Godar (Dhanusha), Jan 4 : Janakpurdham has dispatched 'bhar' special gifts as offerings to Ayodhya, India, in view of a consecration ceremony to take place at the Shreeram Temple in Ayodhya on January 22.
A team left here this morning,
carrying special offerings for Ayodhya under the Janakpurdham-Ayodhyadham
religious procession.
Saroj Kumar Yadav, Chief Minister
of Madhesh Province, Bimalendra Nidhi, House of Representatives (HoR) member
and Nepali Congress leader, and Janaki Temple Mahantha Ram Tapeshwor Das, among
others, bid farewell to the team heading to Ayodhya with the special offerings
from Nepal.
In accordance with Maithili
culture, it is customary to send offerings from the daughter's maternal home on
auspicious occasions taking place in her husband's home.
Upholding this tradition,
Janakpurdham, as the maternal home of Sita, who was married to the then crown
prince of Ayodhaya, Ram, has sent offerings to Ayodhya on the occasion of the
Shreeram Temple inauguration.
The offerings encompass various
types of jewelry, utensils, clothing and sweets, decoratively arranged in
specially crafted bamboo baskets.
A team of around 300 people has
left for Ayodhya with the 'Gharbasak bhar' or gifts for housewarming occasion,
considering the inauguration of the Ram Temple in Ayodhya as lord Ram entering
his new abode, the associate priest Das said.
The team will reach Ayodhya after
visiting various religious places on the way via Jaleshwarnath, Malangawa,
Simraungadh, Gadhimai, Birgunj in Nepal and Betiah, Kushinagar, Siddharthanagar
and Gorakhpur of India.
The 'bhar' or gifts would be handed
over to the Shreeram Janmabhumi Rammandir Trust in Ayodhya on January 6.
This tradition of sending offerings
is believed to further deepen the cultural ties between Nepal and India,
besides reflecting the marriage culture dating back to the Treta yug (epoch) in
this part of the world, said Manoj Kumar Saha, Mayor of Janakpurdham
Sub-Metropolitan City and Patron of the Bharyatra Main Programme
Committee.
The associate Mahanta also said
that this ritual will further deepen the relations between Nepal and India in
existence for centuries as well as send a message throughout the world for
promoting tourism in Nepal.
Before this, the holy water was
send to Ayodhya for sprinkling during the consecration ritual as part of the
inauguration of the Ram Temple there. The holy water was collected from
different rivers of Nepal under the leadership of the World Hindu Council
Nepal.
Two 'shila' big boulders lifted
from the bank of the Kaligandaki River of Nepal were also dispatched to Ayodhya
last year following the initiation of construction of the Ram Temple. (RSS)