• About The Anād Foundation
    • Aims & Objectives
    • Governance
      • Board of Advisors 2026-2029
      • ASHA 2026–2029
    • Trustees & Associates
    • Historical Records
      • Founder Trustees
        • Bhāī Baldeep Singh
          • First visit to the Qila
        • Chiranjiv Singh
        • K. T. S. Tulsi
        • Kiranjit Singh Bawa
        • Manjit Kirpal Singh
        • Pervinder Singh Chandhok
        • Raj M. S. Liberhan
        • Ranjodh Singh
        • Ravinder Singh Ahuja
      • Board of Advisors
        • Rear Admiral Kirpal Singh, AVSM
        • Major H. P. S. Ahluwalia
      • Associate Trustees 2008-2011
      • Associate Trustees 2011-2014
      • Associate Trustees 2014-2017
        • Mayank Singh Bawa
      • Associate Trustees 2017-2020
      • Associate Trustees 2020-2023
    • Team & Project Associates
    • Financial Highlights — Archival Record
  • Anād Khaṅḍ / Conservatory
    • Anād Khaṅḍ — The Proposal
    • The Institute
      • Faculty
        • Resident Faculty
        • Visiting Faculty
      • Learning Streams
        • Class With Bhāī Baldeep Singh
        • After-School Studies
          • AAS Study Programme Coordination Committee Meeting I & II
      • Workshops
        • Gurbāṇī Saṅgīt Workshops
          • With Bhai Gurcharan Singh
          • With Bhai Baldeep Singh
            • BBS I
          • With Ustad Harbhajan Singh Namdhari
        • Dance Workshops
          • Kathak with Maria Maurizia Costanzo
            • Maurizia’s Workshop Note
            • Gallery
          • Chhau Dance with Luisa Spagna
            • A Note by Luisa Spagna
        • Theatre Workshops
          • With Kuljeet Singh
            • Theatre in the spaces
            • Gallery
        • Photography
      • Outreach
        • 2018: Poznań, Poland
        • 2019: Poznań, Poland
        • 2025: Rovigo, Italy
      • Gallery
    • ANĀD Scientific Advisory Committee 2009-2017
      • First Thoughts
        • By Professor Paolo Ceccarelli
        • By Professor Rabindra Vasavada
        • By Ashok B Lall
    • Costs and Funding Framework
    • Luthiery School
      • Rabāb
        • Harbhajan Kaur’s Rabab
      • Saranda
      • Taus
    • Audio-Visual Restoration Studio
  • Gurū Gaurav 350
    • Guru Gobind Singh — A Prophet With Difference
    • Gurū Gaurav — A Concept Note
    • Gurū Gaurav — Press Release
    • Performers
      • Rânsubāi
        • Inauguration
        • Raghuvir Mallik
        • Sangeet Kumar Pathak
        • Bibi Ashupreet Kaur
        • Ashutosh Upadhyay
        • Dr. Alankar Singh
        • Vidushi Jyoti Hegde
        • Bhai Baldeep Singh
        • Pandit Ram Kumar Mallick
        • Bhai Balbir Singh Ragi
        • Bhai Baldeep Singh —Poetry Reading
        • Pandit Rajendra Gangani
        • Pandit Yashpaul
        • Mohan Shyam Sharma
        • Jagat Narayan Pathak
        • Nihal Singh
        • Indra Kishore Mishra
        • Dr. Anil Chaudhary
      • January 1, 2017
        • Guru Gaurav Event Hosts
        • Introductions
        • Pandit Ravi Shankar Upadhyay
        • Dr. Ajit Pradhan
        • Dr. Nirinjan Kaur Khalsa
        • Ustad Asheesh Khan
        • Poet Kulwant Singh Grewal
        • Bhai Baljit Singh Namdhari
      • January 2, 2017
        • Dhaddi Desraj Lachkani
        • Poet Jaswant Singh Zafar
        • Parminder Singh Bhamra
        • Manu Seen
        • Shekhar Sen
        • Pandit Prem Kumar Mallick
      • January 3, 2017
        • Nashir Naqvi
        • Pandit Uday Kumar Mallick
        • Baha’ud’din Dagar
        • Vidushi Gopika Varma
        • Pandit Vinod Pathak
        • Jasbir Jassi
      • January 4, 2017
        • Pandit Ram Prakash Misra
        • Manganiārs
        • Samiran Sanyal
        • Dr. Gurinder Harnam Singh
        • Sukhwinder Amrit
        • Suvir Misra
        • Dr. Madan Gopal Singh
      • January 5, 2017
        • Jago Tareenjan Group
        • Dr. Francesca Cassio
        • Ustad Daud Khan Sadozai
        • Songs of the Khalsa
        • Dr. Ritwik Sanyal
        • Dr. Umayalpuram Sivaraman
        • Dr. Surjit Patar
        • Bhai Baldeep Singh —Gurbāni Pade
    • Review II by Professor Gajendra Narayan Singh
    • Production Team
  • Heritage Conservation
