Rituals and mythologies may differ, but the essential philosophy of all Indian streams of religious thought converge at the same point.
Allegory and anthropomorphism are alternatives for the laity to seek audiences with the Divine, but all forms of worship from India recognize the universal dimensions of truth in the Word of God.
One of the best ways to reach the ultimate goal of salvation is to see God in people. One reason why Indians of all faiths love the Sikh Gurus is that all but one of them were ordinary humans like any of us. The last is eternal and resides in the form of Scripture.
The lives of past Sikh Gurus inspire us, because we know that it is possible to copy them, and thereby to achieve the highest goals for any mortal.
The Living Guru is available every day at all Gurudwaras.
It is fortunate that Sikhs have spread so far and wide on Mother Earth, because the Living Guru is available in most secular fashion.
The Japji Sahib is a short introduction to the Living Guru. Its daily recitation helps us deal with all the people we encounter as we would treat God. It is also an inspiring representation of the religious tolerance that has bound the people of India together for eons and for all time to come.
Do you recite the Japji Sahib every day? Would you like to do so? Perhaps there is another enchanting way to worship humans as God that you can share with our web community.
Please make a post below or write in confidence to
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
Do forgive our daily repetition if you are a regular visitor here, but the Ujjal Jeevan Charitable Trust is dedicated to the service of the poor, especially women.
Please visit us often, and ask other people you know to do the same. Both financial donations and participation at this web site will help the Trust expand its reach.
We wish you unremitting success in realizing God through people.
Saturday, May 31, 2008
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Work as Worship in India
Work has unpleasant connotations in the modern world.
Post-colonial India has copied many bad habits of our former rulers, and exaggerated them as well. Working hours per week for salaried Indians keep reducing, and there are additional holidays for petty reasons.
The first of every May is an especially tragic holiday for India, except for States that were formed on this day. How can anyone celebrate Labor Day by resting?
Indian Saints throughout the ages have extolled the virtues of work. It is a path to salvation and a sacred duty as well. We have to work to the very best of our abilities, without attachment to the fruits of our endeavors. Work gives us meaningful ways of giving tangible forms to our most sublime desires. It is a strong bridge to God. The Almighty keeps watch over all the work we do. None of us can escape final books of account.
Scripture helps mortals see daily work in perspective. We may have to go to war and kill enemies of our countries. Our work may involve menial tasks. There may be temptations to cheat and to lie. We may feel physically weak. There are many excuses and evils surrounding work, though work itself is pure and a gift from God. Daily recitation is like daily cleansing. As soap and water remove the epidermis of yesterday, so does Scripture cleanse the mind and refresh the Spirit.
This is why the Disciples of the Living Guru recite the Japji Sahib every morning. Please do the same and share in the eternal and unified spirituality of Mother India.
Today's post is dedicated to all Indians wherever you may be. Please recite the Japji Sahib, another Scripture, or even your manifesto. Do revere work in the way of our common ancestors. Spread this credo to the generations that must follow us, for India is without end or beginning.
Thank you for taking a minute to post your thoughts below. You can also email us in confidence at:
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
The Ujjal Jeevan Charitable Trust is dedicated to the service of the poor, especially women. All voluntary financial support is welcome.
This web log is updated every 24 hours. Please visit us soon and brings your friends and family along.
May the Living Guru Keep Watch Over You For All Time.
Post-colonial India has copied many bad habits of our former rulers, and exaggerated them as well. Working hours per week for salaried Indians keep reducing, and there are additional holidays for petty reasons.
The first of every May is an especially tragic holiday for India, except for States that were formed on this day. How can anyone celebrate Labor Day by resting?
Indian Saints throughout the ages have extolled the virtues of work. It is a path to salvation and a sacred duty as well. We have to work to the very best of our abilities, without attachment to the fruits of our endeavors. Work gives us meaningful ways of giving tangible forms to our most sublime desires. It is a strong bridge to God. The Almighty keeps watch over all the work we do. None of us can escape final books of account.
