Onkar Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Onkar. Here they are! All 16 of them:

Do we create an impact to make money or de we make money to create an IMPACT ?
Onkar K Khullar (Digital Gandhi)
I am LIMITLESS not bent by the foundations of my own mind.I can create endless possibilities with the world as my canvas
Onkar K Khullar (Digital Gandhi)
I might be broke but I am not Broken
Onkar K Khullar (Digital Gandhi)
Think Big, Start Small
Onkar K Khullar (Digital Gandhi)
Simple is the new complex
Onkar K Khullar (Digital Gandhi)
I am a Cause Artist : using my creative skills for the good of the world
Onkar K Khullar (Digital Gandhi)
My life is circus
Onkar K Khullar (Digital Gandhi)
If your sad about your work then remember there are people who clean actual shit for a living
Onkar K Khullar (Digital Gandhi)
My Destiny is sealed but the journey is my choice
Onkar K Khullar (Digital Gandhi)
Whatever life throws in your path, you carry on, you stand on your own two feet and you follow your dream. It
Tim Bouquet (The Man Behind the Wheel: How Onkar S. Kanwar Created a Global Giant)
You work, you put in your best efforts and you believe in God. Without that faith I do not believe you can achieve anything.
Tim Bouquet (The Man Behind the Wheel: How Onkar S. Kanwar Created a Global Giant)
I have always been an optimist and I tell them that if they have a day-dream, then follow it through but not a night-dream because night dreams come and go. Every day follow your dream and be consistent.
Tim Bouquet (The Man Behind the Wheel: How Onkar S. Kanwar Created a Global Giant)
If you think awakening is like somebody putting a light ray on the planet earth and we all awaken no! Awakening is inside, insight, in heart, within the soul that awakening is "Aham Brahmasmi - I am divine", So God created man in his own image - Genesis 1:27 inna Llaha khalaqa Adama `ala suratihi. “Allah created the human being in His own image" Ek Onkar Satnam Karta Purakh - There is only one God. His name is true Hear, O Israel: The LORD our God, the LORD is One - Deuteronomy 6:4
Aiyaz Uddin (The Inward Journey)
Thus Speaks God (The Sonnet) Ik onkar, satnaam, Porque, yo soy insan. Aham bismillahsmi, Çünkü, benim adım vicdan. Sarva dharman parityajya, Giving up all national grave, Nos haremos vessels of verdad, Rise we shall as sapiens brave. Divinidad está en cada cultura, But no culture is pure divinity. Human divided is human undivine, Hatelessness is civilized divinity. Thus speaks God in tongue beyond tongues. One vessel isn't enough to contain my neurons.
Abhijit Naskar (Himalayan Sonneteer: 100 Sonnets of Unsubmission)
Every child has the potential to become an innovator, a creator, and a leader. This book hopes to inspire and educate young minds to explore the possibilities of AI and to discover their own paths in the world of technology.
A. Onkar (A.I. Encyclopedia for Kids [ Illustrated Color Hardcover Edition ]: Artificial Intelligence for All (AI for Kids and Young Adults))
In Punjab, the great Guru Nanak (1469–1539 CE), who founded the Sikh faith, was greatly influenced by the Bhakti movement. Sikhism, under Nanak, and the nine Gurus who followed him, the last being Guru Gobind Singh (1666–1708 CE), created a remarkably sublime and powerful monotheistic faith of nirguna bhakti. In clear Vedantic tones, its mul mantar or fundamental prayer—Ik Onkar: There is only one Supreme Being—made a powerful call of universal spiritual appeal. Like Brahman, the Sikh Absolute is nirankar (formless), akal (timeless), karta purakh (the Creator), agam agochar (incomprehensible and invisible) and is Waheguru (wonderous Teacher). The religion emphasised the non-duality of divinity—Ek noor te sab jag upja: From one luminous light the entire universe arose. In this one statement, it pole-vaulted above conventional religious orthodoxies. Of great importance in the Sikh faith is mehar, kirpa, karam or the Grace of God. Guru Nanak taught that to obtain this, the most important form of worship is bhakti. Guru Arjan, in the Sukhmani Sahib, recommended that true religion is one of loving devotion to God. Selfless devotion and service can lead to Sach Khand or the Realm of Truth, which is the final union with the spirit of God, akin to the Advaita notion of brahmanubhav. Thus, Sikhism considers simran (the meditative remembrance) of God, and japna (chanting or kirtan of God’s name) to be an essential part of religious practice. The singing of the Guru’s hymns as contained in the Guru Granth Sahib—the only divine symbol of worship recognised by Sikhism—is practised through the shabad kirtans. The passages of the Guru Granth Sahib were poetically composed in rhyme, and lent themselves easily to exceptionally soulful musical compositions based on thirty-one ragas of classical music.
Pavan K. Varma (The Great Hindu Civilisation: Achievement, Neglect, Bias and the Way Forward)