    • Intangible Heritage — Sūkham Virsā
      • Luthiery Tradition
    • Tangible Heritage — Sthūl Virsā
      • Qila Sultanpur Lodhi
        • Lahore Gate
          • Heritage Hammered by IP Singh
        • Darbar Hall
        • Old Kacchehri (Colonial structure)
        • Delhi Gate
        • Mosque
        • Qila Walls
    • Technology Partners
  • Punj-Care Initiatives
  • Events
    • Full Moon Events
      • May 2011
        • 6th Kāv Tarang Review
      • September 2011
        • Gallery
      • February 2012
      • October 2012
        • October 2012 Punya Baithak Gallery
        • 2012 10 29 Punyā Baithak Press Reviews
    • Poetry Festivals
      • 7th Anād Kāv Tarañg
    • Theatre
      • Story-telling by VK
    • Archives
    • Laya Darshan: Revealing the Riches of Indian Rhythm
    • Jashan 2006
    • 2008 Dharati Suhāvī
    • 2013 Harī Rāgu Gāthā: 31-Rāgu in Gurbāṇī
    • 2014 Hari Rāgu Gāthā: Singing of 31 Rāg in Gurbāṇī
    • Jashan 1915-2015
    • Gurū Nānak Dēv 550th
    • Virtual Vaisākhī 2020
    • 2020 Rai Radio3 — Dharati Suhāvī
    • 2020 Expressions on Nature: Dharati Suhāvī
  • Anād Awards
    • Award Jury
    • Anād Sanmān
      • Jashan 2006
        • Jashan 2006 Review
    • Kāv Sanmān
      • 2008
        • 2008 Review
      • 2009
        • 2009 Review
      • 2010
        • 2010 Review
      • 2011
  • Study at Anād
    • Gurbāṇī Saṅgīt Retreats
      • Retreat 25: Merced, California January 2010
        • Gallery
      • Retreat 26: London, Ontario
      • Retreat 27: Tucson Arizona January 2011
        • Love Poem
        • Gallery
      • Retreat 28: Espanola, New Mexico, July 2011
        • Amrita Kaur Khalsa
        • Gurkaran Singh
        • Guru Mander Kaur
        • Gurumukh Singh CPA
        • Harbhajan Kaur Khalsa
        • Keerat Kaur Chahal
        • Nihal Singh
        • Nirvair Kaur
        • Raviraj Singh
        • Siri Sevak Kaur Khalsa
        • Gallery
      • Retreat 29: London, Ontario 2011-12
        • Student Reviews
          • Keerat Kaur I
          • Keerat Kaur II
          • Baljinder Singh Bassi I
          • Baljinder Singh Bassi II
          • Baljinder Singh Bassi III
          • Tanvir Singh Suri I
          • Tanvir Singh Suri II
          • Harkamal Singh I
          • Raviraj Singh I
      • Retreat 30: Qila, Sultanpur Lodhi 2012
        • Concert inside Kapurthala’s Modern Reform Centre, February 18, 2012
        • Mid-term Review by Nirvair Kaur
        • Review by Nadar Nihal Singh
      • Retreat 31: Albuquerque, NM
        • Nirvair Kaur’s Review: 31st Albuquerque Summer Kirtan Course
        • Keerat Kaur’s 31st Summer Retreat Review
      • Retreat 32: Mississuaga, Ontario
        • Keerat Kaur’s Course Review
      • Retreat 40: Albuquerque, New Mexico
        • Gurbani Sangeet Retreat Review: Nihal Singh
      • Retreat 42: Rajgir, Bihar
      • Retreat 48th: New Delhi
      • Retreat 51: Online from Anād HQ
      • Retreat 52: Online from Anād Foundation HQ
      • Retreat 53: Rochester, MN
        • Rochester Preview & Screenshots
      • Retreat 54: Seattle, WA
      • Retreat 55: Seattle, WA
      • Retreat 56: San Francisco, California
      • Retreat 57: Surrey, BC
      • Retreat 58: San Francisco, California
      • Retreat 59: Khalsa Centre, Canada
    • Anād Online Classes Log
    • Internship Programmes
      • Vasant Valley School Class XI 3-week Internship 2012
        • Chairman’s letter to Vasant Valley School Internship Students
        • Delhi Head Office – Tentative Schedule
        • Student Reviews
          • Anmol Handa
          • Himmat Singh Guram
          • Kavya Rai
          • Luigi Hari Tehel Singh
          • Uday Talwar
          • Wanhee Ji
        • Vasant Valley School 2012 Internship – Images 1 – Delhi
  • YaarAnād
  • Contact Us
  • Donate / Support Anād
  • YaarAnād Virtual Baiṭhaks
    • YaarAnād Virtual Baiṭhak – Season I
      • 2020 April
      • 2020 May
      • 2020 June
      • 2020 July
      • 2020 August
      • 2020 September
      • 2020 October
      • 2020 November
    • YaarAnād Virtual Baiṭhak – Season II
      • 2020 December
      • 2021 January
      • 2021 February
      • 2021 March
      • 2021 April

