By Partha Pratim Majumder
Tarapith - Temple Complex |
Tarapith ,
Birbhum, West Bengal
: Brief Story
This
is one of the few places of India ,
meant more as a pilgrimage than a simple tour, marked to categorize as “Been there – Done that” .
No,
here you are for a divine connect while meeting “Maa Janani” at her home for a
spiritual realization.
This
is the place , where decades and centuries have been witnessing with deep
reverence - the aroma of spiritualism of
a “Siddhapitha” , that conjures up the historical names alike –
Maharishi Vashistha to Sadhak Vamaksepa in their search of divinity.
Location : About 265 miles from Kolkata, Tarapith is situated on the northern bank of the flowing Dwarka river, in Birbhum, in West Bengal. A seat of tantra studies, this is yet another holy shrine devoted to the worship of the female principle of creation, or Shakti. Tarapith is where Vasistha, the son of Brahma, the creator among the Hindu trinity is believed to have first attained his spiritual salvation.
Mother's feet |
Background : As the legend goes, Vasistha, after repeated failure
in his attempts to acquire salvation, went away to China, mastered it there,
and brought it back to Tarapith. A very similar form of this quasi Buddhist
asceticism is still practiced here, which involves austerities and meditation,
leading to a final communion with God. The temple that was built by Vasistha
got buried under the earth with the passage of time.
Foundation :Tarapith as it stands today, was built by Joybroto,
a merchant, who received directions from Tara Maa in his sleep to unearth the
'brahmashila', or the sacred stone, to set it up as a shrine in a proper place.
Tara Maa of Tarapith, another form of Kali, has two hands, is garlanded with
snakes, is adorned in sacred threads, and has Shiva lying in her left lap
sucking her breast.
The
Pilgrims’ Paradise:
Any
traveller as a pilgrim would look for
the expectation from his/her tour as under :
·
Prime
focus on divine aspirations to have a tete’-a-tete’ connect with Goddess Tara
at the temple for prayer and rituals as per the notch
ability
·
Tour
of the locality including green paddy fields around to the sites of tantric culture
·
Rest
of mind and body for few hours of meditation
Historical anecdotes :
·
Tarapith is a small temple
town near Rampurhat in Birbhum district ,
West
Bengal,
known for its Tantric temple and its
adjoining cremation grounds where Tantric rites are performed.
·
The
Tantric Hindu temple is dedicated to
goddess Tara, a fearsome Tantric
aspect of the Hindu Divine Mother the chief temples of
the Goddess-oriented Shakta sect
of Hinduism.
·
Tarapith
derives its name from its association as the most important centre of Tara
worship and her cult.
·
Tarapith
is also famous for Bamakhepa known
as the 'mad saint', who worshipped in the temple and resided in the cremation
grounds as a mendicant and practised and perfected Yoga and the Tantric art
under the tutelage of another famous saint known as the Kailashpathi Baba.
·
Bama Khepa dedicated his entire
life to the worship of mother Tara. His ashram is also located close
to the temple.
Tarapith temple : Legend and importance
¦
The
Tara temple in Tarapith steeped in the narrated myths is a medium sized temple
in the rural precincts of Bengal. Its fame as a pilgrimage centre with the
deity of Tara enshrined in it is due to "the temple’s founding myths, its
type of worship (which includes blood offerings), the hymns sung there, the
powers of the nearby tank, and the inhabitants and rituals of the adjacent
cremation ground".
¦
The
temple base is thick with thick walls, built of red brick. The superstructure
has covered passages with many arches raising to the pinnacle with a spire (shikara). The image of the deity is enshrined
under the eaves in the sanctum. There are two Tara images in the sanctum. The
stone image of Tara depicted as a mother suckling Shiva – the "primordial
image" (seen in the inset of the fierce form of the image of Tara) is
camouflaged by a three feet metal image, that the devotee normally seen.
Main Temple |
¦
It
represents Tara in her fiery form with four arms, wearing a garland of skulls and
a protruding tongue. Crowned with a silver crown and with flowing hair, the
outer image wrapped in a sari and decked in
marigold garlands with a silver umbrella over its head. The forehead of the
metal image is adorned with red kumkum (vermilion). Priests take a speck of
this kumkum and apply it on the foreheads of the devotees as a mark of Tara's
blessings. The devotees offer coconuts, bananas and silk saris, and unusually bottles of whisky.The
primordial image of Tara has been described as a "dramatic Hindu image of
Tara’s gentler aspect".
