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krishnayadavajnana-mudrayoga

කෘෂ්ණාය යාදවේන්ද්රාය

कृष्णाय यादवेन्द्राय in Sinhala · සිංහල

🕉️ hindu·📿 11× repetitions·🕐 Morning and evening worship, before meditation, and on Janmashtami·📜 Traditional Vaishnava dhyana-namaskara shloka recited in Krishna worship
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Origin & Story

Traditional Vaishnava dhyana-namaskara shloka recited in Krishna worship · Traditional (anonymous) · Classical / medieval devotional period

Composed as a salutation that gathers Krishna's many dimensions into one verse, it deliberately pairs his earthly identity as the Yadava prince and husband of Rukmini with his transcendental identity as supreme yogi and knower of Vedanta. This balance of lila and jnana made it a popular invocation among devotees who seek both love of God and the wisdom of the Self.

As told in scripture

Tradition holds that one who salutes Krishna daily as 'Yogi' and 'Vedanta-vedi' through this verse gradually receives clarity of mind and right understanding, for the Lord who taught the Gita to Arjuna removes the seeker's inner confusion just as he revealed the path of knowledge on the battlefield.

The Mantra

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කෘෂ්ණාය යාදවේන්ද්රාය ජ්ඤානමුද්රාය යෝගිනේ. නාථාය රුක්මිණීශාය නමෝ වේදාන්තවේදිනේ..

Krishnaya yadavendraya jnana-mudraya yogine, Nathaya rukmini-shaya namo vedanta-vedine.

Meaning:उन कृष्ण को नमस्कार है, जो यादवों के अधिपति हैं, ज्ञानमुद्रा धारण करने वाले हैं, परम योगी हैं, सबके नाथ हैं, रुक्मिणी के पति हैं, और वेदान्त के ज्ञाता हैं।

Word-by-Word Meaning

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කෘෂ්ණාය🔊krishnayato Krishna, the all-attractive Lord
යාදවේන්ද්රාය🔊yadavendrayato the chief (Indra) of the Yadavas, the lord of the Yadu dynasty
ජ්ඤානමුද්රාය🔊jnana-mudrayato the one who displays the jnana-mudra, the gesture of supreme knowledge
යෝගිනේ🔊yogineto the great yogi, the master of yoga
නාථාය🔊nathayato the Lord, the protector and master
රුක්මිණීශාය🔊rukmini-shayato the lord (husband) of Rukmini
නමඃ🔊namahsalutations, I bow
වේදාන්තවේදිනේ🔊vedanta-vedineto the knower (and revealer) of the Vedanta, the essence of the Vedas

Benefits of Chanting कृष्णाय यादवेन्द्राय

Salutes Krishna as both the supreme yogi and the master of Vedanta, uniting devotion with knowledge

A compact dhyana-namaskara verse perfect for opening or closing Krishna worship

Strengthens the aspiration for spiritual wisdom (jnana) alongside loving bhakti

Easy to memorise and chant daily as a salutation or japa

Invokes Krishna as Natha (protector and master), nurturing surrender and trust

Contemplating the jnana-mudra steadies the mind toward the higher Self

How to Chant कृष्णाय यादवेन्द्राय

Repetitions11times
Best TimeMorning and evening worship, before meditation, and on Janmashtami

Chant slowly while visualising Sri Krishna seated in yogic poise, the right hand raised in the jnana-mudra. Reflect on each name as you utter it — Yadavendra, Jnanamudra, Yogi, Natha, Rukmini's lord, and knower of Vedanta. Recite three or eleven times as a salutation before meditation or puja; it can also be repeated as japa with a mala to cultivate both devotion and discernment.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete कृष्णाय यादवेन्द्राय 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.
It is a salutation verse meaning 'Salutations to Krishna, the lord of the Yadavas, holder of the jnana-mudra, the great yogi, the Lord, the husband of Rukmini, and the knower of Vedanta.' Each word is one of Krishna's names or attributes.
The jnana-mudra is the hand gesture in which the tip of the thumb touches the tip of the index finger, symbolising the union of the individual soul with the Supreme. Krishna is praised as 'jnana-mudraya,' the one who teaches supreme knowledge through this seal.
Because, as the speaker of the Bhagavad Gita and the source of all scriptures, Krishna is the very knower and revealer of Vedanta — the culminating wisdom of the Vedas. The epithet shows that loving him and knowing the highest truth are one.
It is recited as a namaskara (salutation) and dhyana verse — typically three or eleven times before or after Krishna puja, bhajans, or meditation, and is also chanted as daily japa.

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Read the full कृष्णाय यादवेन्द्राय with verse-by-verse meaning, or explore more sacred texts