The Anād Foundation

~ Culture | Conservation | Continuity

The Anād Foundation

Monthly Archives: November 2012

Music

30 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by bhaibaldeep in ANAD Poetry Page

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

celebrities, entertainment, hofstra university, music, music bbs

A day as "seen from my window" series. 2012 11 30.

A day as “seen from my window” series. 2012 11 30.

Music is not
a note or very many,
Music is,
what an able one
can imagine
and then contain,
albeit in even
a single note.

Music is not
in the meaningless mnemonics
dha kai duN ghe
take-trik-dhe
na-ki-T-ta
ghin-nNaan dha.
Music is
the meaning
sa-arth
in the meaningless
nir-arth
that a master can
lace,
—grace, it with.

Music is not
when one plays
—one sings.
Music is rather
when music plays
when music sings.

Master is not
who plays music
but, for whom
music is played for.

My Doer,
my Mirasi,
the Entertainer
I,
the jajman,
the entertained.

The entertained I, Ah!
Occasionally, my Entertainer
en-illusions me;
I am
human
born
—in pain
—in sorrow
—in joy
—in celebration
successful
—a failure
Ignorant.
At times drowns me
—in love
—in hate
Notions all so ‘alien’,
Notions so strange.
Separation.
Longing.
Union.
…at times awakened
—dead.
But then,
Snap!
There isn’t I.
There isn’t the Entertainer.
For, there Is
—the None-other
—Nanak.
Just entertainment!
But then,
From all knowing to
None-knowing.
All by Itself.
Unaware,
of Its Own Self.

When None exists
Concepts
Thoughts
Expressions
Logic
Music.
That is
Then is
Music.

BBS. 2012. November 30.
Glen Cove & Hofstra University, Hempstead.

Bhai Baldeep Singh teaches at Hofstra University, New York

30 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by in Anad Lecture Series

≈ Leave a comment

Poster of the event.

On Wednesday November 28, Bhai Baldeep Singh visited the Sikh musicology class at Hofstra University, Long Island. It was an auspicious day indeed, being the 543th Guru Nanak’s birth anniversary. We could not celebrate it in a better way than singing with our students, colleagues, and members of the Sikh sadh sangat. Among the guests, we would like to mention, Dr. Balbinder Singh Bhogal (Chair of the Sikh Studies at Hofstra University), and Mrs. Indie Singh (daughter of Dr. Hakam Singh, who established the Sardarni Harbans Kaur Chair in Sikh musicology in the loving memory of his wife).

In such a special athmosphere, all congregated to attend a wonderful lecture entitled “Tradition of Gurbani Sangeet and Its Study”. Only a day before, I had requested of Bhai Baldeep Singh to give a talk about the meaning of ‘tradition’ in the field of Sikh musicology, and he promptly set up a presentation focused on this topic.

