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EL DESPERTAR SAI: Shri Shirdi Sai Speaks-27th June/ My visit to the sleeping Vishnu temple in Kathmandu Shri Shirdi Sai Speaks-27th June/ My visit to the sleeping Vishnu temple in Kathmandu - EL DESPERTAR SAI

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jueves, 28 de junio de 2012

Shri Shirdi Sai Speaks-27th June/ My visit to the sleeping Vishnu temple in Kathmandu



Shri Shirdi Sai Speaks-27th June/ My visit to the sleeping Vishnu temple in Kathmandu


Shri Shirdi Sai Speaks-27th June/ My visit to the sleeping Vishnu temple in Kathmandu

Posted: 27 Jun 2012 12:18 AM PDT

Om Sai Ram
Picture of the day
Budhanilkantha Temple (Sleeping Vishnu)
 I was fortunate to pay my respects to this very ancient Sleeping Vishnu temple.. Just the feeling to be at this place was divine.. The positive energy and the bliss could be felt in the air..And mantras and prayers automatically came from with in my heart. We also went to Pashupatinath temple that day but unfortunately , our cameras were not allowed inside the temple..7 or 8 of us were lucky to do abhishek at the sacred Pashupatinath temple and the priest blessed us all for a safe and successful kailash Parikrama..
Sai bhakt,
Deepa H

 
Looking at the mighty scale sculpture of Ananta Shahin Narayan at Budhanilkantha, one might as well say that a pit of snakes is no less than a bed of roses. Really, lying on the coiled body of the Ananta Sesa, or the eleven hooded serpent, this stone carving of Lord Vishnu represents profound serenity and utmost peace of mind as it seems to float amidst the natural spring on the lap of the Shivapuri Hill range.

 Budhanilkantha is a gigantic sculpture carved on a five-meter-long boulder and is 9 km from Kathmandu city. The temple consists of a pond in which lies a great stone figure of Lord Vishnu reclining on the coils of a cosmic serpent. The huge statue of sleeping Vishnu is carved from the single block of black stone of a type not found in the valley. It is believed that in a by-gone age, many years before there were two hardworking farmers (husband and wife) who maintained a farm here, and one day they discovered the Deity when they were ploughing their field.According to one of the locals, the legend states that the statue was once amazingly lost."It was rediscovered when a farmer accidentally hit the sculpture while he ploughed his fields and the statue started bleeding," he says. "On further mining, the statue was finally exposed for the second time," he maintainsWell, true or not, but all in all and above everything else, this statue here is not as lifeless as a stone!The Deity is over 1,000 years old. Lord Vishnu is about 5m (17 ft) long and is lying in a 13m (43 ft) long tank, as if floating, with His legs crossed. His four hands hold the four symbols of Vishnu: the chakra (disc), club, and conch-shell and lotus flower. It is believed that the deity was carved in the 7th or 8th century during the Licchavi period...
The name Budha Nilkantha represents something of an oddity. It means "Old Blue Neck" and actually refers to Shiva, who drank the poison of the ocean which turned his neck blue. To soothe the burning he threw himself into Lake Gosainkund, from whence, it is said, comes the water in Budha Nilkantha's tank. The shrine itself however is dedicated unambiguously to Vishnu.
Hindus can walk down the steps and touch His feet, but foreigners cannot.

May Lord Vishnu increase our faith in our Creator and May He fill our lives with bliss and divinity..
Always wish to conduct your life in such a manner that when God wishes to write His autobiography, He proudly writes your name in Gold


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