sant Kabir become a renowed sant
in bhakti movement
Answers
Answer:
1.Sant kabir did not attach any importance to places of piligrmage, vratas or idol worship
2.For him truth was god
3. He taught that all human beings are equal
4.He did not believe in any difference based on caste, cteed, sect, religion.
5.He wanted to bring about Hindu and Muslim unity.
6.He criticized the extremly orthodox people in both Hindu and Muslim religion in strong term.
hi mate,
Kabir, the renowned saint of northern India, falls squarely in this tradition of singer-songwriter-critic. Living in the 13th and 14th centuries (the exact dates are disputed, but fall between 1398 and 1518), Kabir upturned the religious notions and social conventions of his time.
Originaly it is trusted that bhakti development began in seventh century Tamil Nadu and later spread to northern India by means of Maharashtra.
It spread crosswise over northern India in fifteenth century and achieved its peak in seventeenth century.
Kabir was a fifteenth century Indian spiritualist writer and holy person, whose compositions affected Hinduism's Bhakti development and his verses are found in Sikhism's sacred text Guru Granth Sahib.
i hope it helps you.