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| Purva Tirupati Sri Balaji Mandir |
We yatris arrived at Guwahati at 7 in the morning. Here, we were picked up by a couple of buses and transported to our destination which is the beautiful Purva Tirupati Sri Balaji temple. This was located approx 18 kms away and nearly took us 45 minutes to reach.
We were accommodated on the second floor of their residential building meant for yatris - men & women were given separate large halls with attached 4 bathrooms & toilets. This place was significantly cleaner than PK lodging and the beds (on the floor for men and regular cots for women) too were covered with fresh clean sheets. The only drawback was that this place was swarming with mosquitoes - PK has none. We quickly got into the business of having bath etc. The bathrooms were better than PK and we didn't feel the need for hot water as the weather was not too cold. After finishing our morning prayers, we proceeded to the temple for darshan.
The Balaji
temple complex in Guwahati is a must visit place for anyone travelling there.
Located in a sprawling parcel of land of about 17 acres, it has a Veda Patasala
and a Goshala beside the temples. There are 4 marble temples - a small one of
Sri Ganesha which has a beautiful idol, two medium sized temple for Padmavati Devi & Maa Durga and one large temple of Sri Balaji. The temples, constructed in
South Indian style, are clean and well maintained. Unfortunately, photography
was prohibited and, hence I am attaching photos sourced from the internet. All
the idols here are exact replicas of the original deities and even the
decoration / alankaram is similar. The priests are educated from South Indian
patasalas and hence they were easy to converse with.
After the
darshan, we came to a nearby building, within the complex, where we were served
hot pongal Prasadam from the temple. It was piping hot and very tasty. Later,
we came back to the temple where we had the formal Vaideekas Sambhavanai
ceremony. All the Vaideekas who had accompanied us for the yatra, were duly
honoured and thanked and were given a small token of appreciation / gratitude
by the yatris.
Then, we visited the Veda Patasala located within the complex, and met the students there along with their Guru. The students were from different parts of Assam and were staying here during the duration of their studies like a typical Gurukul. Upon the bidding of their Guru, they chanted some part of the Shukla Yajur Veda in unison. It was so heartening to listen to this and getting reassured that our traditions are being preserved so well in this part of the country too. We then proceeded towards the Goshala but couldn't see the cows close up as they were out grazing in the distance within the complex. It was good to see the cows getting some exercise by walking around - most goshalas that I have seen don't have the luxury of space for this.
After this,
we had our lunch - Vaideekas were served first on banana leaves and, then the
rest of us were served on our plates - for the first time we ate at the same
time. Lunch was superb as usual. The catering staff had better kitchen
facilities here as compared to PK and they churned out a superb spread- rice,
vegetables , sambhar, rasam, papad, curd rice et al.
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| Maa Kamakhya Temple |
Post lunch,
around 2.30 pm we got into 2 buses and left for Kamakhya Temple. This Temple,
located on Nilachala hill, is believed to be the site where the yoni (genital
organ or womb) of the goddess Sati fell. Maa Kamakhya or Kameswari is the
renowned Goddess of Desire, is considered one of the most sacred Shakti
Peethas, symbolizing fertility, the creative power of women, and the center of
Tantric practices. Maa Kamakhya Devalaya is one of the oldest
of the 51 Shakti Peethas on earth.
It took us
about 45 minutes to cover the distance of 20 kms. After alighting from the bus,
we had to walk a short distance to reach the temple. As our organisers had made
arrangements for a special darshan, we were asked to go into a waiting room
where everyone who has purchased the special ticket has to wait. The wait time
was long, nearly 1.5 hours but as we had seating arrangements it was ok. Most
of the yatris were busy chanting various stotras including Lalitha Sahasranama
during the wait time.
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| Maa Kamakhya Temple |
We moved into
the shorter queue meant for people with special darshan tickets. Alongside was
the regular darshan queue where people had been waiting for over 7-8 hours. It
look us another 45 minutes before we could move into the sanctum. Just outside
the sanctum there is an idol where people made offerings of flowers and clothes.
The sanctum is a cave at a lower level which was dark – only some lamps were
there to go by. We had to climb down some narrow steps to reach the main sanctum.
There was an idol here but fully covered with clothes offered by the devotees. At
the feet of the idol, there was a thin layer of water. The priest asked us to go
down on our knees and touch the water. We did that and sprinkled the water on
our heads. We also collected the water in small containers purchased outside
the temple. As the water level was only about an inch or so, we could only
collect little water. We were then pushed out to make way for the large number
of devotees still in the queue.
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| Maa Kamakhya Temple |
Once we came
outside, we took some photographs. We also got small piece of red cloth from a
local priest which was part of an offering made to Maa Kamakhya. Apart from the
main temple of Maa Kamakhya, there are temples of the Dasamahavidya (ten
incarnations of the deity) namely Kamakhya (i.e. Tripura Sundari, alongwith
Matangi and Kamala), Kali, Tara, Bhuvaneshvari, Bagalamukhi, Chinnamasta,
Bhairavi, Dhumavati, and five temples of Lord Shiva namely Kameswara,
Siddheswara, Kedareswara, Amratokeswara, Aghora and Kautilinga around the
Nilachala Hill which is also called as Kamakhya Temple Complex.
The main
temple closes early here at 5.30 pm and the last aarti is at 7.30 pm. When we
started moving out, it was around 6.30 pm and quite dark. Most of the numerous shops
outside the temple had closed for the day. We walked back to our bus and
returned to the Balaji temple for our evening prayers & dinner.
The
mosquitoes here were waiting for us. We tried our best to keep them from biting
us by keeping the fans on and covering ourselves with the blankets. As we were
tired, we soon drifted to deep sleep and were blissfully unaware of what
happened next. Thus ended our penultimate day of the yatra.
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| Pillars of Maa Kamakhya Temple |






10 comments:
Vish Splendid
Super π rendition and conclusion Radhe Krishna
Well written Sir πππ
Superb rendering
Very vividly described blog. Finished all the episodes of the pilgrimage. It took me 75 mnts to read thru. interesting sthala puranas of Parusuram Kund and Khamakya temple made it very interesting. Added to this describing your each day routine and activity was. interesting too. Await your concluding day.
Excellent Vish. Good guide for those visiting the temple.
Dhanya hogaye ππaap visit karkar
Hum aankhon dekha aapke mukh sunkarπππ
Magnificent architecture. Beautiful temples, both.
Superb! Interesting info about the temples, idols and various other aspects which are equally important to get a good experience. Well written sir as always...
The flow is almost like being there
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