In the academic context, the intellectual and abstract appreciation of music traditions, it is sometimes divorced from the actual meaning of the performance and its transmission from one generation to another. Hence, Bhai Baldeep Singh stressed the concept of tradition as:

“The tradition is
a stream of knowledge,
its waves,
its memory banks.
It remembers,
it cherishes,
all those who savored from,
and contributed to,
its riches.”

According to lecturer, who was recently appointed as Visiting Professor at the Guru Nanak Dev University in Amritsar, the intellectual pursuit should proceed at the steps of the “exponents of the tradition for they are the bearers of the memory of how Gurbani Sangeet has been sung and practiced over the centuries”. Unlike a few contemporary scholars, the authority of the tradition and the scholarship of the tradition bearers, past or present, must not be understated or underestimated. In Bhai Baldeep Singh’s words,

“The tradition is the Master,
its students,
its students
.”

The purpose of the event at Hosftra was meant to create a platform where students living in the United States could have not only a direct interaction with the 13th generation exponent of the Sikh Kirtan tradition, but also a link to the authentic tradition, remembering those who took the responsibility to preserve and pass the ancient knowledge and discipline (maryada) transmitted by the Sikh Gurus. As Bhai Baldeep Singh pointed out while introducing some of the elders “who, the traditions’ custodians in the 20th century, brought its pedagogical processes” to us.’The presentation was enriched by rare pictures of those masters, such as: Baba Jwala Singh, Gyani Bhagat Singh, Bhai Arjan Singh Tarangar, Bhai Avtar Singh, Bhai Gurcharan Singh, Gyan Harbhajan Singh, Sakar Khan Manganiar, Ustad Bahadur Singh and Bhai Balbir Singh.

And from the memory of the past, our guest weaved a link with the present, leading the new students into the practice of an ancient form of raga Asa. His methodology is an interesting mix of parables, metaphors and riddles interlaced with humour. For example, one slide in his presentation carried as if his invite to sing. It read:

“If you think you can sing,
I will show you,
you can’t.
If you think you can’t,
I will transform you into a
one who can…
”

Baldeep Singh concluded the class giving a brief, yet an intense rendition of alap, followed by the composition Oha Prem Piri, an original masterpiece of Guru Arjan Dev set to tala Chartal.

Students who were already trained in the raga and in the first part of the composition (asthai) enjoyed singing along with Bhai Baldeep Singh, and worked on the antara, sanchari and abhog, the following stanzas of the shabad. Alas, the time slot of a class was too short for satisfying the quest and, following a students’ desire to hear more and more, Bhai Baldeep Singh kindly agreed to give an extra class, and we all look forward to the start of a next avartan of the tradition….

Finishing touches to the presentation. Inside Dr. Francesca Cassio’s office.
Dr. Francesca Cassio PhD, Sardarni Harbans Kaur Chair in Sikh Musicology introduces Bhai Baldeep Singh to the students and guests.

Session begins

Students





Teaching a Raga Asa composition by Guru Arjan Dev.




Students attendees
Interview for the Hofstra University radio WRHU.

Rikhav Kothari gets a class.

Photos by Parminder Singh Bhamra and Dr. Francesca Cassio.

Raga Kalyan

30 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by Anād Foundation in ANAD Poetry Page

≈ Leave a comment

Sunset from my window. 2012 11 29.

Kalyan!
Each time I attend to it,
there is
so much more,
so much more.
Each session is
like a new wave,
formed
from the same water,
approaching,
overwhelming,
enriching,
the same shore.
I,
feel like a child,
each time,
—splashing,
—diving in it.
At times
swept off my feet,
but always,
so much
in awe of it…,
seeking Kalyan.
For
the relentless waves, and
the manner in which
they lure,
I’ve hope.

Was Born in 1469…

28 Wednesday Nov 2012

Posted by bhaibaldeep in ANAD Poetry Page, People

≈ 1 Comment

“Fog vanished, world is now lit…” (Bhai Gurdas. 15th Century.)
Reflecting, a teacher once said to me,
“Son, the dark in the night
will darken yet,
and darken still after,
then,
there shall be dawn…!”