Scripture helps mortals see daily work in perspective. We may have to go to war and kill enemies of our countries. Our work may involve menial tasks. There may be temptations to cheat and to lie. We may feel physically weak. There are many excuses and evils surrounding work, though work itself is pure and a gift from God. Daily recitation is like daily cleansing. As soap and water remove the epidermis of yesterday, so does Scripture cleanse the mind and refresh the Spirit.
This is why the Disciples of the Living Guru recite the Japji Sahib every morning. Please do the same and share in the eternal and unified spirituality of Mother India.
Today's post is dedicated to all Indians wherever you may be. Please recite the Japji Sahib, another Scripture, or even your manifesto. Do revere work in the way of our common ancestors. Spread this credo to the generations that must follow us, for India is without end or beginning.
Thank you for taking a minute to post your thoughts below. You can also email us in confidence at:
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
The Ujjal Jeevan Charitable Trust is dedicated to the service of the poor, especially women. All voluntary financial support is welcome.
This web log is updated every 24 hours. Please visit us soon and brings your friends and family along.
May the Living Guru Keep Watch Over You For All Time.
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
The First Enemy of India
Great Indian thinkers are united in the quest for peace.
Many armies have crossed its mountainous North-Western border with aims of conquest, but this has always been a one-way movement.
Buddhists and sea-faring communities from our Eastern sea-board have ventured all the way from Myanmar and Thailand to Vietnam and Indonesia, but such dispersion has never been bloody or even forced.
The modern Diasporas of India continue the peaceful ways of our ancestors.
Yet India is relentless in its aggression against an insidious enemy. The latter has five heads. It is remarkable that all indigenous streams of religious thought of India, see the five-faced enemy the same way.
Lust, anger, envy, delusion, and pride are five tendencies of the human mind against which every Indian must guard. Mortality nurses these five faces of personal enmity. They can surface with even momentary lapses on our parts.
Spirituality is an Indian weapon to fight the five faces of the common enemy that lurks inside human minds. The Word of God has more power for a believer than all the aircraft, warships, tanks, and guns of other countries.
Indians should wage incessant war with their mortality, rather than against others.
Victory over lust, anger, envy, delusion, and pride is a prime life aim of a Sikh. It is a cardinal instruction of the Japji Sahib, which in turn is a part of the Living God in every Gurudwara.
Our Chief Trustee, Group Captain (Retired) Premjit Singh has translated the Japji Sahib. Please use the following link if you would like an English or a Hindi translation of the Japji Sahib:
http://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?showtopic=26201
Thank you for visiting this web log often, and for requesting your friends and families to do the same.
Dialog is our first goal, so please leave a post below. You can also email us in confidence at
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
The Ujjal Jeevan Charitable Trust serves the poor especially women, in memory of the parents of the family now headed by Group Captain (Retired) Premjit Singh.
You can donate financially to this Trust so that we can reach out to more people.
Our prayers are with you until we meet again on this web page.
Many armies have crossed its mountainous North-Western border with aims of conquest, but this has always been a one-way movement.
Buddhists and sea-faring communities from our Eastern sea-board have ventured all the way from Myanmar and Thailand to Vietnam and Indonesia, but such dispersion has never been bloody or even forced.
The modern Diasporas of India continue the peaceful ways of our ancestors.
Yet India is relentless in its aggression against an insidious enemy. The latter has five heads. It is remarkable that all indigenous streams of religious thought of India, see the five-faced enemy the same way.
Lust, anger, envy, delusion, and pride are five tendencies of the human mind against which every Indian must guard. Mortality nurses these five faces of personal enmity. They can surface with even momentary lapses on our parts.
Spirituality is an Indian weapon to fight the five faces of the common enemy that lurks inside human minds. The Word of God has more power for a believer than all the aircraft, warships, tanks, and guns of other countries.
Indians should wage incessant war with their mortality, rather than against others.
Victory over lust, anger, envy, delusion, and pride is a prime life aim of a Sikh. It is a cardinal instruction of the Japji Sahib, which in turn is a part of the Living God in every Gurudwara.
Our Chief Trustee, Group Captain (Retired) Premjit Singh has translated the Japji Sahib. Please use the following link if you would like an English or a Hindi translation of the Japji Sahib:
http://www.sikhsangat.com/index.php?showtopic=26201
Thank you for visiting this web log often, and for requesting your friends and families to do the same.
