
Achyutam Keshavam Krishna Damodaram
About this Bhajan
Achyutam Keshavam is a meditative Krishna bhajan chanting His divine names — Achyuta, Keshava, Damodara — interwoven with verses recalling Krishna's love for Meera, Shabari, Yashoda, Sudama, and Draupadi.
Naam Sankirtan — Krishna divine names — Bhakti devotion — Meera/Shabari/Yashoda/Sudama/Draupadi — God responds to pure love
Krishna, Vishnu, Narayana, Rama
Significance & Importance
Achyutam Keshavam is a meditative bhajan that weaves together two profound layers of devotion — the divine names (Naam Sankirtan) of Lord Krishna and a soul-stirring lament that asks 'Why does God seem distant?' The first verse is the seed mantra: Achyuta (the imperishable one), Keshava (the slayer of Keshi), Krishna (the all-attractive), Damodara (the one bound by Yashoda's love), Rama (the source of joy), Narayana (the resting place of all beings), and Janaki Vallabha (beloved of Sita).
The verses that follow are the genius of this composition — they remind the listener that God HAS come, eaten, slept, danced, laughed, and wept with His devotees throughout history. Krishna came when Meera called Him with pure love. He ate the half-eaten berries Shabari offered Him. He slept in Yashoda's lap. He danced for Sudama's sake. He made Draupadi laugh in her darkest hour. He wept at Karuna's depth.
This bhajan is widely sung at Krishna mandirs across North India and in kirtan gatherings worldwide, and during Janmashtami, Govardhan Puja, and Krishna Jayanti celebrations. Its slow, devotional rhythm makes it ideal for chanting practice (japa) and group kirtan. The bhajan reaffirms one of the deepest truths of the Bhakti tradition: God responds to pure devotion, not ritual perfection.
English Transliteration
Achyutam Keshavam Krishna Damodaram,
Rama Narayanam Janaki Vallabham.
Achyutam Keshavam Krishna Damodaram,
Rama Narayanam Janaki Vallabham.
Note: This seed verse is the ancient, public-domain core of the bhajan (from the Achyutāṣṭakam / Mukunda Mālā tradition). The popular "Kaun Kehta Hai Bhagwan Aate Nahin" stanzas often sung with it have contested, likely 20th-century authorship and appear in modern copyrighted recordings, so their full lyrics are not reproduced here. Their devotional theme is explained in the significance below. Please enjoy the full song on authorised platforms.