darshan

English

Etymology

From Sanskrit दर्शन (darśana, vision), from a root दृश् (dṛś, to see).

Noun

darshan (countable and uncountable, plural darshans)

  1. (Hinduism, Buddhism) Hierophany, theophany; being in the presence of the divine or holy (as a person or object).
    • 2002, S. Brent Plate, Religion, Art, and Visual Culture: A Cross-Cultural Reader, →ISBN, page 171:
      A common sight in India is a crowd of people gathered in the courtyard of a temple or at the doorway of a streetside shrine for the darshan of the deity.
    • 2006, Linda Hess, chapter 8, in The Life of Hinduism, page 183:
      Hindus take darshan of a holy person, object, or place, believing that its mere presence, particularly the sight of it, conveys blessings.
    • 2007, Editors of Hinduism Today, What Is Hinduism?: Modern Adventures Into a Profound Global Faith, page 151:
      When approaching a soul who is known to give darshan, be in the same area of the superconscious mind that you feel he must be in.

Anagrams

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.