Dialog is our first goal, so please leave a post below. You can also email us in confidence at
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
The Ujjal Jeevan Charitable Trust serves the poor especially women, in memory of the parents of the family now headed by Group Captain (Retired) Premjit Singh.
You can donate financially to this Trust so that we can reach out to more people.
Our prayers are with you until we meet again on this web page.
Life and Death in India
Why should India be different?
Life and death belong to all people on earth.
The Indian way is to seek freedom from the yoke of death over life.
India recognizes the inevitably of death, but sees it in cyclical rather than finite fashion.
Death is no end in Indian thought.
It is but a small and inconsequential step in a universal and unceasing process.
Genetics, as a branch of science, is less than 250 years old.
The continuity of life is a fundamental realization from every stream of Indian religious thought.
It is a timeless element of the Gift of India to all humanity.
India has a plethora of tongues. However, she speaks of the link between life and death with one common term.
Sanatan
India asks her children to live beyond death.
The Japuji Sahib, which is the Word of God for all Sikh learners, speaks of more than 8 million cycles of birth and death.
The eternal blessings to all India of the Sikh Gurus is that they live forever in the Guru Granth Sahib.
The Japuji Sahib is a vital start to a lifetime of devotion to the Word of God.
Daily recitation of the Japuji Sahib brings you to the lap of God every morning.
It is a unique gift from Mother India for all her children.
Group Captain Premjit Singh (Retired) has prepared an English translation of the Japuji Sahib. Premjit is the Chief Trustee of the sponsor of this web log.
Please email
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
or leave a post below if you would like a copy of the Japuji Sahib in English.
The Ujjal Jeevan Charitable Trust is dedicated to the service of the poor, especially women.
Ujjal and Jeevan are the eternal names of the parents of the family now headed by Premjit.
We would be grateful for every financial support for the Trust to further its aims and activities.
This web log is updated everyday.
Your visits and dialog are invaluable for us. This applies to your friends and family as well.
Please help us to contribute in humility to the Sanatan way of India.
Life and death belong to all people on earth.
The Indian way is to seek freedom from the yoke of death over life.
India recognizes the inevitably of death, but sees it in cyclical rather than finite fashion.
Death is no end in Indian thought.
It is but a small and inconsequential step in a universal and unceasing process.
Genetics, as a branch of science, is less than 250 years old.
The continuity of life is a fundamental realization from every stream of Indian religious thought.
It is a timeless element of the Gift of India to all humanity.
India has a plethora of tongues. However, she speaks of the link between life and death with one common term.
Sanatan
India asks her children to live beyond death.
The Japuji Sahib, which is the Word of God for all Sikh learners, speaks of more than 8 million cycles of birth and death.
The eternal blessings to all India of the Sikh Gurus is that they live forever in the Guru Granth Sahib.
The Japuji Sahib is a vital start to a lifetime of devotion to the Word of God.
Daily recitation of the Japuji Sahib brings you to the lap of God every morning.
It is a unique gift from Mother India for all her children.
Group Captain Premjit Singh (Retired) has prepared an English translation of the Japuji Sahib. Premjit is the Chief Trustee of the sponsor of this web log.
Please email
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
or leave a post below if you would like a copy of the Japuji Sahib in English.
The Ujjal Jeevan Charitable Trust is dedicated to the service of the poor, especially women.
Ujjal and Jeevan are the eternal names of the parents of the family now headed by Premjit.
We would be grateful for every financial support for the Trust to further its aims and activities.
This web log is updated everyday.
Your visits and dialog are invaluable for us. This applies to your friends and family as well.
Please help us to contribute in humility to the Sanatan way of India.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
The Indian Way to Bliss
Every person deserves to be happy.
This is easier said than done.
Most people are never satisfied with their situations.
Human aspirations are Malthusian. We seek new heights every time we attain a new peak.
That is why bliss is so difficult to reach and to sustain. We may be satiated for seconds on occasion , only for some form of want to haunt our minds yet again.
All civilizations are driven by motives to attain and to maintain a state of bliss.
There are many synonyms of bliss. Any or all of them represent major aims of personal spirituality and organized religion.
