User:AADITYA

AADITYA also mispelled/modified as ADITYA

The innate nature of AADITYA is to remove darkness by illuminating the earth. The darkness is nothing but the absence of light. With the presence of light the life starts, the plant start the process of converting carbon-dioxide to Oxygen and its different constituents start converting energy into many useful forms (like in photosynthesis). AADITYA as a community Empowerment organisation, also work as catalyst to give required knowledge, experience and opportunities (resources) to social communities, so that a harmony is created at all levels (i.e. physical, mental, social, financial and spiritual) for creating a highly evolved society.

AADITYA is referred as one of the Vedic gods, the sons of Aditi. [Origin: < Skt āditya (or ādityāḥ pl.), deriv. of aditi a goddess (orig. a deified abstraction, lit., the absence of binding)]

In Hinduism, the Aadityas are a group of solar deities, sons of Aditi and Kashyapa.

"Aaditya" and its modifications like "Vikramaditya","Aditya","Suryaaditya" etc are also common Indian male names, as a mark of respect to the Sun God.

Vedas In the Rigveda, the Adityas are seven deities of the heavens, headed by Varuna, followed by Mitra:

1. Varuna 2. Mitra 3. Aryaman 4. Bhaga 5. Daksha 6. Anśa 7. Sūrya (the Sun) or Savitr. 8. Ravi

As a class of gods, the Rigvedic Ādityas were distinct from other groups such as the Maruts, the Rbhus or the (although Mitra and Varuna appear also in the context of the latter).

In the Yajurveda (Taittirīya Samhita), their number is given as eight.

Vedanta and Puranic Hinduism Āditya in the (Chāndogya-) is also a name of, in his Vāmana (dwarf) avatāra. His mother is Aditi.

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