Representative
Brahma Kumaris

Saturday 28th April 2007
St Johns Hall, Penzance, Cornwall
Experience the Power of a Quiet Mind
with Brahma Kumaris

Time: 10.30 - 11.30 Price: FREE -

For many of us, the challenges we face on a daily basis can trigger stress and quickly drain our energy. Yet it takes only a minute to focus your mind. There’s nothing new about silent reflection and its benefits, but how do we find the time? Just-a-minute is about taking 60 seconds for yourself – to slow down, to let go and focus your mind. It’s a positive habit that you can slip into your busy schedule, to help you hold on to your peace of mind and yet perform to your optimum.

This workshop will help you start and sustain the habit. There’s a just-a-minute website and a CD of one-minute meditations and reflections. With people taking up the just-a-minute habit all over the world, this little introduction session could make a big difference to your life! Anyone can do it. Everyone will benefit. And it’s free…






Perhaps few organizations have stimulated as much change and discussion at the time of their inception, or have undergone such expansion in the course of 60 years, as the Brahma Kumaris World Spiritual University. And yet, from its beginnings the BKWSU has managed to remain steadfast in maintaining its original principles and in adhering to its original purpose.

The University came into being under the name "Om Mandali" and consisted of only a handful of men, women and children living in Hyderabad (now part of Pakistan, but at that time part of colonial India). These spiritual pioneers were inspired to transform their lives after a respected and wealthy member of their community, Dada Lekhraj experienced a series of profound visions in 1936. The visions revealed spiritual truths about the nature of the soul and God, the Supreme Soul. These concepts were simple in their expression but their meaning so deep that they awakened a powerful sense of recognition in those with whom the visions were shared.

A year after its establishment, the organization moved from Hyderabad to Karachi. For fourteen years, until after the partition of India and Pakistan, the founding group of 300 individuals, lived as a self-sufficient community spending their time in intense spiritual study, meditation and self transformation.

In 1950, the community moved to Mount Abu, a quiet place reputed for its ancient spiritual heritage. Nestled high up in the Aravali mountains of Rajasthan, it provided an ideal location for reflection and contemplation. Brij-Kothi was their first home. This building was located in a vast expanse of bare rocks, uninhabited except for a few recluses living in small caves. A few years later, the community moved to another site which remains the University’s world headquarters - Madhuban (meaning ‘Forest of Honey’). The potential of the place did not go unnoticed as the location offered opportunities for expansion. The courtyard of Madhuban, which serves as a meeting place for students from around the world, was once two large stables. These structures were the first to be transformed into classrooms and living quarters. With every year, there came an addition in the form of an extension or new building.

In 1952, Brahma Baba, as Dada Lekhraj had become known, felt that it was time to reach out to the rest of India and share this knowledge, as he was aware of the devastating scars the troubled independence process and partition had left on peoples’ lives. A few sisters left their haven and moved to Bombay and Delhi ‘on service’. Their task was to establish study centers where the knowledge of Raja Yoga would be taught. Today, there is scarcely a town in India where the name of Brahma Kumaris has not been heard.

From its modest beginnings, the organization kept progressing in leaps and bounds to reach by early 1996, about 3,200 meditation centers in 70 countries with over 450,000 students. Madhuban serves as the nucleus of the Brahma Kumaris’ centers worldwide and Mt. Abu, ‘the Father’s mountain’ is regarded as a pilgrimage place by many who are in search of spiritual rejuvenation. Together they attract over a quarter of a million individuals from all ethnic and religious backgrounds every year. From classes in the stables, the organization has come a long way and has just inaugurated ‘The Academy for a Better World’ as part of the celebration of its 60th anniversary. This Academy is a place of international endeavor -- a place where men, women and children can reach their unique human potential and cultivate the values of our common humanity.






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