Glitzz india travel guides
At Glitzindia Travels we provide you all type of travel related services. We have strong Associations with leading hotels across the country, enables us to give our clients their best value for money. This trait of our, makes us the most attractive tour and travel agency for you. We are prompt in our replies to your queries, and this has earned us a reputation as one of the best and most efficient tour and travel operators in India by both our clients and our overseas partners.
Glitzz india Offers the Following Tours :
Cultural Tours in India:
Cultural Tours
Heritage Tours
Forts & Palace Tours
Fairs and Festival Tours
Adventure Tours in India
Trekking in Himalayas
Mountaineering Expeditions
Camel Safaris
Cycling Tours
River Rafting Trips
High Altitude Jeep Safaris
Bike Tours
Special Interest Journeys in India
Wild Life Tours
Archeological Tours
Tribal Tours
Photography Tours
Culinary Tours
Enlightenment Journeys in India
Ayurvedic Tours
Spa
Ayurvedic Treatments
Stress Busting Treatments
Religious Tours
Yoga & Meditation Tours | Yoga Classes ( With natural Environments)
Pilgrimage & Spiritual Tours
Recreation Holidays in India
Beach Tours
Mountain Tours
Hill Station Tours
Now you can have a comfortable and hassle free Holiday in India where in you leave all the worries to us. Right from the arrival at the airport to personalised assistance of departure, we take care of all the needs of the travellers. Our guests just sit back & enjoy their holidays with all the value for the money they have spent.
We provide :
Personalised assistance on arrival & departure.
All sorts of transfer from car to coach in any city in India.
Accommodation in all category of hotels from budget to 5 Star hotels all over India.
Multilingual guide services.
Escort services.
Air, train and bus tickets.
Sight seeing in comfortable chauffer driver cars to coaches.
Special cultural theme events if any.
24 * 7 Personal care taken from us towards our clients.
For any queries can always feel free to contact us:
Call: +91-9739920428
Mail: manju.198928@gmail.com
values of indian culture
It is customary to respect elders and touch their feet as to seek their blessings. Occasions or festivals demand a lot of participation in terms of rangoli drawing, diyas and an array of yummy treats made in the authentic variety as per the caste and geography. Hindu rituals are a lot about song and dance and each family has a natural way to adjust to these formats. It is a ritual to pray to the Goddess of learning Ma Saraswathi to achieve success. Similarly business people always insist on drawing the Swastika which marks prosperity and worship the Goddess of wealth.
With the advent of technology and women emancipation there is a trend to mingle free with the western concepts of dress, belief, work and also get into a secular concept. But one can feel a distinct Indianness and most of our brethren abroad miss their homeland. Indians all over the world are known for their hospitality and high level of tolerance. Their adaptation power is high and hence they are able to scale heights in the international arena. Putting oneself on the global map, Indians are seeking new vistas of communicating their beliefs and tradition. The gift of health and well being through yoga and meditation is a great source of Vedas in the rich Hindu tradition which has actually benefited the world.
The values in India is about living life with a zest and observing the belief that there is one God prevailing despite so many religions.
Respecting elders, understanding cross culture traditions, free mingling to accommodate tolerance, staying interested in rural welfare are the values of India. The artifacts, cuisine handicrafts, attire and lifestyle of the rural folks is still followed and preserved by Indians.
Ethics is concerned with the norms of human social behaviour. "it is that study of human behaviour which propounds the supreme good of human life and which formulates the judgements of right and wrong and good and evil." It is also called moral philosophy. The word 'ethic,' itself is derived from the Greek 'ethos' meaning customs, usages or habits, or more comprehensively 'character'. The word 'right' has a Latin origin ('rectus') which means 'straight' or 'according to rule'. Ethics is thus specifically concerned with the principles or rules which make our conduct right or straight. The Latin word 'mores' from which is derived the English 'moral' is not much different from the Greek 'ethos' which means habits or customs (as stated earlier). The word 'good' comes of the German 'gut', meaning anything useful or serviceable for some end or purpose.
Ethics as a science or body of knowledge is not so much concerned with what an individual considers as good for himself as with the ultimate good of the society as a whole. It is a science of values as distinguished from a science of facts such as physics or chemistry. It is by applying these values that judgements of human conduct are formed. According to ethics, good conduct is an intrinsic value. The two great concepts, which have a bearing on Indian ethics, contained in the Vedas, are the Rta, the law of good or the Eternal Law, and Satya, truth. God is Ritavaan, the upholder of the Eternal Order, and He is Satya-dhama, the One for whom truth is the law of being. Anyone who acts in accordance with the law of truth and the law of Eternal Order is 'good'.
Dr. Radhakrishnan sums up the Vedic idea of moral life thus: "Prayers are to be offered to the Gods. Rites are to be performed... The life of man has to be led under the very eye of God. Apart from the duties owed to Gods there are also duties to man. Kindness to all is enjoined; hospitality is reckoned a great virtue. 'The riches of one who gives do not diminish. He who possessed of food hardens his heart against the feeble man craving nourishment, against the sufferer coming to him (for help), and pursues (his own enjoyment even) before him, that man finds no consoler.' Sorcery, witchraft, seduction and adultery are condemned as vicious. Gambling is denounced. Virtue is conformity to the law of God, which includes love of man. Vice is disobedience to this law."
The Upanishads presuppose ethical excellence on the part of the student set on a study of spiritual knowledge. They do not, therefore, discuss elaborately the principles of ethics though, here and there, they do contain teachings about morals.
The Brthadaranyaka Upanishad sums up a whole ethical philosophy in three words: Daammyat, datta and dayadhvam - self-control, charity and compassion. (These are the three D's which T.S. Eliot uses in his poem 'The Wasteland' as the message from the ancient world to the conflict-ridden modern world.)
In the Taittiriya Upanishad the teacher exhorts the pupil to speak the truth, practise virtue, not to be negligent of virtue, welfare and prosperity, to honour the parents and the teacher and so on. The Chhandogya instructs the spiritual aspirant not to cause injury to any living creature. It stresses austerities, charity, truth-speaking, straight forwardness among others.
The Maitrayani Upanishad, one of the minor Upanishads, speaks of anger, jealousy, meanness, cruelty and rashness, among others, as vices to be avoided. The Upanishads also stress virtues such as chastity, austerity and silence.
Manu and Yajnavalkya, among the Hindu law-givers, stress the importance of `Achara' or conduct. Dharma, which is traceable to the Vedic Rta, is exalted. Manusmriti proclaims: "Self-possession, patience, self-control, integrity, purity, restraint, intelligence, truthfulness, absence of anger -- these ten are the marks of Dharma." Manu points out that non-injury to other beings and truthfulness, among others, represent the essence of Dharma.
The whole of Dharma, says Yajnavalkya, consists of truthfulness, non-stealing, absence of anger, modesty, purity, intelligence, self-possession, self-control, restraint of the sense and learning.
Manu lists the virtues expected of the student, the house-holder, the renunciand, the priestly class and the ruling class. Respect for elders as one of the cardinal virtues is held up by him. Women, he says, must be honoured and mutual fidelity between husband and wife must continue till death (of both).