From July 3rd to 9th, 2023, the serene landscapes of Limpopo, South Africa, served as the backdrop for a transformative spiritual gathering – the Nithyananda eGurukul, under the auspices of The Supreme Pontiff of Hinduism, Kailasa’s Sri Nithyananda ParamashivamTHE SUPREME PONTIFF OF HINDUISM (SPH), BHAGAVAN SRI NITHYANANDA PARAMASHIVAM. This event marked a significant occasion for participants to immerse themselves in the profound teachings and practices of Hinduism, fostering spiritual growth and community.
The week was adorned with a plethora of activities, including the revered Charya Pada, a daily regimen crafted to awaken the state, space, powers, and being of Paramashiva. The guidance of THE SPH BHAGAVAN SRI NITHYANANDA PARAMASHIVAM ensured attendees could delve deep into their spiritual journey with clarity and purpose.
A highlight of the week was the celebration of Guru Purnima, a time-honored tradition that honors the guru-disciple relationship, alongside engaging Satsangs, darshans, and a vibrant yoga festival. These events not only enriched the participants’ spiritual lives but also connected them more deeply with the ancient Vedic traditions.
For those looking to explore the depth of Hindu teachings and practices further, the eGurukul offered a wealth of resources and opportunities for engagement. From Nithyananda yoga for kids to comprehensive sessions on Guru and Shiva puja, the program catered to all ages and interest levels. Additionally, the KAILASA Courtyard Power Manifestation sessions provided a unique platform for experiencing and understanding the potential of human consciousness.
The Nithyananda eGurukul in Limpopo is a testament to KAILASA’s dedication to reviving and spreading the enlightened Hindu civilizational nation’s wisdom worldwide. With eternal gratitude to THE SPH BHAGAVAN SRI NITHYANANDA PARAMASHIVAM, the eGurukul is a beacon of spiritual education, transformation, and enlightenment.
As the week concluded, participants left with a renewed sense of purpose, deeper spiritual insights, and a stronger connection to their divine heritage. The Nithyananda eGurukul stands as a pivotal initiative in KAILASA’s mission to nurture global harmony, spiritual awakening, and the preservation of Hindu traditions for future generations.
Pujehun District located in the Southern Province of Sierra Leone has entered into Bilateral Relations and the United States of KAILASA, the Ancient Enlightened Civilizational Nation, First Nation of Hindus – emphasizing their similar values on cultural understanding, religious freedom, and other rights, eradication of hunger, youth leadership, holistic health and education initiatives, exchanges to educate citizens, environmental stewardship and sustainable living.
Pujehun District is Sierra Leone’s most prosperous district in natural resource endowment and diversity. The Gola Forest which Pujehun shares with Liberia is one of Africa’s top 5 biologically diverse forests regarding medicinal plant varieties and wildlife.
Makeni City Council, the largest city in the Northern Province of Sierra Leone, and the economic center of the Northern Province, has entered into Bilateral Relations and the United States of KAILASA, the Ancient Enlightened Civilizational Nation, First Nation of Hindus – emphasizing their similar values on cultural understanding, religious freedom and other rights, eradication of hunger, youth leadership, holistic health and education initiatives, exchanges to educate citizens, environmental stewardship and sustainable living.
At the heart of Sierra Leone, Makeni is the site of Sierra Leone’s largest private university, the University of Makeni. Makeni is also home to the Temne people who are largely engaged in agricultural activities.
Today, March 16 marks the historical moment of yet another Bilateral relationship the United States of KAILASA has entered with the Tororo Municipal Council of the Republic of Uganda – emphasizing the similar values of holistic health, education initiatives including eradicating illiteracy, social issues of teenage pregnancy, gender-based violence against women and girls, among others.
Tororo Municipality is yet another worldwide community KAILASA benefits with its three decades track record of highly valuable humanitarian services. We are grateful to the Tororo Municipal Council Ledearship, especially to Hon. Kenneth Orono Nyapidi, the Municipality Mayor for making this Friendly and mutually beneficial Partnership a reality.
𝐀𝐛𝐨𝐮𝐭 𝐓𝐨𝐫𝐨𝐫𝐨 𝐌𝐮𝐧𝐢𝐜𝐢𝐩𝐚𝐥𝐢𝐭𝐲
Tororo Municipality lies in the Eastern part of Uganda bordering Western Kenya and serves as the entry and exit point to Uganda.
It is the main municipal, administrative, and commercial center of Tororo District.
The main economic activity is small-scale business and subsistence farming, which employs 21.6% of the 43,000 thousand population. The main crops grown by farmers in the municipality are maize, yams, and millet and there is also livestock farming.
Tororo is home to three cement factories thus making Tororo the biggest producer of cement in the country.
The Municipality gained recognition for housing East Africa’s some of the oldest secondary schools, including Tororo Girls School and St. Peter’s College.
The tourist attraction of the town is the dominating rock outcrop that overlooks the town known as Tororo Rock, a wonderful natural beauty with striking caves and a variety of rock paintings.
Freetown City, capital, chief port, and largest city of Sierra Leone, and the Sovereign State of SHRIKAILASA, the Ancient Enlightened Civilizational Nation, First Nation of Hindus entered into Bilateral Relations – emphasizing their similar values on cultural understanding, religious freedom, and other rights, eradication of hunger, youth leadership, holistic health, and education initiatives, exchanges to educate citizens, environmental stewardship and sustainable living.
Freetown, on the rocky Sierra Leone Peninsula, at the seaward tip of a range of wooded hills, which were named Serra Leôa (“Lion Mountains”) by the Portuguese navigator Pedro de Sintra when he explored the West African coast in 1462. By the 1650s the increased activity of British, French, Dutch, and Danish trading companies ended the limited degree of Portuguese control over the coastal trade. An English abolitionist, Granville Sharp, selected the site (south of the mouth of the Sierra Leone River) in 1787 as a haven for African slaves, freed and destitute in England. (They were known as the Black Poor.) In 1792 the Sierra Leone Company assumed responsibility and helped settle slaves from Nova Scotia who had fought for the British in the American Revolutionary War, the “Maroons,” runaway slaves of Jamaica, and others from captured slave ships. They were landed at King Jimmy’s Watering Place (now a bustling marketplace). Their descendants, known as Creoles, are now outnumbered by Mende and Temne immigrants from the interior. In 1821 Freetown became the seat of government for all of Great Britain’s West African possessions, a position it retained (with slight changes) until 1874. Freetown, incorporated as a municipality in 1893, became the country’s capital in 1961.
Freetown’s excellent natural harbor (an important World War II naval base) has deepwater docking facilities at the Queen Elizabeth II Quay. Its exports include palm oil and kernels, cocoa, coffee, ginger, and kola nuts. The city is the country’s commercial and transportation center; industrial enterprises are limited and include diamond cutting, confectionary, paint and shoe enterprises, rice milling, and fish packing. Construction of the Guma Dam has solved Freeport’s longtime water problem and provided more electrical power. Hastings Airfield (10 miles [16 km] southeast) handles domestic flights; the international airport at Lungi is across the Sierra Leone River.
Freetown is the site of Fourah Bay College on Mount Aureol (founded 1827, part of the University of Sierra Leone, 1969), Njala University College (1964), the Milton Margai College of Education and Technology at nearby Goderich (1960), a teachers college, a technical institute, and several governments and Christian and Muslim secondary schools. Fort Thornton (1796), now the State House and residence of the president, and the House of Representatives stand on Tower Hill.