Jai Jai Garavi Gujarat
English: Victory To Valiant Gujarat | |
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જય જય ગરવી ગુજરાત | |
State anthem of Gujarat, India (de facto) | |
Lyrics | Narmad, 1873 |
"Jai Jai Garavi Gujarat" (Gujarati: જય જય ગરવી ગુજરાત) is a poem written by Gujarati poet Narmadashankar Dave, better known as Narmad in 1873. It is used as a de facto state song during ceremonies of Government of Gujarat in the western state of India.[1]
Composition
Narmad is considered as the first modern Gujarati writer. He has written "Jai Jai Garavi Gujarat" in 1873 as the forward of his first Gujarati dictionary, Narmakosh.[2][3]
In this poem, Narmad epitomises the sense of pride in the region by identifying the region of Gujarati-speaking people. He delineates the boundary within which Gujarati-speaking population live; Ambaji in the north; Pavagadh in the east; Kunteshwar Mahadev near Vapi in the south; and Somnath, Dwarka in the west. This region mentioned by him now forms modern-day Gujarat, the western state of India.[2]
The poem is composed and is used as a de facto state song during ceremonies of Government of Gujarat. In 2011, the composition sung by various Gujarati singers was released by Government of Gujarat.[1]
Lyrics
Lyrics are as following:
જય જય ગરવી ગુજરાત (in Gujarati) | Victory To Valiant Gujarat (In English) |
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જય જય ગરવી ગુજરાત! જય જય ગરવી ગુજરાત, |
Victory to valiant Gujarat! Thy scarlet flag marked with love and valour will shine; In north, Goddess Amba [is situated], Have seen rivers Narmada, Tapi, Mahi and others. That past glory of [ancient capital] Anhilwad and [king] Siddharaj Jaisinh. |
References
- 1 2 "Newest version of Jay Jay Garvi Gujarat song launched(Video)". DeshGujarat. 2011-05-07. Retrieved 2016-11-12.
- 1 2 Bharat Yagnik; Ashish Vashi (2 July 2010). "No Gujarati dept in Veer Narmad, Hemchandracharya varsities". The Times of India. Retrieved 13 November 2016.
- ↑ Tevani, Shailesh (1 January 2003). C.C. Mehta. Sahitya Akademi. p. 67. ISBN 978-81-260-1676-1. Retrieved 13 November 2016.