Bhajans for Sathya Sai Baba

Indian devotional songs in western music notation

What Bhajans can you find here
This website is dedicated to Bhajans sung in the presence of Sathya Sai Baba in His ashrams in South India and in Sai centres around the world.

What's unique about this website
On this website you can learn the Bhajans by the means of audio & music notation & translation on one page per Bhajan.

How do Indian Bhajans come to Switzerland
Some Swiss Sai devotees and musicians dedicate themselves to singing, playing and teaching these Bhajans. For this purpose they have edited books with the transcription from original Indian audio sources of 3 x 108 Bhajans (324 Bhajans) in western music notation.

Why do we sing Bhajans
In 1968 Sathya Sai Baba said: "Sing aloud the glory of God and charge the atmosphere with divine adoration; the clouds will pour the sanctity through rain on the fields; the crops will feed on it and purify and fortify the food; the food will induce divine urges in man. This is the chain of progress. This is the reason why I insist on group singing of the names of the Lord."

Udemy - Javascript - Understanding The Weird Parts [Must Read]

Most developers learn to avoid these quirks. Anthony Alicea’s legendary Udemy course, teaches you to conquer them.

This piece explores why a course released years ago remains one of the most transformational learning experiences for JavaScript developers. The course opens with a provocative, humbling premise: Most of us are "parrot coders." We write jQuery, React, or Node code that works, but if asked what the JavaScript engine is actually doing at the memory allocation level, we freeze.

If you are ready to stop memorizing and start understanding, close this article and open Udemy. Your future self, debugging a production issue at 2 AM, will thank you.

If you have ever written typeof null and gotten "object" , scratched your head at 0.1 + 0.2 !== 0.3 , or wondered why [] + [] equals an empty string while [] + {} does something entirely different, you have encountered the "weird parts" of JavaScript.

After completing it, you will stop saying "JavaScript is weird" and start saying "Ah, that makes sense — because of the execution context stack." You move from a state of confusion to a state of control.

9.5/10 Best quote from the course: "By understanding the weird parts, they are no longer weird — they are just parts."

Most developers learn to avoid these quirks. Anthony Alicea’s legendary Udemy course, teaches you to conquer them.

This piece explores why a course released years ago remains one of the most transformational learning experiences for JavaScript developers. The course opens with a provocative, humbling premise: Most of us are "parrot coders." We write jQuery, React, or Node code that works, but if asked what the JavaScript engine is actually doing at the memory allocation level, we freeze.

If you are ready to stop memorizing and start understanding, close this article and open Udemy. Your future self, debugging a production issue at 2 AM, will thank you.

If you have ever written typeof null and gotten "object" , scratched your head at 0.1 + 0.2 !== 0.3 , or wondered why [] + [] equals an empty string while [] + {} does something entirely different, you have encountered the "weird parts" of JavaScript.

After completing it, you will stop saying "JavaScript is weird" and start saying "Ah, that makes sense — because of the execution context stack." You move from a state of confusion to a state of control.

9.5/10 Best quote from the course: "By understanding the weird parts, they are no longer weird — they are just parts."

Team of authors

If you have questions or feedback about our project "Bhajans for Sathya Sai Baba", please don't hesitate to .

Udemy - JavaScript - Understanding the Weird Parts

Martin Lienhard

Physicist, viola & sitar
Langenbruck, Switzerland
music transcriptions, project coordination first book

Udemy - JavaScript - Understanding the Weird Parts

Social worker, flute & bansuri
Luzern, Switzerland
music transcriptions, project coordination second book

Udemy - JavaScript - Understanding the Weird Parts

Reto Küng

Artist, sax & tabla
Basel, Switzerland
music transcriptions third book, translations, webmaster

Udemy - JavaScript - Understanding the Weird Parts

Homeopath, harmonium
Langenbruck, Switzerland
supporter of the project, critical tester of the notations