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Shani Chalisa Lyrics in Hindi

Shani Chalisa
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About this composition: read the full lyrics, browse the song meaning, and move between artist, genre, and language pages without losing the reading flow.

Full Lyrics

This page keeps the readable verified verse block from the source page and omits the corrupted closing doha and the aarti section.

जय गणेश गिरिजा सुवन मंगल करण कृपाल । दीनन के दुख दूर करि कीजै नाथ निहाल ॥

जय जय श्री शनिदेव प्रभु सुनहु विनय महाराज । करहु कृपा हे रवि तनय राखहु जनकी लाज ॥

जयति जयति शनिदेव दयाला । करत सदा भक्तन प्रतिपाला ॥

चारि भुजा तनु श्याम विराजै । माथे रतन मुकुट छबि छाजै ॥

परम विशाल मनोहर भाला । टेढ़ी दृष्टि भृकुटि विकराला ॥

कुण्डल श्रवण चमाचम चमके । हिये माल मुक्तन मणि दमकै ॥

कर में गदा त्रिशूल कुठारा । पल बिच करैं अरिहिं संहारा ॥

Meaning & Significance

Shani Chalisa carries a different mood from the more celebratory or openly intense devotional texts in this batch. It is tied to the discipline, gravity, and protective force associated with Shani Dev. The opening verses establish reverence first and practical prayer second. The devotee asks for compassion, steadiness, and relief from difficulty rather than simply praise.

That makes the text especially meaningful for readers who approach it as a devotional support during stressful phases. Shani is often understood as a force that tests patience and reveals where life needs more balance. In that sense, the Chalisa becomes a text of reflection as much as petition. It asks the reader to stay grounded while asking for grace.

The prayer is also useful because it is widely recognized in Navagraha practice. Many devotees read it on Saturdays or when they want a more focused connection with Shani Dev. That makes the page high-intent in search terms: readers are not merely browsing a poem, they are looking for a ritual text they can actually use.

For a lyrics page, the challenge is to make that use easy. A clean layout matters because these are not casual reading pages. People often arrive during a devotional moment and want the words in front of them quickly. A readable verse block is more useful than a long introduction.

The source page includes extra material after the Chalisa, including aarti lines and a closing doha that is corrupted in the HTML rendering. Rather than repair that line by guessing, this page keeps the main readable verse block and stops there. That choice preserves accuracy and protects the page from a bad transcription fix.

The result is a page that can still serve the key user need: a stable Hindi Shani Chalisa excerpt with enough context to understand why the text matters and how it is used in devotional practice.

Pronunciation Notes

The first couplets should be read steadily and with respect. Shani Chalisa has a firm tone, but it works best when the recitation is even rather than rushed. That helps the devotional mood stay grounded.

Because the page is intended for mobile readers as well, short lines and visible spacing are important. Users can pause between couplets and keep their place easily while reciting.

About the Navagraha Tradition

Shani Chalisa sits inside a wider Navagraha devotional frame, where planetary deities are approached with prayer, respect, and practical intention. The text is not only about fear or difficulty. It is also about alignment, discipline, and the hope that divine grace can soften hard periods.

That is why the page needs a balanced tone. Readers searching Shani content usually want both the lyric text and a sense of what the text is for. The page should help them with that without becoming preachy or overexplained.

The attribution is kept traditional because the source context does not foreground a single modern composer. That fits the way many readers already encounter the Chalisa: as a prayer passed through use and devotion more than through modern authorship branding.

It also fits the site’s broader devotional navigation. Shani Chalisa readers often move to Hanuman, Durga, or Bhairav pages as part of a larger protective-prayer routine. A stable related-link structure helps them do that naturally.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is Shani Chalisa often read on Saturdays?

Saturday is traditionally associated with Shani Dev, so many devotees choose that day for recitation and other Navagraha prayers.

Is Shani Chalisa a protection prayer?

Yes. Many readers use it as a prayer for steadiness, protection, and relief from difficult stretches in life.

Why does this page stop before the aarti?

The source page contains a separate aarti section and a corrupted closing doha. This page keeps the readable prayer text and avoids guessing at the broken line.