In the Footsteps of Kabir
Possibly the most-quoted poet-saint of north India is Kabir, the
illiterate, 15th century mystic who belonged to a class of weavers in
the ancient city of Varanasi. Kabir was a 'nirguni', one who believes in
a formless divinity that can be discovered both within and without.
With whip-like wit, his poetry scorns outward rituals and displays of
piety exhorting his listeners to seek the divine through
self-interrogation, and to recognise the impermanence of manifest
reality. Read on for an extract from 'The Bijak of Kabir', one of the
most important anthologies of the Eastern tradition of Kabir's verses.
http://www.dailygood.org/story/2134/in-the-footsteps-of-kabir-linda-hess-and-sukhdev-singh/
http://www.dailygood.org/story/2134/in-the-footsteps-of-kabir-linda-hess-and-sukhdev-singh/