In awe of whom…
The one who
—gave me the gift of the song
—taught me about
wonderment

the art of seeking
of receiving
of attaining
of fulfillment
of giving
of sharing
of becoming one with the One
All this in one song..!

Sach-e-araa
Anand
Anaadi
Anaahat
Adbhut
Visamay
Bairaag
Udaasi
Sahaj
Sanjam
Sadaa-Suhaagini
Banjaaran (Ramaiyye kee)
Bhau
Prem
Raga
Rababa
Pakhaawaj
Kartaal
Kirtan
Haumai Surti Visaar
Haumai Maar
Bichaar Man
Gun vich gun lai saar.

Nanak Shah Faqir
Hindu ka Guru
Mussalman ka Peer
Was born today
albeit in the year
1469.

bbs.
Glen Cove, NY.
28.11.2012

Photo by me.
“After teardrops, there is light indeed.”
‘As seen from my room’ series.
Day 28 of November 2012. Glen Cove, NY.

Crisis…

27 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by bhaibaldeep in ANAD Poetry Page

≈ 1 Comment

Snow it was meant to be, poured tears instead…

I am learning,
still…
—am wondering still.
Every crisis teaches me,
enriches me
—about me
—about the world
that I think is mine.
Of all moments of crisis,
the first one is the most important.
For it is like
that moment after –
the first note of cry, of calling…
the first smile
the first burp
the first love
the first failure
the first success.
when I didn’t know
—just what to do next…

bbs.
Glen Cove, NY
November 27, 2012

Review Committee Meeting 2012

26 Monday Nov 2012

Posted by bhaibaldeep in Guru Nanak Dev University Events

≈ Leave a comment

On September, I joined the Centre on Studies in Sri Guru Granth Sahib, Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar, as a visiting professor. During my short stints, I will be engaging in an Analytical Study of Literature on Gurbani Sangeet be it written (books, manuscripts, monographs, etc.) or recorded performances on a/v platform.

On October 18, 2012, I went to document the Gurmat Sangeet Utsav 2012, which is organized by the Department of Gurmat Sangeet, Punjabi University, Patiala. There were nine performances to analyze which, I set up a Review Committee some very illustrious elders such as Pandit Tejpal Singh (Singh Bandhu), Bhai Sikandar Singh Bagrian, Dr. B. S. Rattan, Bhai Balbir Singh Ragi, Bhai Narinder Singh Banarsi, Bhai Narinder Singh and artist Hardev Singh to name a few. I convened the first meeting of the review committee on November 7, 2012 at the Centre. There was also a programme in the evening focusing on the percussion system of the Gur-darbar in which Harbhajan Singh Dhariwal, Parminder Singh Bhamra, Dr. Murli Manohar and I played pakhawaj, tabla and Jori-pakhwaj, respectively. Here are a few images:
















Postcard 49: Radical by Nature

21 Wednesday Nov 2012

Posted by in Postcards from the Journey, Reflections

≈ Leave a comment

Have you ever noticed how people react when their belief system gets challenged? We all carry around our own version of reality that has been constructed based on our own experiences in the world, what we have thought and what we have been taught. This story includes our beliefs about the world, the way we see ourselves, the way we see other people. Some people think their story is The True Story and if someone else tells a different one it can get really uncomfortable. When I hear a story that challenges what I think I know to be true, my mind is faced with a few choices — either go to battle to defend the world as I believe it to be, avoid the person and their story and retreat into the comfortable world of what is already known, or actually consider the other person’s viewpoint and allow space for a little earthquake to shake me out of my dream, examine the possibilities and perhaps even make a shift.

Guru Nanak was an earthquake like this and the whole collection of bāni in Siri Guru Granth Sāhib is a challenge to the status quo, a revolution. The shabds tell us we are fools, make fun of our attachment to mindless rituals, put us in our place when we get self-righteous and think we are better than some less fortunate soul. But the Gurus, Bhagats and composers of bāni don’t leave us there, in the humbled state of realizing the small, limited nature of the self. They offer an alternative, a new world order. There is an infinite Oneness ever present, accessible, available to everyone. And they tell us where to look and how to see it. These wise ones have composed amazing songs to share their discoveries with the rest of us.

