Guru Nanak used to travel all over India with his companions Bala and Mardana. Wherever they went, they made beautiful music to help people understand God and spread truth. This story takes place when they visited a remote village in Northern India.
Vancouver cab driver Sarjinder Singh set an exemplary example of honesty as he returned a huge amount of money to its owners.
On that day I noticed a bag lying in my cab." When I opened the bag I saw it was full of cash - 11 bundles of 10,000 Australian dollars each.
Why some people are manipulative, self-entitled, materialistic, and exploitive – and why it matters for everyone;.........With a hook like that, there’s no wonder it is attracting attention across the psychological community and into the mainstream.
A great telling of the classic story, The Boy Who Cried Wolf. Once a young boy was trusted to watch a flock of sheep for a small village. As the day continued, the boy was very bored and decided to play a trick on everyone of the village. Listen to hear what happens next.
The unmarked envelope floated into the living room of the home in northeastern Japan, riding the wave of tsunami flood waters. Inside, the astounded resident found $40,000 in yen notes.
I keep reminding myself that Guru Gobind Singh is not the first Khalsa, though he is the embodiment of Khalsa. Khalsa means ‘the pure’. Guru Gobind Singh did not initiate people into his faith, he showed, through that awesome Baisakhi day, that there are people who are great and that possibility of greatness is within us.
“I really feel good,” Dosanjh said. “There is nothing else I could have done.”
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