Sthanika Brahmins - Associations

Associations

  • Adwaitha Samithi - an inter communal registered association of pancha Dravida Brahmans has also been formed by the leaders of the community and has its own building Adwaitha Ashrama (Now Belongs to Sringeri Mutt), at Kotekar near Ullal, five miles to the south of Mangalore.
  • Shri Subramanya Sabha, Founded about 99 years back and registered on 1942.
  • Sthanika Dravida Brahmana Sangha, Kunjibettu, Udupi, Karnataka. - 576101.
  • Akhila Bharata Sthanika Brahmana Sabha, Jnanashakthi Mantap, Kodigehalli post, Vishwaneedum, Bangalore.
  • Bangalore Sthanika Brahmana Sabha was founded in 1962-63,with 47 members,which got officially registered in the early 70's.
  • Shri Jnanashakthi Samskruthika Sabha, 87,Venkatadri, 9th Main, Saraswathipuram, Mysore - founded in 1977.
  • Sthanika Brahmana Sangha Hoskote (KUNDAPURA)
  • Shiva Brahmana Sabha Kasaragod
  • Sri Subramanya sthanika samaja seva sangha (R) sullia D.K.

Apart from Mangalore, Udupi, Mysore and Bangalore they have their associations at Mumbai, Nashik, Satara, Karad, Sangli, Belthangady Pune, Mysore, Hubli-Dharwad, Kasargod USA and Padubidri

Read more about this topic:  Sthanika Brahmins

Famous quotes containing the word associations:

    There is ... no glamor at banquets—I mean the large formal banquets of big associations and societies. There is only a kind of dignified confusion that gradually unhinges the mind.
    James Thurber (1894–1961)

    Writing prejudicial, off-putting reviews is a precise exercise in applied black magic. The reviewer can draw free- floating disagreeable associations to a book by implying that the book is completely unimportant without saying exactly why, and carefully avoiding any clear images that could capture the reader’s full attention.
    William Burroughs (b. 1914)

    Wild as it was, it was hard for me to get rid of the associations of the settlements. Any steady and monotonous sound, to which I did not distinctly attend, passed for a sound of human industry.... Our minds anywhere, when left to themselves, are always thus busily drawing conclusions from false premises.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)