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krishnakunj-bihariaartigiridhar

ආරතී කුංජබිහාරී කී

Aarti Kunj Bihari Ki in Sinhala · සිංහල

🕉️ hindu·📿 1× repetitions·🕐 During the morning and evening aarti, especially on Janmashtami and Ekadashi, in any Krishna or Radha-Krishna temple·📜 Traditional Braj devotional aarti, attributed to Surdas (Sur Sagar tradition)
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Origin & Story

Traditional Braj devotional aarti, attributed to Surdas (Sur Sagar tradition) · Attributed to Surdas (16th century) · 16th century (Bhakti movement) to present

Surdas, the blind poet-saint of Braj and a disciple within the Pushtimarg tradition, poured his vision of Krishna into thousands of verses. This aarti, beloved across North India, captures the darshan of Krishna as Kunj Bihari amid the groves of Vrindavan, surrounded by gopis and cowherds, with Radha shining at his side. It is sung at the close of worship in countless Krishna temples and homes.

As told in scripture

It is lovingly told that though Surdas was blind from birth, his inner vision of Krishna was so complete that he described the Lord's form, ornaments and pastimes in flawless detail — a grace believed to be Krishna's own gift, so that through his aarti even those who cannot see may behold the beauty of Kunj Bihari.

Complete Text with Meaning

Tap any line — or the ▶ button — to hear it recited

Verse 1

ආරතී කුංජබිහාරී කී, ශ්රී ගිරිධර කෘෂ්ණ මුරාරී කී .. ආරතී කුංජබිහාරී කී, ශ්රී ගිරිධර කෘෂ්ණ මුරාරී කී ..

Aarti Kunjabihaari ki, shri Giridhara Krishna Muraari ki Aarti Kunjabihaari ki, shri Giridhara Krishna Muraari ki

Meaning:This is the aarti of Kunj Bihari — of Shri Giridhar, Krishna, the slayer of Mura.

Verse 2

ගලේ මේං බෛජන්තී මාලා, බජාවෛ මුරලී මධුර බාලා . ශ්රවණ මේං කුණ්ඩල ඣලකාලා, නන්ද කේ ආනන්ද නන්දලාලා .. ගගන සම අංග කාන්ති කාලී, රාධිකා චමක රහී ආලී . ලතන මේං ඨාඪ़ේ බනමාලී, භ්රමර සී අලක, කස්තූරී තිලක, චන්ද්ර සී ඣලක . ලලිත ඡබි ශ්යාමා ප්යාරී කී, ශ්රී ගිරිධර කෘෂ්ණ මුරාරී කී ..

Gale mein baijanti maala, bajaavai murali madhura baala Shravana mein kundala jhalakaala, Nanda ke aananda Nandalaala Gagana sama anga kaanti kaali, Raadhika chamaka rahi aali Latana mein thaadhe banamaali, bhramara si alaka, kastoori tilaka, chandra si jhalaka Lalita chhabi Shyaama pyaari ki, shri Giridhara Krishna Muraari ki

Meaning:Around his neck hangs the vaijayanti garland, and the youthful Lord plays a sweet melody on his flute; earrings shimmer in his ears — he is Nandalala, the joy of Nanda. His form glows dark and radiant like the sky, and beside him Radhika herself shines forth; the garland-wearer stands amid the creepers, with curls like black bees, a tilak of musk and a glow like the moon — such is the lovely beauty of Krishna, the beloved of Shyama (Radha).

Verse 3

කනකමය මෝර මුකුට බිලසෛ, දේවතා දරසන කෝ තරසෛං . ගගන සෝං සුමන රාසි බරසෛ, බජේ මුරචංග, මධුර මෘදංග, ග්වාලින සංග . අතුල රති ගෝප කුමාරී කී, ශ්රී ගිරිධර කෘෂ්ණ මුරාරී කී ..

Kanakamaya mora mukuta bilasai, devata darasana ko tarasain Gagana son sumana raasi barasai, baje murachanga, madhura mridanga, gvaalina sanga Atula rati gopa kumaari ki, shri Giridhara Krishna Muraari ki

Meaning:A golden peacock-feather crown adorns him, and the very gods yearn for his darshan; flowers rain in showers from the sky, the murchang and the sweet mridanga play, and amid the cowherd maidens shines the matchless love of the gopis.

Verse 4

ජහාං තේ ප්රකට භඊ ගංගා, සකල මන හාරිණි ශ්රී ගංගා . ස්මරන තේ හෝත මෝහ භංගා, බසී ශිව සීස, ජටා කේ බීච, හරෛ අඝ කීච . චරන ඡබි ශ්රී බනවාරී කී, ශ්රී ගිරිධර කෘෂ්ණ මුරාරී කී ..

Jahaan te prakata bhai Ganga, sakala mana haarini shri Ganga Smarana te hota moha bhanga, basi Shiva seesa, jata ke beecha, harai agha keecha Charana chhabi shri Banavaari ki, shri Giridhara Krishna Muraari ki

Meaning:From his feet sprang forth the holy Ganga, the river that captivates every heart; by his remembrance delusion is shattered — she who dwells in Shiva's matted locks washes away the mire of sin; such is the beauty of the feet of Banwari.

Verse 5

චමකතී උජ්ජ්වල තට රේණු, බජ රහී වෘන්දාවන වේණු . චහුං දිසි ගෝපී ග්වාල ධේනු, හංසත මෘදු මන්ද, චාංදනී චන්ද, කටත භව ඵංද . ටේර සුන දීන දුඛාරී කී, ශ්රී ගිරිධර කෘෂ්ණ මුරාරී කී ..

