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Hallowed by the aura of Shri
Krishna
Brajbhoomi - the land
where Lord Krishna was born and
spent his youth, has today
little towns and hamlets that
are still alive with the
Krishna- legend and still
redolent with the music of his
flute. Mathura, a quiet town on
the River Yamuna was transformed
into a place of faith after Lord
Krishna was born here. Vrindavan,
a village - once noted for its
fragrant groves, is where he
spent an eventful youth. There
are numerous other little spots
in the area that still
reverberate with the enchantment
of Lord Krishna.
The city of Mathura, in Uttar
Pradesh, the nucleus of
Brajbhoomi, is located at a
distances of 145 km south- east
of Delhi and 58 km north-west of
Agra. Covering an area of about
3,800 sq. km. today, Brajbhoomi
can be divided into two distinct
units - the eastern part in the
trans-Yamuna tract with places
like Gokul, Mahavan, Baldeo, Mat
and Bajna and the western side
of the Yamuna covering the
Mathura region that encompasses
Vrindavan, Govardhan, Kusum
Sarovar, Barsana and Nandgaon.
The land of Braj starts from
Kotban near Hodel about 95 km
from Delhi and ends at Runakta
which is known specially for its
association with the great poet
Surdas, an ardent Krishna
devotee.
The
embodiment of love
Revered as the most endearing of
the Hindu gods, Shri Krishna is
fondly remembered for his charm,
his mischievous pranks and his
extraordinary exploits. As the
charioteer and preceptor to
Arjun in the famous battle of
Kurukshetra, he revealed to the
world the supreme truths of
life. Shri Krishna, an
incarnation of Lord Vishnu, was
born in the Dwapara Yuga as the
eighth son of the Yadava prince
Vasudev and his wife Devaki. To
save him from his maternal uncle
Kansa wrath, the infant Krishna
was spirited away soon after
birth to Gokul, the village of
the gopas (cowherds) in Braj. It
was here that he grew to
manhood, in the tender care of
his foster parents Nand and
Yashoda in the happy company of
the cowherds.
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