Do you know the meaning of Sikh?
A Sikh is a disciple.
The Japuji Sahib, which is the Living God, says:
"O Nanak, The Disciples Are Forever In Bliss"
The culture of the Guru implies learning. The post of May 25, 2008 on this web log is about India and the way of the Guru.
Every tributary of spirituality that has emerged from the soil of India, enjoins the way of a Guru and disciples.
Discipleship is a path with bliss as a destination.
Are discipleship and learning the same?
The Japuji Sahib comes to our rescue once again. The Guru prescribes active listening as a primary duty of a disciple.
Visit a Gurudwara anywhere on Earth. You will find it to be an ocean of bliss, even if it is situated in the most trying of circumstances.
Active listening to the Living Guru is the over-riding aim that joins all Gurudwaras in reverberant spirituality.
The Japuji Sahib is a convenient recitation for you to practice active listening. It sets the tone to make every day full of bliss, regardless of the obstacles and set-backs that one may encounter.
Our Chief Trustee, Group Captain (Retired) Premjit Singh has prepared an English interpretation of the Japuji Sahib. Please email
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
or leave a post here if you would like a copy of this translation.
Please also let us have the benefits of your opinions and views.
We would be grateful if you would visit this web log often, and ask your family and friends to do the same. The web log has a new post everyday.
Everything here is free. Voluntary donations will be used exclusively to further the aims and activities of the Trust.
Thank you for your kind consideration.
Have a Great Day.
Every tributary of spirituality that has emerged from the soil of India, enjoins the way of a Guru and disciples.
Discipleship is a path with bliss as a destination.
Are discipleship and learning the same?
The Japuji Sahib comes to our rescue once again. The Guru prescribes active listening as a primary duty of a disciple.
Visit a Gurudwara anywhere on Earth. You will find it to be an ocean of bliss, even if it is situated in the most trying of circumstances.
Active listening to the Living Guru is the over-riding aim that joins all Gurudwaras in reverberant spirituality.
The Japuji Sahib is a convenient recitation for you to practice active listening. It sets the tone to make every day full of bliss, regardless of the obstacles and set-backs that one may encounter.
Our Chief Trustee, Group Captain (Retired) Premjit Singh has prepared an English interpretation of the Japuji Sahib. Please email
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
or leave a post here if you would like a copy of this translation.
Please also let us have the benefits of your opinions and views.
We would be grateful if you would visit this web log often, and ask your family and friends to do the same. The web log has a new post everyday.
Everything here is free. Voluntary donations will be used exclusively to further the aims and activities of the Trust.
Thank you for your kind consideration.
Have a Great Day.
Monday, May 26, 2008
Charity in India
You are never far from charity in India.
The large numbers of people who live in conventional poverty are not the only reason for this sub-continent to be so immersed in ubiquitous acts of charity everyday.
Charity has been a way of life in India since times immemorial.
The Japuji Sahib, which is the root source of the Word of God from Sikh Gurus, warns believers that charity is not adequate by itself to earn the Grace of God.
However, charity is seamlessly ensconced in the life of every devout Sikh.
Giving alms is a way of life in India. Charity binds the nation. Even the poor share their mites with others. It is common to see impoverished and starving people sharing even small portions of donated food and makeshift shelter with stray animals.
It fell on the conscience of Emperor Ashoka to open the first veterinary hospital in a brutally flesh-eating world. This was more than two centuries before the birth of Jesus Christ.
The Grace of our Gurus must have also drawn Mother Teresa to contribute her life of charity in India, thousands of miles from her native place.
Poverty binds the world. Here is a link to the facts of the poor in the materially richest country in the world:
http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty/poverty.html
Charity is simultaneously a secular and a spiritual act. That is why charity binds all humans together, regardless of differences in beliefs and even ideology.
Charity in Sikhism is special. It involves personal effort, rather than casual donations of money alone. The rich and poor share the fruits of community effort without any discrimination.
It is not easy for a Sikh to indulge in charity, though it is vital to do do. Our Gurus expect us to perform duties of charity without any ego. Similarly, recipients for charity should not feel any loss of dignity when they accept help.
