Brivazens
Neurology India
menu-bar5 Open access journal indexed with Index Medicus
  Users online: 9264  
 Home | Login 
About Editorial board Articlesmenu-bullet NSI Publicationsmenu-bullet Search Instructions Online Submission Subscribe Videos Etcetera Contact
  Navigate Here 
 Search
 
  
 Resource Links
  »  Similar in PUBMED
  »  Article in PDF (1,288 KB)
  »  Citation Manager
  »  Access Statistics
  »  Reader Comments
  »  Email Alert *
  »  Add to My List *
* Registration required (free)  

 
  In this Article

 Article Access Statistics
    Viewed3322    
    Printed177    
    Emailed0    
    PDF Downloaded27    
    Comments [Add]    

Recommend this journal

 


 
Table of Contents    
PHOTOGRAPH 10
Year : 2019  |  Volume : 67  |  Issue : 8  |  Page : 213

Every religion acknowledges the unfathomable power beyond…



Date of Web Publication24-May-2019

Correspondence Address:
Login to access the Email id

Source of Support: None, Conflict of Interest: None


Rights and PermissionsRights and Permissions



How to cite this article:
. Every religion acknowledges the unfathomable power beyond…. Neurol India 2019;67, Suppl S2:213

How to cite this URL:
. Every religion acknowledges the unfathomable power beyond…. Neurol India [serial online] 2019 [cited 2023 Dec 8];67, Suppl S2:213. Available from: https://www.neurologyindia.com/text.asp?2019/67/8/213/259139




This picture has been contributed by Dr. Sajad Arif, Associate Professor, Department of Neurosurgery, Sher-i-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir.

One winter evening, on my way home, I happened to pass by the famed Hazratbal shrine, Srinagar, which is especially revered by the local populace as it houses a holy relic, a lock of hair said to be that of the Prophet of Islam. It was a beautiful winter night and the air held a bracing chill. The dome and the minarets of the shrine, made of pristine white marble, were lit up with floodlights producing an ethereal effect in the mist-laden darkness. The roads were deserted as people retire early in winters. The trees in the foreground of the shrine, which is located on the banks of the Dal Lake, were lined with roosting egrets silently contemplating the magnificent sight of the lit-up shrine. Every dome and minaret of every religious shrine point towards the sky. They represent human obeisance and homage to the unseen power above that stores immense knowledge far beyond the comprehension of human mind. This photograph has been taken with a Nikon 5200, 55-300mm, ISO 640,92mm,f/8, 13 seconds exposure






 

Top
Print this article  Email this article
   
Online since 20th March '04
Published by Wolters Kluwer - Medknow