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Lalleshwari

Lalleshwari, also known locally as Lal Ded (Kashmiri pronunciation: [laːl dʲad]; 1320–1392), was a Kashmiri mystic of the Kashmir Shaivism school of Hindu philosophy.[1][2] She was the creator of the style of mystic poetry called vatsun or Vakhs, literally "speech" (from Sanskrit vaak). Known as Lal Vakhs, her verses are the earliest compositions in the Kashmiri language and are an important part in the history of modern Kashmiri literature.[3][4]

Lalleshwari
Born1320
Pandrethan (present-day Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India)
Died1392
Other namesLalla, Lalleshwari, Lal Arifa
Known forVatsun poetry

Lal Ded ("Mother Lal" or "Mother Lalla") is also known by various other names, including Lal Dyad (Dyad means "Grandmother"), Lalla Aarifa, Lal Diddi, Lalleshwari, Lalla Yogishwari/Yogeshwari and Lalishri.[5][6][7][8]

Life

A great deal of the records of Lal Ded's life are contained in oral tradition, and consequently there is considerable variance on the details of her life and beliefs.[9] Numerous contemporary Kashmiri histories, such as those prepared by Jonaraja, Srivara, Prajyabhatta, and Haidar Malik Chadura, do not mention Lal Ded.[9] The first written record of Lal Ded's life is contained in the Tadhkirat-ul-Arifin (1587), a collection of biographies of saints and religious figures written by Mulla Ali Raina, and followed by an account of her life in Baba Daud Mishkati's Asrar ul-Akbar (1654). In these texts, Lal Ded is described as a mystic saint, appearing in the forest to travellers.[9] In 1736, Khwaja Azam Diddamari's Tarikh-i-Azami contained a more detailed account of Lal Ded's life.[9] She is also noted in a Persian chronicle, the Waqiati-e-Kashmir (1746) in which she is described as being famous in the reign of Sultan Alau-ud-din (1343–54) and died in the reign of Sultan Shihab-ud-din (1354–73).[10]

Lal Ded is also believed to be a contemporary of Mir Sayyid Ali-Hamdani, an Iranian Sufi scholar and poet, who recorded stories of her in his own verse during his travels to Kashmir.[11]

Most modern scholars place Lal Ded's birth between 1301 and 1320 C.E., near Sempore or Pandrenthan.[10][2] She is estimated to have died in 1373, and a grave near Bijbehara is commonly attributed to her, although there is no confirmation. Lal Ded is believed to have been born to a Brahmin family, and was married at the age of twelve in accordance with the local customs.[9] Following her marriage, she was renamed, as is custom, to Padmavati, but continued to be known as Lalla or Lal Ded.[10] Some reports suggest her marriage was unhappy,[10] and that she left home, between the ages of twenty-four and twenty-six, to become a disciple of a spiritual leader, Siddha Srikanth or Sed Boyu, who was a Shaivite.[9] As part of her religious education, she travelled alone on foot, surviving on alms, before becoming a teacher and spiritual leader herself.[9]

Literary works

Lal Ded's poems represent some of the earliest known works of Kashmiri literature, and were written as Kashmiri began to emerge as a distinct language from Apabhramsa-prakrit, which was spoken in North India.[12] A total of 285 poems, known as vakhs, are attributed to Lal Ded.[9]

Themes

Lal Ded's vakhs drawn from influences and languages that made contact with the Indian sub-continent in her life, drawing from Sanskritic, Islamic, Sufi, and Sikh cultures.[9]

She continued the mystic tradition of Shaivism in Kashmir, which was known as Trika before 1900.[13]

Translations

Lal Ded's works were first recorded in writing in the twentieth century, and have been frequently republished since, in Kashmiri as well as in translation. In 1914, Sir George Grierson, a civil servant and the Superintendent of the Linguistic Survey of India, commissioned a copy of Lal Ded's vakhs. A written record of the vakhs was unavailable at the time, and one was prepared by transcribing an oral narration of the vakhs performed by Dharma-dasa Darwesh, a story-teller residing in Gush, Kashmir. This manuscript was translated in English by Grierson and published as Lalla-Vakyani, or The Wise Sayings of Lal Ded.[14] Grierson consolidated and expanded on the partial translation prepared by the Hungarian-British archaeologist and scholar Sir Marc Aurel Stein, and incorporated some archived poems that were contained in the Dictionary of Kashmiri Proverbs and Sayings (1888).[9]

