Kathmandu, Feb. 16 -- For many young people in Nepal, spirituality is evolving. It is no longer limited to temple visits with family or ritual-heavy ceremonies that they do not fully understand. Instead, it is becoming something they choose for themselves.
Bhajan Sanjh is part of that shift.
What began as a small private gathering of around 40 to 50 people has now grown into a youth-led spiritual platform under the Yagyasala Foundation. Over the past two and a half years, it has evolved into an organised musical and collective experience that blends bhajans, classical music and community participation.
"We have been doing this for quite a while," says Ravi Pandey, the event lead. "Earlier, it was not public. It was free of registration...
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