Bhagwan Gopinath

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Bhagwan Gopinath
Bhagwan Gopinath 1998 stamp of India.jpg
Bhagwan Gopinath on a 1998 stamp of India
Personal
Born
Gopinath Bhan

3 July 1898**
Died28 May 1968 (aged 69)(Jyeshta, Shuklapaksh, Dvitiya)
Chandapora in Srinagar
ReligionHinduism
^** Bhagwan Gopinath’s birthday is observed on Ashad, Shuklapaksh, Dvadashi as per Hindu lunar calendar.
PhilosophyTrika school of Advaita Kashmir Shaivism
Religious career
GuruUnknown or self-initiated (by Bhagvad Gita)
^** Bhagwan Gopinath’s birthday is observed on Ashad, Shuklapaksh, Dvadashi as per Hindu lunar calendar.
Quotation
Bidding adieu to ones ego leads one to self realisation.[1]

Bhagwan Gopinath (3 July 1898 – 28 May 1968), born Gopinath Bhan, also called Bhagwan Gopinath Ji, was a mystic saint of early 20th century Kashmir in India. He has been called a jivanmukta (liberated soul)[2] and his spiritual state has been described as Shambhavi avastha (state of Shiva).[3] Contemporary saints of his times have also called him an Aghoreshwar.[4] It was sometime during 1946–1956 that he came to be called as Bhagwan by his devotees.[3][5]

Though not much is known about who his spiritual master was, he is known to have remarked that one can consider Bhagvad Gita as one's spiritual master.[6] In his teachings, he regarded the practice of "self-enquiry" (atma vichara) as highly effective in helping a seeker attain self-realization.[7] He considered lust and ego as impediments in one's spiritual development and extolled the virtues of honesty and truthfulness.[1][8] He wouldn't differentiate between religions and regarded Hindus and Muslims to be one and the same.[9] During various periods of his life, he spent considerable time meditating at various shrines in Kashmir as he considered it spiritually beneficial and would recommend the same to spiritual seekers.[10]

Birth and family