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Question
'Kabir Das is one of the most outstanding examples of a Poet-saint who has given extensive views on social situation, institution and on ultimate reality.' Explain the statement.
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Solution
Kabir (c. fourteenth-fifteenth centuries) is perhaps one of the most outstanding examples of a poet-saint who emerged within this context.
- Historians have painstakingly tried to reconstruct his life and times through a study of compositions attributed to him and later hagiographies.
- Verses ascribed to Kabir have been compiled in three distinct but overlapping traditions.
- The Kabir Bijak is preserved by the Kabirpanth (the path or sect of Kabir) in Varanasi and elsewhere in Uttar Pradesh.
- The Kabir Granthavali is associated with the Dadupanth in Rajasthan, and many of his compositions are found in the Adi Granth Sahib.
- Kabir's poems have survived in several languages and dialects, and some are composed in the unique language of nirguna poets, the sant bhasha. Others, known as ulatbansi (upside-down sayings), are written in a form in which everyday meanings are inverted.
- He was strongly opposed to the worship of idols, as well as to religious journeys, taking baths in sacred rivers, and attending formal religious services like namaz.
- Despite being familiar with yogic techniques, he did not regard asceticism or book knowledge as crucial for obtaining actual knowledge.
- He rejected the aspects of Hinduism and Islam that ran counter to this spirit and were unimportant for a person's spiritual welfare.
- He emphasised the fundamental unity of man and harshly denounced the caste system, especially the practice of untouchability.
- He supported the idea that all people are fundamentally the same and opposed any prejudice against them, whether based on caste, religion, race, family, or wealth.
- His focus was on personal transformation under the direction of a genuine guru or teacher; he was not, however, a social reformer.
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Answer in 100-150 words.
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- Verses ascribed to Kabir have been compiled in three distinct but overlapping traditions.
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One Lord Here is a composition attributed to Kabir: |
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One Lord Here is a composition attributed to Kabir: |
Kabir’s poetry has a literary as well as a philosophical significance.
Select the most appropriate option from the following that describes this essence.
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One Lord Here is a composition attributed to Kabir: |
Read the following statements regarding Kabir and select the appropriate option.
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- He believed in formless supreme God.
- He wanted to remove the differences based on caste and religion.
- He condemned the superstitious cults, the ritualism, the doctrines of both Hinduism and Islam.
The verses of Baba Farid were incorporated in ______.
'Bijak' is compiled by ______.
Arranged them in chronological order.
- Kabir
- Mirabai
- Guru Nanak
- Shankaradeva
Match the following:
| List I | List II |
| A. Guru Nanak | 1. Assam |
| B. Kabir | 2. Marwar |
| C. Shankaradeva | 3. Nankana Sahib |
| D. Mirabai | 4. Varanasi |
Match the following:
| List I | List II |
| A. Lingayat | 1. Punjab |
| B. Kabirpanthi | 2. Karnataka |
| C. Baba Guru Nanak | 3. Rajasthan |
| D. Mira Bai | 4. Benaras |
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Which of the following statement describe the teaching of Kabir?
(i) To achieve inward spiritual bliss.
(ii) Condemnation of empty ritual.
(iii) To faster harmony between Hinduism and Islam.
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