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Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Day 77 - Faith Busters

Yesterday I visited Shirdi, to offer prayers to Sai Baba.  I had been to the place, last time, many many years ago.  This post is prompted by yesterday's visit to the shrine.

Just after the Babri Masjid demolition, I, as an eighteen year old teenager, decided that I will never ever visit a public place of worship.  And I stuck to it for a long period of time.  The point was, I thought faith is a matter of personal choices and is best exercised in the private domain.  Bringing it to the public domain only causes great damage to the fabric of a peaceful and secular society.  Mind you, when at home, I offer prayers every day, since childhood.  And I feel good about it.  However, after many years, I again started visiting temples, even if just to keep family members happy. 

In the past few years, I have now visited three of the most renowned temples in India.  Tirupati, Palani and Shirdi.  The most striking thing that I have observed after being to these places, is that religion has become grossly commercialised.  To me, as a faithful, this trend kills the feelings with which you go to any place of worship.  And that is, to seek peace and tranquility.  What you do get is:

1) Differentiation based on your standing in the society / the money you have.  VIP passses to bypass every queue of order.  A gross violation of the belief that everyone is equal in the eyes of God.  Unless you have some influence, you are sure to be hugely disappointed with the rendezvous with God.
2) Long queues through which one has to tiringly wade through for hours to get a glimpse of the deity.  By the time you reach the deity, you are not even thinking about the deity; only how to keep your place in the queue.
3) Touts prevail (and rule!) all over the place.  These places wail for professional management!

I much rather prefer the Sai Baba temple in Chennai on ECR Road.  The place is amazing and I would encourage everyone to visit it.  It is a place where I felt like going, again and again, because of the peace and tranquility that it affords, in this fast paced world.

Not sure whether I will visit any famous shrines in the near future.  May be only if, I can obtain a VIP pass!  Or maybe not!  Ultimately, the home, is the best temple!

Jai Sai Ram!  Take care.

5 comments:

Horizon said...

i cant even think of a reason to dispute your argument.

However we need to think its commercialized because people are willing to pay ,its like the chicken and egg story .

Its just the we have become more comfort driven that we think money can do everything and you see even in the holiest of shrines money does everything and not the lord himself.

For many money is the "Maker" and hence the commercialization.

I completely agree with what you have concluded ,Home is the best temple and i have the same view.

Suresh Iyer said...

It is not a chicken and egg story. Look deeper and you shall find that it is pure economics. The basic economic theory of demand and supply. Restrict supply to a minimum; what happens.....? Create hype about something which the public (in this case, even the smallest common denominator) would aspire for and then restrict the supply! Increased demand results in a premium being paid.

This is the truth. The times that we live in also creates more demand for spirituality...and bingo...there are people waiting to take advantage of that opportunity!

Sad, but true.

Cheers!

Anonymous said...

Very True...

That was one reason i said to GOD that i will no visit Tirupati again.

Atleast temples like Vaishno Devi and other prominent places in North India are not commercialized to this extent (if you let go the demands or notorious Pandas of Banaras / Gaya)

Unknown said...

Remember going to Palani always as a kid and then it became so commercialised that I havent been there for the last 11 yrs at least.

Suresh Iyer said...

I found Palani to be less commercial than Tirupati, but that might just be because our visit to Palani was a privileged affair organised by a friend due to his contacts at the temple.