Grierson's translation was the first printed and published volume of Lal Ded's works. Following his translation, a number of English translations have been produced, notably those by Pandit Ananda Koul (1921), Sir Richard Carnac Temple (1924)[15] and Jaylal Kaul (1973). More recent translations include those by Coleman Barks,[16] Jaishree Odin Kak,[17] and Ranjit Hoskote.[9]

Her poems, (vakhs) have been translated into English by Richard Temple, Jaylal Kaul, Coleman Barks,[18] Jaishree Odin, and Ranjit Hoskote.[19][20][21][22]

Legacy

The leading Kashmiri Sufi figure Sheikh Noor-ud-din Wali (also known as Nooruddin Rishi or Nunda Rishi) was highly influenced by Lal Ded. He ultimately led to the formation of the Rishi order of saints and later gave rise to many Rishi saints like Resh Mir Sàeb.[1] One Kashmiri folk story recounts that, as a baby, Nunda Rishi refused to be breast-fed by his mother. It was Lal Ded who breast-fed him.[23]

Lal Ded and her mystic musings continue to have a deep impact on the psyche of Kashmiris, and the 2000 National Seminar on her held at New Delhi led to the release of the book Remembering Lal Ded in Modern Times.[24] In his book "Triadic Mysticism", Paul E. Murphy calls her the "chief exponent of devotional or emotion-oriented Triadism".[citation needed] According to him, three significant representatives of devotionalism emerged in Kashmir in the five hundred years between the last half of the ninth and the end of the fourteenth centuries.[citation needed]

What this points to is the non-sectarian nature of Lal Ded's spiritual life and her song-poems. Yet, her life and work have been used for various religious and political agendas over time. As author and poet Ranjit Hoskote writes:[9]

To the outer world, Lal Ded is arguably Kashmir's best known spiritual and literary figure; within Kashmir, she has been venerated both by Hindus and Muslims for nearly seven centuries. For most of that period, she has successfully eluded the proprietorial claims of religious monopolists. Since the 1980s, however, Kashmir's confluential culture has frayed thin under the pressure of a prolonged conflict to which transnational terrorism, State repression and local militancy have all contributed. Religious identities in the region have become harder and more sharp-edged, following a substantial exodus of the Hindu minority during the early 1990s, and a gradual effort to replace Kashmir's unique and syncretically nuanced tradition of Islam with a more Arabocentric global template. It is true that Lal Ded was constructed differently by each community, but she was simultaneously Lallesvari or Lalla Yogini to the Hindus and Lal'arifa to the Muslims; today unfortunately, these descriptions are increasingly being promoted at the expense of one another.

Beyond several new translations of Lal Ded's vakh, there are other contemporary performative arts that are based on Lal Ded's life and poetry. For example, there are contemporary renderings of Lal Ded's poetry in song. In addition, a solo play in English, Hindi, and Kashmiri titled Lal Ded (based on her life) has been performed by actress Mita Vashisht across India since 2004.[25][26]

