Guru Ravidass, one of the most famous so-called untouchable sages of the 15th-16th century, also known as a leading star of the Bhakti movement, especially the nirguna sampradaya or sant parampara of the later medieval centuries in Northern India, articulated an alternative genre of bhakti in parallel to, and silent reproach of, the ritual-based puja (worship) ceremonies of mainstream religions performed by Varna-based designated priests at altars dedicated to various different Hindu deities. This innovative and radical form of bhakti with its adoration of a non-anthropocentric God, sharply distinguished it from the traditional form of Hindu prayers which involve recitation, lightning lamps (ceremonial flames), striking gongs, and blowing conch shells, but which did not assign any space to the vast multitude of historically segregated and socially excluded sections of society. His innovative bhakti genre did not include any rituals, ceremonies or sacred spectacle, and neither did it exclude anyone whomsoever from its envisaged utopian city of Begumpura (also spelled as Begampura) – an empowering and uplifting construct wherein the inhabitants would be free to live and move around without fear of the rulers, taxes, social hierarchies, discriminations, indignities, economic hardships, administrative restrictions and spatial confinements irrespective of caste, class, creed, and gender. It was a place where caste-based systems of ‘graded inequality’, and the social malice of untouchability would be unknown. Despite its utopian nature, Begumpura was not a mere figment of Bhakti radical Ravidass라이브 바카라 mind, a fantasy or an ecstasy; it was based on a critical understanding of the socio-economic and political realities prevailing during his lifetime.