About MyBrahman
धर्म · ब्रह्माण्ड · संबंध
The Dharmic traditions — Hindu, Buddhist, Jain and Sikh — are usually presented in separate books, separate temples, separate Wikipedia pages. But lived reality has never been that tidy: Ahimsa travels from Mahavira through the Buddha into the Gita and on to Gandhi; Mount Kailash is sacred to four traditions at once; the Guru Granth Sahib holds the songs of Hindu and Muslim saints beside the Gurus.
MyBrahman is a map of those connections — currently 162 entities and 784 relationships between deities, sacred places, texts, festivals and ideas. Every page opens a door; none is a dead end.
There are no ads and no paywall, and there never will be. Like the langar and the prasad, the knowledge stays open to everyone. The project runs on dāna — freely given support from those who find something here worth keeping alive.
This is an educational project compiled from general reference sources, made with respect and without any claim to religious authority. Where traditions differ, we try to say so; where we get something wrong, we want to fix it — corrections are always welcome.