me.”įor a follow-up to this article, please go here. But after the awakening I went there almost every evening. Formerly I used to go there occasionally with friends to look at the images and put the sacred ash and vermillion on my brow and would return home almost unmoved. “One of the features of my new state was my changed attitude to the Meenakshi Temple. During that period he visted the temple often. The view from Ramana’s house has changed since the sepia photo was taken in the 1870s, but if you look past the trees, you can still see the temple tower:Īfter he realized the Self, Ramana remained at home for about six weeks before running away to Tiruvanammalai.

It’s the pink-and-white one in the middle: Today the house is a museum called Ramana Mandiram. Ramana moved there at the age of twelve soon after his father died and lived there until he realized the Self at age sixteen.

The house belonged to Ramana’s paternal uncle Subba. When Ramana stood in front of his house he could see the temple’s south gopuram (gate tower) at the end of the block. The house where Ramana Maharshi lived as a teenager is about 300 feet from Meenakshi Amman Temple in Madurai, India, as shown in this picture from Google Earth: No amount of thanks could ever be adequate. The first two posts on this blog pay homage to my guides and protectors, the Goddess and Sri Ramana Maharshi.
