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Ranjha Tilla Jogian par

Tela Jogiyan is located about 50 km west of Jhelum city in Jhelum district of Punjab province of Pakistan. Due to the fact that this abode of the Jogis was on the top of a mountain, the top of this mountain itself came to be called Tela Jogis. The high place in Punjab is called Tela and because of the height of this mountain it is called Tela. Tela Jogiyan is located on a 3200 feet high peak. The mountain is located in the middle of 25,000 acres of forest. Drink a way to get to this top of the mountain. It is from P. D. Khan Road which turns right from Nathuwala and there is a paved road to Hamun. You have to walk on foot from this village which is a four hour journey from this village to the top. There is no shopping center, no mobile phone service and no food on the top. There is a rest house of the forest department for spending the night. You can spend the night in it by paying rent. The second way to reach Tela Jogiyan is to go from Jhelum city to Dina and from Dina to Rohtas and from this road also Tela Jogiyan is about fifty kilometers away from Jhelum city. This road can be used to reach Tela Jogiyan Top but only big jeep can go. Small vehicle cannot go to the mountain because the road is bad and this road is also rough from Rohtas village to Mowgli village and there is no petrol from Dina to Tela Jogiyan Top There is no pump. It is a difficult journey and that is probably why women and children do not go to Tela Jogi. My advice to young people is not to go on this trip alone and if you are going on this trip, take as much food and drink with you as you can carry while climbing the mountain. And secondly, make sure that you are in Mowgli village at nine o'clock in the morning because this hill is in a dense forest and there are a lot of wild animals in this forest. At this time of day there are shepherds, farmers and other tourists which makes you not feel lonely and similarly if you do not spend the night at the top, you should start descending from the top at two o'clock so that you can go before evening. Get out of this jungle. If you want to visit this mountain peak, you have to come to Jhelum city and if you want to come to this hill jogi from any corner of the world, you have to visit one of the airports of Islamabad, Lahore or Sialkot. You have to get off at the port and then come to Jhelum. There are all kinds of hotels available in Jhelum The reason for the fame of this mountain is that Ranjha who was born in Sargodha city of Punjab about five hundred and fifty years ago today and his girlfriend was snatched from him and his parents married him to Syedkhera to which Ranjha reacted. He decided to become a jogi. At that time, there was a training ground for jogis on this mountain and those who wanted to become jogis used to travel long distances to this training ground by piercing the ears of those who succeeded in training as a sign in these holes. Rings were applied and this was a sign of his being a professional jogi and Ranjha also reached this top and got the training of the first jogi and at the end of the training he would make a hole in Ranjha's ears and put rings in them. Even before Ranjha became a yogi on this mountain, a Muslim ruler had built a water tank mosque and a residence here, of which there is a pool and a mosque, while the walls of the living rooms are there. Some of the buildings are of the recent past which are said to have been inhabited by jogis till the time of Pakistan and India. There is a rest house here which is said to have been occupied by the British Deputy Commissioner According to a tradition, Baba Guru Nanak, the elder of the Sikhs, also stayed on this hill. All books in Pakistan are available in Urdu and English language and majority of Pakistanis use these two languages ​​and I am also Pakistani. If there is anything written in other languages ​​about this mountain peak, then it is difficult for me to give an opinion when I cannot read and understand it. Anyway, in India, on the one hand, there has been a monopoly of Brahman on reading and writing, and how can I accept his writings as correct? On the other hand, with the arrival of Muslims in India, Arabic, Turkish, Persian and later Urdu remained the official languages, so the information contained in them is also one-sided.

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