Further reading

  • Lalla Yogishwari, Anand Kaul, reprint from the Indian Antiquary, Vols. L, LIX, LX, LXI, LXII.
  • Lalla-Vakyani, Sir George Grierson and Dr. Lionel D. Barnett Litt. D. (R. A. S. monograph, Vol. XVII, London 1920).ISBN 1846647010.
  • Vaakh Lalla Ishwari, Parts I and II (Urdu Edition by A. K. Wanchoo and English by Sarwanand Chaaragi, 1939).
  • Lal Ded by Jayalal Kaul, 1973, Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi.
  • The Ascent of Self: A Reinterpretation of the Mystical Poetry of Lalla-Ded by B. N. Parimoo, Motilal Banarsidass, Delhi. ISBN 81-208-0305-1.
  • The Word of Lalla the Prophetess, by Sir Richard Carnac Temple, Cambridge 1924
  • Lal Ded: Her life and sayings by Nil Kanth Kotru, Utpal publications, Srinagar, ISBN 81-85217-02-5.
  • Lalleshwari : spiritual poems by a great Siddha yogini, by Swami Muktananda and Swami Laldyada. 1981, SYDA Foundation, ASIN: B000M1C7BC.
  • Lal Ded: Her life & sayings, by Swami Laldyada. Utpal Publications, 1989, ISBN 81-85217-02-5.
  • Naked Song, by Laldyada, Lalla, Coleman Barks (Translator), 1992, Maypop Books, ISBN 0-9618916-4-5. [1]
  • Mystical Verses of Lalla: A Journey of Self Realization, by Jaishree Kak. Motilal Banarsidass, 2007.
  • I, Lalla: The Poems of Lal Ded, translated by Ranjit Hoskote with an Introduction and Notes, Penguin Classics, 2011, ISBN 978-0-670-08447-0. [2]
  • Siddha Yogini, A Kashmiri Secret of Divine Knowledge. by Ghauri, Laila Khalid. Proquest Dissertations And Theses 2012. Section 0075, Part 0604 82 pages; [M.A dissertation].United States – District of Columbia: The George Washington University; 2012. Publication Number: AAT 1501080.
  • Lalla, Unveiled: The Naked Voice of the Feminine Translations by Jennifer Sundeen. 2nd Tier Publishing, July 3, 2020.' ISBN 978-0578542577.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b M. G. Chitkara (1 January 2002). Kashmir Shaivism: Under Siege. APH Publishing. pp. 14–. ISBN 978-81-7648-360-5.
  2. ^ a b Kaul, Shonaleeka (16 October 2020). "Remembering Lal Ded, the Kashmiri Yogini". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  3. ^ Lal Vakh online 11 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Lal Ded's Vakhs
  5. ^ Paniker, K. Ayyappa (1997). Medieval Indian Literature: Surveys and selections. Sahitya Akademi. ISBN 978-81-260-0365-5.
  6. ^ Richard Carnac Temple (1 August 2003). Word of Lalla the Prophetess. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7661-8119-9.
  7. ^ Lal Ded www.poetry-chaikhana.com.
  8. ^ Lal Ded 19 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine www.radiokashmir.org.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l I, Lalla: The Poems of Lal Ded, translated by Ranjit Hoskote with an Introduction and Notes, Penguin Classics, 2011, p. xiv ISBN 978-0-670-08447-0.
  10. ^ a b c d Laldyada (2007). Mystical Verses of Lallā: A Journey of Self Realization. Motilal Banarsidass Publishe. p. 4. ISBN 978-81-208-3255-8.
  11. ^ Grierson, Sir George; Barnett, Lionel D. (18 April 2013). Lalla-Vakyani or the Wise Sayings of Lal-Ded - A Mystic Poetess of Ancient Kashmir. Read Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1-4474-9436-2.
  12. ^ Ded, Lal; Laldyada (2013). I, Lalla: The Poems of Lal Ded. Penguin. pp. x. ISBN 978-0-14-342078-1.
  13. ^ Toshkhani, S.S. (2002). Lal Ded : the great Kashmiri saint-poetess. New Delhi: A.P.H. Pub. Corp. ISBN 81-7648-381-8.
  14. ^ Grierson, Sir George; Barnett, Lionel D. (18 April 2013). Lalla-Vakyani or the Wise Sayings of Lal-Ded - A Mystic Poetess of Ancient Kashmir. Read Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1-4474-9436-2.
  15. ^ Temple, Richard Carnac (1924). The Word of Lalla the Prophetess, Being the Sayings of Lal Ded, Or Lal Diddi of Kashmir ... Between 1300 and 1400 A.D., Done Into English Verse from the Lalla-Vakyani Or Lal-Wakhi and Annotated by Sir Richard Carnac Temple, ... The University Press.
  16. ^ Laldyada; Barks, Coleman (1992). Naked Song. Maypop. ISBN 978-0-9618916-4-0.
  17. ^ Laldyada (2007). Mystical Verses of Lallā: A Journey of Self Realization. Motilal Banarsidass Publishe. ISBN 978-81-208-3255-8.
  18. ^ Barks, Coleman (1992). Naked Song. Maypop Books. ISBN 0-9618916-4-5.
  19. ^ Kashmir's wise old Grandmother Lal Aditi De's review of I, Lalla by Ranjit Hoskote in The Hindu/ Business Line
  20. ^ Mystic insights Abdullah Khan's review of I, Lalla by Ranjit Hoskote in The Hindu
  21. ^ Words are floating Jerry Pinto's review of I, Lalla by Ranjit Hoskote in Hindustan Times
  22. ^ Lalla and Kabir, resurrected Nilanjana S. Roy's article on Ranjit Hoskote's I, Lalla and Arvind Krishna Mehrotra's Songs of Kabir
  23. ^ K. Warikoo (1 January 2009). Cultural Heritage of Jammu And Kashmir. Pentagon Press. pp. 140–. ISBN 978-81-8274-376-2.
  24. ^ Remembering Lal Ded in Modern Times National Seminar by Kashmir Education, Culture and Science Society, 2000.
  25. ^ , The Hindu, 1 May 2005.
  26. ^ Bhumika K. All for theatre. The Hindu, 7 November 2011.