The Gurudwaras of Sikh communities are visionary and living examples of charity in a community context, and in the enveloping presence of the living Guru.
Sikh Diaspora, through their Gurudwaras, have taken the quintessential Spirit of India, to most parts of Mother Earth, in the form of charity.
The Ujjal Jeevan Charitable Trust, with humility and mindful of mortal limitations, is dedicated to charity. Our special focus is on women.
Please help us by mailing
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
or write a post below
to guide us with your experiences with charity.
It will help us if you visit this web log regularly, and ask your acquaintances to do the same. There is a new post here everyday.
We have an English Translation of the Japji Sahib written by our Chief Trustee, Group Captain (Retired) Premjit Singh. Please let us know if you would like a soft copy.
We have no terms and conditions, but voluntary donations in material form will help us reach out to larger numbers of people.
Thank you for your patience in reaching this final section of today's post. We hope to be honored by your visit again soon.
May we all achieve ever higher peaks of Grace through charity.
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Truth, God, and India
Each country uses symbols to stand apart from others.
The United States, born by the violent colonization of the land of Aleutians, lays claim to bravery and freedom at the end of its National Anthem.
The British, who originally sponsored the colonization of much of North America, focus their national symbols, and give voices to their aspirations by paeans to their Monarchy.
The French, who nurture a love-hate relationship with the British, prefer to stand by the bloody and murderous revolution which beheaded their Kings and Queens.
What about India?
Satyameva Jayate
The founders of Modern India valued truth above all else. Our National Father has written magnetically on his personal experiences with truth.
That is why our National Symbol has an inscription dedicated to truth.
Truth is also inextricably intertwined with the indigenous religions of the Indian sub-continent.
"His Name is Truth"
"He Exists as Truth Since the Beginning of Time, and Throughout the Ages".
The Sikh Gurus are unequivocal in extolling the essential and mutual bonds between truth and spirituality.
The Japji Sahib, which guides the everyday lives of devout Sikhs, accords a central place to truth, and tells us that this value is integral to the human experience.
Truth and the Japji Sahib are available in secular fashion.
Please mail UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com or leave a post below if you would like an English interpretation of the Japji Sahib, or to let us have the benefits of your opinions and views.
This Trust is dedicated to the service of the poor, especially women. All voluntary financial support will help the Trust serve larger numbers. Thank you for your consideration in this regard.
This web log is updated once every 24 hours. Please visit us often, and help us spread the word.
May God and Truth Be With You As One.
The United States, born by the violent colonization of the land of Aleutians, lays claim to bravery and freedom at the end of its National Anthem.
The British, who originally sponsored the colonization of much of North America, focus their national symbols, and give voices to their aspirations by paeans to their Monarchy.
The French, who nurture a love-hate relationship with the British, prefer to stand by the bloody and murderous revolution which beheaded their Kings and Queens.
What about India?
Satyameva Jayate
The founders of Modern India valued truth above all else. Our National Father has written magnetically on his personal experiences with truth.
That is why our National Symbol has an inscription dedicated to truth.
Truth is also inextricably intertwined with the indigenous religions of the Indian sub-continent.
"His Name is Truth"
"He Exists as Truth Since the Beginning of Time, and Throughout the Ages".
The Sikh Gurus are unequivocal in extolling the essential and mutual bonds between truth and spirituality.
The Japji Sahib, which guides the everyday lives of devout Sikhs, accords a central place to truth, and tells us that this value is integral to the human experience.
Truth and the Japji Sahib are available in secular fashion.
Please mail UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com or leave a post below if you would like an English interpretation of the Japji Sahib, or to let us have the benefits of your opinions and views.
This Trust is dedicated to the service of the poor, especially women. All voluntary financial support will help the Trust serve larger numbers. Thank you for your consideration in this regard.
This web log is updated once every 24 hours. Please visit us often, and help us spread the word.
May God and Truth Be With You As One.
A Gift from India
You would not expect the concept of a Guru to emanate from any part of Mother Earth, other than from India.
Priests and spiritual leaders have arisen within the most ancient of civilizations, but existential learning always ends with the personal realization that a Guru is unique.