Chamakati ujjvala tata renu, baja rahi Vrindavana venu Chahun disi gopi gvaala dhenu, hansata mridu manda, chaandani chanda, katata bhava phanda Tera suna deena dukhaari ki, shri Giridhara Krishna Muraari ki

Meaning:The bright sands of the riverbank gleam, the flute of Vrindavan sounds, and on every side are gopis, cowherds and cows; he smiles softly and gently, like the moon amid moonlight, and the noose of worldly existence is cut — for he hears the cry of the humble and the distressed.

Verse 6

ආරතී කුංජබිහාරී කී, ශ්රී ගිරිධර කෘෂ්ණ මුරාරී කී ..

Aarti Kunjabihaari ki, shri Giridhara Krishna Muraari ki

Word-by-Word Meaning

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ආරතී කුංජබිහාරී කී🔊aarti Kunjabihaari kiThe aarti of Kunj Bihari (Krishna, who sports in the groves of Vrindavan)
ශ්රී ගිරිධර කෘෂ්ණ මුරාරී කී🔊shri Giridhara Krishna Muraari kiOf Shri Giridhar (lifter of Govardhan), Krishna, slayer of the demon Mura
ගලේ මේං බෛජන්තී මාලා🔊gale mein baijanti maalaAround his neck hangs a garland of vaijayanti flowers
බජාවෛ මුරලී මධුර බාලා🔊bajaavai murali madhura baalaThe youthful Lord plays sweetly upon his flute
ශ්රවණ මේං කුණ්ඩල ඣලකාලා🔊shravana mein kundala jhalakaalaEarrings glitter and shimmer in his ears
නන්ද කේ ආනන්ද නන්දලාලා🔊Nanda ke aananda NandalaalaThe darling son of Nanda, the joy of Nanda
ගගන සම අංග කාන්ති කාලී🔊gagana sama anga kaanti kaaliHis limbs glow with a dark radiance like the sky
කස්තූරී තිලක🔊kastoori tilakaA tilak of musk (upon his forehead)
කනකමය මෝර මුකුට🔊kanakamaya mora mukutaA golden crown adorned with peacock feathers
දේවතා දරසන කෝ තරසෛං🔊devata darasana ko tarasainEven the gods long for his darshan
ගගන සෝං සුමන රාසි බරසෛ🔊gagana son sumana raasi barasaiShowers of flowers rain down from the heavens
මධුර මෘදංග🔊madhura mridangaThe sweet sound of the mridanga drum
ජහාං තේ ප්රකට භඊ ගංගා🔊jahaan te prakata bhai GangaFrom whose (feet) the holy Ganga sprang forth
ස්මරන තේ හෝත මෝහ භංගා🔊smarana te hota moha bhangaBy whose remembrance delusion is shattered
හරෛ අඝ කීච🔊harai agha keechaWashes away the mire of sins
බජ රහී වෘන්දාවන වේණු🔊baja rahi Vrindavana venuThe flute resounds throughout Vrindavan
කටත භව ඵංද🔊katata bhava phandaThe noose of worldly bondage is cut away
ටේර සුන දීන දුඛාරී කී🔊tera suna deena dukhaari kiHearing the call of the humble and the suffering

Benefits of Chanting Aarti Kunj Bihari Ki

Invokes the loving presence of Lord Krishna as Kunj Bihari of Vrindavan

Believed that his remembrance (smaran) shatters delusion (moha) and ego

Cuts the bonds of worldly existence (bhava-phanda) and brings inner freedom

Fills the heart with the sweetness, peace and love (madhurya) of Braj-bhakti

Deepens devotion and draws the mind to Krishna's beautiful form (roopa-dhyana)

Especially uplifting when sung on Janmashtami and during evening aarti in Krishna temples

Soothes sorrow, for the Lord 'hears the cry of the humble and the distressed'

How to Chant Aarti Kunj Bihari Ki

Repetitions1times
Best TimeDuring the morning and evening aarti, especially on Janmashtami and Ekadashi, in any Krishna or Radha-Krishna temple

Offer this aarti before an image or idol of Lord Krishna (Kunj Bihari) with a lit ghee or camphor lamp. Sing it with devotion while circling the lamp clockwise, accompanied by bell, conch, mridanga or cymbals as available. Offer tulsi, flowers, butter and sweets as bhog. Visualise the beautiful form of Krishna described in each verse, and conclude by taking the aarti flame's blessing while chanting 'Radhe Radhe' or 'Jai Shri Krishna'.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete Aarti Kunj Bihari Ki written in the Sinhala script — the same Sanskrit/Hindi verses, transliterated character-by-character so you can read and chant comfortably. Tap any line (or the ▶ button) to hear it recited aloud.
Yes — only the script changes; the words and their meaning are the original. The verse-by-verse meaning, benefits and how-to-chant guidance on this page apply exactly the same.
'Kunj Bihari' means 'the one who roams and sports in the kunj' — the flowering groves and bowers of Vrindavan. It is a loving name for Lord Krishna, who enjoyed his pastimes (leela) with Radha and the gopis amid these groves on the banks of the Yamuna.
This aarti is traditionally attributed to Surdas, the great blind devotional poet of the 16th century and a luminary of the Bhakti movement, renowned for his Krishna-centred verses in the Sur Sagar. It remains one of the most popular Krishna aartis sung across India.
It is sung daily at morning and evening aarti in Krishna temples, and with special joy on Janmashtami (Krishna's birthday), Ekadashi, and during festivals celebrating Krishna's Vrindavan pastimes.
Each verse paints a vivid picture of Krishna's beauty — his peacock crown, vaijayanti garland, musk tilak, flute, and Radha shining beside him. This devotional visualisation (roopa-dhyana) helps the singer absorb the mind in Krishna's sweet form and experience the bliss of Vrindavan.

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Read the full Aarti Kunj Bihari Ki with verse-by-verse meaning, or explore more sacred texts