¦
The
priests of the temple offer puja (worship)
with great reverence to bring out her motherly aspect to the devotees, blending
the North Indian fierce depiction of the Sati myth of the goddess with the
peaceful motherly visionary form of Tara seen by Buddha and his disciple
Vasishtha of the Tantric tradition – the Buddhist Tara
form. At Tarapith, though the softer
motherly aspect of the fierce goddess is emphasized. Chanting hymns or poems in
her praise is also a part of the devotional appeal made to the goddess.
¦
The
devotees take a holy bath at the sacred tank adjacent to the temple before
entering the temple premises to offer worship and even after the worship. The
waters of the tank are said to have healing powers and even restore life to the
dead.
¦
Blood
sacrifice of goats is the daily norm in the temple. Devotees who offer such
goat sacrifices seek blessings from the deity. They bathe the goats in the holy
tank near the temple before the sacrifice. They also purify themselves by
taking bath in the holy tank before offering worship to the deity. The goat is
then tethered to a stake, the designated post in a sand pit, and the neck of
the goat butchered with a single stroke by a special sword. A small quantity of
the blood of the goat is then collected in a vessel and offered to the deity in
the temple. The devotees also smear their forehead with a bit of blood from the
pit, as a mark of reverence to the deity.
Sadhak Bamakhepa |
The saga of
Tarapith and Sadhak Bamakhepa :
TARAPITH @ Present : Few Observations
1. Riot of hotels and lodges around the shrine : After
10km on the main road from Rampurhat Railway Station to Saithia amidst the
green rural belt, this great shrine is found to be gheraoed by innumerable hotels
and lodges for commercial gain, whereas civic amenities, hygiene and road
conditions are too poor as far as its plan is concerned.
It seems that there is no municipal
body to look after the social issues of the divine place.
2. Lack of infrastructure : A serviceable arterial road in the
presence of more than 300 hotels, lodges and other establishments is so pathetic
and poor that “misfit” is the right word to reckon with
3. Lack of tourist attraction & tourist guide : While the fact
remains that the huge inbound tourist traffic has been a continuous reality
over the years and decades, the district authority has no plan to make it a
tourist destination with variety of options including trained guides for the sake of retention of the tourists. It’s
a big failure in reshaping it in the fitness of the things.
Sad road condition |
Ready
Reckoner :
¦ When
to go : Any day round
the year. Normally , the tourist crowd swells on weekend, and Tuesday
¦ How
to get there : Several trains from Howrah and Sealdah Rly stn. Including daily Maa Tara Express (Departure
from Sealdah at 07.25hrs. / Arrival at
Rampurhat Stn. at 12.25 hrs. and (Departure from Rampurhat Stn. at 14.05pm /
Arrival at Sealdah at 19.00hrs)
¦ Where
to stay ?
There are hundreds of hotels and
lodges around. A list of a few :-
SL NO.
|
NAME OF THE HOTEL
|
CONTACT NO.
|
WEBSITE / Email
|
||
1
|
Hotel
Maa Tara Residency
|
9564304497/03461-253432
|
|||
2
|
Hotel
Sathi
|
9033848112
|
sathi.traders1980@gmail.com
|
||
3.
|
Raktajaba
Lodge of Benfish
|
|
http://www.benfish.info/raktajaba.php
|
||
4.
|
Hotel
Swagatam Intl.
|
· 03461253446
· 9735336120
· 9674319687
|
https://swagatamhoteltarapith.com/tarapith
|
¦ Whom
to take help for all rituals at the temple ?
Shri Dinabandhu Mukherjee, Teacher (B.A-English) / Tori (Taramaa), Maa Chandi
Anusandhani / (M) 89262-08575 – The Priest , who is able to take care of his
client at the compound of the temple and beyond
------- 000 ------
4 comments:
Very good. All tourists/pilgrims will be benefitted.
Good article.
Stay at mukherjee lodge,rampurhat,contact-9932799619
Cheap and best
Stay at mukherjee lodge,rampurhat,contact-9932799619
Cheap and best
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