External links

lalleshwari, also, known, locally, kashmiri, pronunciation, laːl, dʲad, 1320, 1392, kashmiri, mystic, kashmir, shaivism, school, hindu, philosophy, creator, style, mystic, poetry, called, vatsun, vakhs, literally, speech, from, sanskrit, vaak, known, vakhs, ve. Lalleshwari also known locally as Lal Ded Kashmiri pronunciation laːl dʲad 1320 1392 was a Kashmiri mystic of the Kashmir Shaivism school of Hindu philosophy 1 2 She was the creator of the style of mystic poetry called vatsun or Vakhs literally speech from Sanskrit vaak Known as Lal Vakhs her verses are the earliest compositions in the Kashmiri language and are an important part in the history of modern Kashmiri literature 3 4 LalleshwariBorn1320Pandrethan present day Srinagar Jammu and Kashmir India Died1392KashmirOther namesLalla Lalleshwari Lal ArifaKnown forVatsun poetryLal Ded Mother Lal or Mother Lalla is also known by various other names including Lal Dyad Dyad means Grandmother Lalla Aarifa Lal Diddi Lalleshwari Lalla Yogishwari Yogeshwari and Lalishri 5 6 7 8 Contents 1 Life 2 Literary works 2 1 Themes 2 2 Translations 3 Legacy 4 Further reading 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksLife EditA great deal of the records of Lal Ded s life are contained in oral tradition and consequently there is considerable variance on the details of her life and beliefs 9 Numerous contemporary Kashmiri histories such as those prepared by Jonaraja Srivara Prajyabhatta and Haidar Malik Chadura do not mention Lal Ded 9 The first written record of Lal Ded s life is contained in the Tadhkirat ul Arifin 1587 a collection of biographies of saints and religious figures written by Mulla Ali Raina and followed by an account of her life in Baba Daud Mishkati s Asrar ul Akbar 1654 In these texts Lal Ded is described as a mystic saint appearing in the forest to travellers 9 In 1736 Khwaja Azam Diddamari s Tarikh i Azami contained a more detailed account of Lal Ded s life 9 She is also noted in a Persian chronicle the Waqiati e Kashmir 1746 in which she is described as being famous in the reign of Sultan Alau ud din 1343 54 and died in the reign of Sultan Shihab ud din 1354 73 10 Lal Ded is also believed to be a contemporary of Mir Sayyid Ali Hamdani an Iranian Sufi scholar and poet who recorded stories of her in his own verse during his travels to Kashmir 11 Most modern scholars place Lal Ded s birth between 1301 and 1320 C E near Sempore or Pandrenthan 10 2 She is estimated to have died in 1373 and a grave near Bijbehara is commonly attributed to her although there is no confirmation Lal Ded is believed to have been born to a Brahmin family and was married at the age of twelve in accordance with the local customs 9 Following her marriage she was renamed as is custom to Padmavati but continued to be known as Lalla or Lal Ded 10 Some reports suggest her marriage was unhappy 10 and that she left home between the ages of twenty four and twenty six to become a disciple of a spiritual leader Siddha Srikanth or Sed Boyu who was a Shaivite 9 As part of her religious education she travelled alone on foot surviving on alms before becoming a teacher and spiritual leader herself 9 Literary works EditLal Ded s poems represent some of the earliest known works of Kashmiri literature and were written as Kashmiri began to emerge as a distinct language from Apabhramsa prakrit which was spoken in North India 12 A total of 285 poems known as vakhs are attributed to Lal Ded 9 Themes Edit Lal Ded s vakhs drawn from influences and languages that made contact with the Indian sub continent in her life drawing from Sanskritic Islamic Sufi and Sikh cultures 9 She continued the mystic tradition of Shaivism in Kashmir which was known as Trika before 1900 13 Translations Edit Lal Ded s works were first recorded in writing in the twentieth century and have been frequently republished since in Kashmiri as well as in translation In 1914 Sir George Grierson a civil servant and the Superintendent of the Linguistic Survey of India commissioned a copy of Lal Ded s vakhs A written record of the vakhs was unavailable at the time and one was prepared by transcribing an oral narration