The old reets in rāga kānra are deep and profound, majestic mansions of wisdom that convey a powerful state of knowing, an expansive vision of worlds seen and unseen. These melodies are written to be accompanied by the resonating bass notes of pakāwaj, and decorated with ornaments placed by a knowledgeable voice. In my little room, singing with the digital accompaniment of itābla, I am left to imagine the possibilities and remember the times when I was fortunate to hear masterful renditions of some of these songs, live and in person, to feel the earth shake.

When the music moves us, and the wisdom shakes the ground on which we stand, we can run and hide, or move in closer, have the courage to question what we thought we knew, resist the tyranny of the mind, join an inner revolution.

Postcard 48: Singing Down the Rain

13 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by in Postcards from the Journey, Reflections

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Nirvair's blog

11-9-12
Today I woke up at 3:00 am to sound of rain pounding on the roof, pouring from the rafters and splashing off the hard, dry desert floor. It is also the day I will sing the last rāga malār shabd in Gurubāni Sangeet.

Rāga malār is a rāga for the rainy season and traveling through these shabds is like driving through a storm. In the desert we anticipate the precious drops of rain that bring green life to our dry world but the rain can also come so hard and fast it is hard to see past the water, and flooding can change the landscape forever.

Rāg malār makes its entrance in Gurbāni Sangeet with a slow, steady chārtāl, like the slow steady rhythm of the rain as it begins to fall. Then the pace picks up with choti teen tāl and builds in complexity as pārtāls are introduced, combining rhythms, creating beauty and drama, displays of grandeur as powerful as lightning bolts and thunderclouds.

The bani of rāga malār describes the state of the seeker and the seasons of the soul journey. The poetry celebrates the showers of blessing, calls out in love and longing or  fear of the torrents to come. Like the peacocks and songbirds singing down the rain, the soul sings along.

At least eight different malārs have been remembered in this collection from the memory of tradition. The malār collection concludes with rāgas and blends in sweet, singable songs with tāls like rupak, dādra and iktāl. These delightful melodies are like the gentle rain that continues to fall after all the drama of the storm has passed. What remains is the peace that lingers on a cloudy day, the bittersweet seeing, knowing what has come, what has gone, what has been lost, what has been gained.

Postcard 47: Conversing with the Past

05 Monday Nov 2012

Posted by in Postcards from the Journey, Reflections

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Nirvair's blog

“It has been said that, at its best, preservation engages the past in a conversation with the present over a mutual concern for the future.”
—William Murtaugh, Keeper of the US National Register of Historic Places 

I think this brilliantly describes the work of Bhai Baldeep Singh and the Anad Foundation. Preservation is not about getting locked in the past or looking backwards instead of forwards. It is about seeking the counsel of the ones who came before, seeing the present   through their eyes, enriching the future with lessons of then and now.

Subscribe

  • Entries (RSS)
  • Comments (RSS)

Archives

  • May 2026
  • December 2025
  • May 2025
  • December 2024
  • June 2024
  • January 2024
  • November 2023
  • May 2023
  • January 2023
  • May 2022
  • December 2020
  • July 2020
  • April 2020
  • December 2019
  • January 2019
  • November 2018
  • June 2018
  • March 2017
  • December 2016
  • August 2016
  • June 2016
  • February 2016
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • November 2013
  • October 2013
  • September 2013
  • August 2013
  • July 2013
  • June 2013
  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • November 2011
  • October 2011

Categories

  • ANAD Discussion Forum
  • ANAD Events
  • ANAD Foundation
  • Anad Initiatives
  • ANAD Khand
  • Anad Lecture Series
  • Anad Luthiery
  • ANAD Obituaries
  • ANAD Poetry Page
  • Anad Residencies
  • Anad Scientific Advisory Committee (ASAC)
  • Enroute to a realisation
  • Guru Nanak Dev University Events
  • Humour & …
  • Lines and Colours
  • Mere Music
  • Oral History Archives
  • People
  • Photos
  • Press
  • Quotes
  • Ravneet Sangha Anecdotes
  • Reflections
    • Postcards from the Journey
  • Responses
  • Rāngli Sath
  • Sarcasm
  • Television
  • Uncategorized

Meta

  • Log in

Culture | Conservation | Continuity

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com Theme: Chateau by Ignacio Ricci.

Loading Comments...