Bonding with a Guru is in no way weaker than with parents and spouses. Priests and officials from religious establishments may be powerful and deserving of respect as well. However, we cannot allow them inside the privates of our minds, as we so lovingly do with a Guru.
Sikhs are amongst the most fortunate of Indians. The Gurus of other peoples of this blessed sub-continent leave their bodies as per the dictates of mortality. The Sikh Guru never leaves your side. It is enshrined in Scripture for all time.
Do not despair if you are not a practicing Sikh. You can become one from tomorrow. Sikhism does not exclude any worshippers. Nor does it force itself on any unwilling person. You can remain with your inherited faith and worship the Guru at the same time.
The Guru shows a path to live well.
It is easy to understand the Guru provided that you start each day by reciting at least a part of the Japji Sahib.
Sikhism is anthropomorphic. Worship of the Guru is not different from love for humanity. It is a way of life, apart from being a faith.
Please email UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com or leave a post below if you would like an expose of the Japji Sahib.
This web log is updated every day. Please visit us often, and ask your friends and families to do the same.
Everything here is free. However, any voluntary donations that you may wish to make will add to the material resources of our Trust in its quest of social service for the poor, especially women.
Have a wonderful day.
Priests and spiritual leaders have arisen within the most ancient of civilizations, but existential learning always ends with the personal realization that a Guru is unique.
Bonding with a Guru is in no way weaker than with parents and spouses. Priests and officials from religious establishments may be powerful and deserving of respect as well. However, we cannot allow them inside the privates of our minds, as we so lovingly do with a Guru.
Sikhs are amongst the most fortunate of Indians. The Gurus of other peoples of this blessed sub-continent leave their bodies as per the dictates of mortality. The Sikh Guru never leaves your side. It is enshrined in Scripture for all time.
Do not despair if you are not a practicing Sikh. You can become one from tomorrow. Sikhism does not exclude any worshippers. Nor does it force itself on any unwilling person. You can remain with your inherited faith and worship the Guru at the same time.
The Guru shows a path to live well.
It is easy to understand the Guru provided that you start each day by reciting at least a part of the Japji Sahib.
Sikhism is anthropomorphic. Worship of the Guru is not different from love for humanity. It is a way of life, apart from being a faith.
Please email UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com or leave a post below if you would like an expose of the Japji Sahib.
This web log is updated every day. Please visit us often, and ask your friends and families to do the same.
Everything here is free. However, any voluntary donations that you may wish to make will add to the material resources of our Trust in its quest of social service for the poor, especially women.
Have a wonderful day.
Saturday, May 24, 2008
Our Aims
Premjit and Gurjeet are the surviving sons of the late Ujjal and Jeevan.
Premjit rose to the exalted rank of Group Captain in the Indian Air Force before he retired.
Gurjeet is an accomplished agricultural technologist with business management training as well.
Premjit and Gurjeet have not retired from public life.
They manage a Trust named in honor of their departed parents.
The Ujjal Jeevan Charitable Trust serves the poor, with a focus on women.
This web log celebrates the ancient traditions of India, which makes it such a special member of the earth community.
There will be a new post here everyday.
You can send a mail to:
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
or
leave a post below
if there is some spiritual material which you would like to discuss.
You can also contribute your writing, podcasts, and images for publication here.
Everything on this web log is free. However, you can send voluntary donations to help the Trust further its objectives. The address is:
Premjit rose to the exalted rank of Group Captain in the Indian Air Force before he retired.
Gurjeet is an accomplished agricultural technologist with business management training as well.
Premjit and Gurjeet have not retired from public life.
They manage a Trust named in honor of their departed parents.
The Ujjal Jeevan Charitable Trust serves the poor, with a focus on women.
This web log celebrates the ancient traditions of India, which makes it such a special member of the earth community.
There will be a new post here everyday.
You can send a mail to:
UjjalJeevanCharitableTrust@gmail.com
or
leave a post below
if there is some spiritual material which you would like to discuss.
You can also contribute your writing, podcasts, and images for publication here.
Everything on this web log is free. However, you can send voluntary donations to help the Trust further its objectives. The address is:
Premjit Singh
808-B,
Thank you for visiting this web log.
Please tell your friends about it.
Do come back as often as you can.
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