of the vakhs performed by Dharma dasa Darwesh a story teller residing in Gush Kashmir This manuscript was translated in English by Grierson and published as Lalla Vakyani or The Wise Sayings of Lal Ded 14 Grierson consolidated and expanded on the partial translation prepared by the Hungarian British archaeologist and scholar Sir Marc Aurel Stein and incorporated some archived poems that were contained in the Dictionary of Kashmiri Proverbs and Sayings 1888 9 Grierson s translation was the first printed and published volume of Lal Ded s works Following his translation a number of English translations have been produced notably those by Pandit Ananda Koul 1921 Sir Richard Carnac Temple 1924 15 and Jaylal Kaul 1973 More recent translations include those by Coleman Barks 16 Jaishree Odin Kak 17 and Ranjit Hoskote 9 Her poems vakhs have been translated into English by Richard Temple Jaylal Kaul Coleman Barks 18 Jaishree Odin and Ranjit Hoskote 19 20 21 22 Legacy EditThe leading Kashmiri Sufi figure Sheikh Noor ud din Wali also known as Nooruddin Rishi or Nunda Rishi was highly influenced by Lal Ded He ultimately led to the formation of the Rishi order of saints and later gave rise to many Rishi saints like Resh Mir Saeb 1 One Kashmiri folk story recounts that as a baby Nunda Rishi refused to be breast fed by his mother It was Lal Ded who breast fed him 23 Lal Ded and her mystic musings continue to have a deep impact on the psyche of Kashmiris and the 2000 National Seminar on her held at New Delhi led to the release of the book Remembering Lal Ded in Modern Times 24 In his book Triadic Mysticism Paul E Murphy calls her the chief exponent of devotional or emotion oriented Triadism citation needed According to him three significant representatives of devotionalism emerged in Kashmir in the five hundred years between the last half of the ninth and the end of the fourteenth centuries citation needed What this points to is the non sectarian nature of Lal Ded s spiritual life and her song poems Yet her life and work have been used for various religious and political agendas over time As author and poet Ranjit Hoskote writes 9 To the outer world Lal Ded is arguably Kashmir s best known spiritual and literary figure within Kashmir she has been venerated both by Hindus and Muslims for nearly seven centuries For most of that period she has successfully eluded the proprietorial claims of religious monopolists Since the 1980s however Kashmir s confluential culture has frayed thin under the pressure of a prolonged conflict to which transnational terrorism State repression and local militancy have all contributed Religious identities in the region have become harder and more sharp edged following a substantial exodus of the Hindu minority during the early 1990s and a gradual effort to replace Kashmir s unique and syncretically nuanced tradition of Islam with a more Arabocentric global template It is true that Lal Ded was constructed differently by each community but she was simultaneously Lallesvari or Lalla Yogini to the Hindus and Lal arifa to the Muslims today unfortunately these descriptions are increasingly being promoted at the expense of one another Beyond several new translations of Lal Ded s vakh there are other contemporary performative arts that are based on Lal Ded s life and poetry For example there are contemporary renderings of Lal Ded s poetry in song In addition a solo play in English Hindi and Kashmiri titled Lal Ded based on her life has been performed by actress Mita Vashisht across India since 2004 25 26 Further reading EditLalla Yogishwari Anand Kaul reprint from the Indian Antiquary Vols L LIX LX LXI LXII Lalla Vakyani Sir George Grierson and Dr Lionel D Barnett Litt D R A S monograph Vol XVII London 1920 ISBN 1846647010 Vaakh Lalla Ishwari Parts I and II Urdu Edition by A K Wanchoo and English by Sarwanand Chaaragi 1939 Lal Ded by Jayalal Kaul 1973 Sahitya Akademi New Delhi The Ascent of Self A Reinterpretation of the Mystical Poetry of Lalla Ded by B N Parimoo Motilal Banarsidass Delhi ISBN 81 208 0305 1 The Word of Lalla the Prophetess by Sir Richard Carnac Temple Cambridge 1924 Lal Ded Her life and sayings