28°32′12″N 77°14′51″E / 28.53667°N 77.24750°E / 28.53667; 77.24750

Chittaranjan Park Kali Mandir
Religion
AffiliationHinduism
DistrictChittaranjan Park
DeityLord (Shiva)
Location
LocationChittaranjan Park
StateNew Delhi
CountryIndia
Chittaranjan Park Kali Mandir at sunrise. The entrance to the main kali temple can be seen at center. The Bengali-majority colony of Chittaranjan Park in the background.

Chittaranjan Park Kali Mandir (Chittaranjan Park Kali Bari) is a temple complex and Bengali community cultural center in Chittaranjan Park in New Delhi, India. Built on a small hill, it started as a Shiv temple in 1973, which still stands within the complex, the larger shrines dedicated to goddess Kali, Shiva, and Radhakrishna were added in 1984. Over the years it has remained an important centre of convergence of local Bengali community during annual Durga Puja festivities.[1]

The temple also hosted its first Durga Puja in 1977, a tradition that continues to date.[2]

History

It was founded in 1973, on land designated by the nascent EPDP colony, and a small temple to Shiva was consecrated on small hill at the edge of the colony. The tradition of Durga Puja started in 1977. Expansion of the devotee base enabled the construction of an imposing Kali temple in February 1984 in Bengal terracotta temple architecture. This was followed by two temples, one for Shiva and the other for Radha-Krishna. The temples was overlaid with elaborate terracotta designs around 2006–2009.

The Kali Mandir is a hub of Bengali activity owing to the high density of Bengalis residing in Chittaranjan Park. Managed by the Chittaranjan Park Kali Mandir Society, it organizes a number of cultural and religious events throughout the year.

Pujas and Festivals

Religious functions include the major five-day festival of Durga Puja, which is one of the most popular in Delhi[3] and attracts enormous crowds every day.[4] The rituals are observed with great fidelity; barrels of bengal-specific flowers are flown in fresh for the puja every day. For procuring sufficient quantities of blue lotus, needed for sandhi puja, entire ponds from Bengal are booked well in advance.[5] Other religious functions at the Mandir include Kali Puja, Lakshmi Puja, Saraswati Puja, Ganesh Chaturthi etc. The mandir attracts a large volume of donations from devotees, particularly during the Durga Puja period.[5] There is also a small atelier where artists create the earthen idols of durga and other goddesses.[6]

The Mandir also houses a large library with books on various aspects of Bengali culture and runs bengali language classes for those wishing to learn bangla. A number of cultural programmes and competitions are organized for children. The mandir also manages a guest house.

References

  1. "City pandals step up security ahead of Puja". Indian Express. 6 October 2008.
  2. "How community pujas came about". India Today. 25 September 2009.
  3. A walk with the Goddess (1 October 2011). "A walk with the Goddess". The Pioneer. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  4. "Durgotsav '98: Kali Mandir, Chittaranjan Park, New Delhi". Durgotsav98.tripod.com. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  5. 1 2 "Slowdown fails to dampen puja spirits : What's Hot: News India Today". India Today. 25 September 2009. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
  6. Alokparna Das (5 October 2008). "Divine image". Indian Express. Archived from the original on 22 January 2013. Retrieved 7 October 2011.
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