by Nil Kanth Kotru Utpal publications Srinagar ISBN 81 85217 02 5 Lalleshwari spiritual poems by a great Siddha yogini by Swami Muktananda and Swami Laldyada 1981 SYDA Foundation ASIN B000M1C7BC Lal Ded Her life amp sayings by Swami Laldyada Utpal Publications 1989 ISBN 81 85217 02 5 Naked Song by Laldyada Lalla Coleman Barks Translator 1992 Maypop Books ISBN 0 9618916 4 5 1 Mystical Verses of Lalla A Journey of Self Realization by Jaishree Kak Motilal Banarsidass 2007 I Lalla The Poems of Lal Ded translated by Ranjit Hoskote with an Introduction and Notes Penguin Classics 2011 ISBN 978 0 670 08447 0 2 Siddha Yogini A Kashmiri Secret of Divine Knowledge by Ghauri Laila Khalid Proquest Dissertations And Theses 2012 Section 0075 Part 0604 82 pages M A dissertation United States District of Columbia The George Washington University 2012 Publication Number AAT 1501080 Lalla Unveiled The Naked Voice of the Feminine Translations by Jennifer Sundeen 2nd Tier Publishing July 3 2020 ISBN 978 0578542577 See also EditHabba Khatoon Nund Rishi Hamza Makhdoom Rishi orderReferences Edit a b M G Chitkara 1 January 2002 Kashmir Shaivism Under Siege APH Publishing pp 14 ISBN 978 81 7648 360 5 a b Kaul Shonaleeka 16 October 2020 Remembering Lal Ded the Kashmiri Yogini The New Indian Express Retrieved 18 September 2021 Lal Vakh online Archived 11 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Lal Ded s Vakhs Paniker K Ayyappa 1997 Medieval Indian Literature Surveys and selections Sahitya Akademi ISBN 978 81 260 0365 5 Richard Carnac Temple 1 August 2003 Word of Lalla the Prophetess Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 0 7661 8119 9 Lal Ded www poetry chaikhana com Lal Ded Archived 19 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine www radiokashmir org a b c d e f g h i j k l I Lalla The Poems of Lal Ded translated by Ranjit Hoskote with an Introduction and Notes Penguin Classics 2011 p xiv ISBN 978 0 670 08447 0 a b c d Laldyada 2007 Mystical Verses of Lalla A Journey of Self Realization Motilal Banarsidass Publishe p 4 ISBN 978 81 208 3255 8 Grierson Sir George Barnett Lionel D 18 April 2013 Lalla Vakyani or the Wise Sayings of Lal Ded A Mystic Poetess of Ancient Kashmir Read Books Ltd ISBN 978 1 4474 9436 2 Ded Lal Laldyada 2013 I Lalla The Poems of Lal Ded Penguin pp x ISBN 978 0 14 342078 1 Toshkhani S S 2002 Lal Ded the great Kashmiri saint poetess New Delhi A P H Pub Corp ISBN 81 7648 381 8 Grierson Sir George Barnett Lionel D 18 April 2013 Lalla Vakyani or the Wise Sayings of Lal Ded A Mystic Poetess of Ancient Kashmir Read Books Ltd ISBN 978 1 4474 9436 2 Temple Richard Carnac 1924 The Word of Lalla the Prophetess Being the Sayings of Lal Ded Or Lal Diddi of Kashmir Between 1300 and 1400 A D Done Into English Verse from the Lalla Vakyani Or Lal Wakhi and Annotated by Sir Richard Carnac Temple The University Press Laldyada Barks Coleman 1992 Naked Song Maypop ISBN 978 0 9618916 4 0 Laldyada 2007 Mystical Verses of Lalla A Journey of Self Realization Motilal Banarsidass Publishe ISBN 978 81 208 3255 8 Barks Coleman 1992 Naked Song Maypop Books ISBN 0 9618916 4 5 Kashmir s wise old Grandmother Lal Aditi De s review of I Lalla by Ranjit Hoskote in The Hindu Business Line Mystic insights Abdullah Khan s review of I Lalla by Ranjit Hoskote in The Hindu Words are floating Jerry Pinto s review of I Lalla by Ranjit Hoskote in Hindustan Times Lalla and Kabir resurrected Nilanjana S Roy s article on Ranjit Hoskote s I Lalla and Arvind Krishna Mehrotra s Songs of Kabir K Warikoo 1 January 2009 Cultural Heritage of Jammu And Kashmir Pentagon Press pp 140 ISBN 978 81 8274 376 2 Remembering Lal Ded in Modern Times National Seminar by Kashmir Education Culture and Science Society 2000 Songs of a mystic The Hindu 1 May 2005 Bhumika K All for theatre The Hindu 7 November 2011 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Lalleshwari Kashmiri Saints and Sages The Wise Sayings of Lal Ded translated by Sir George Grierson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lalleshwari amp oldid 1116587163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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