Hinduism - Where Is The Omkareshvar Tirtha In India?

 


On an island in the Narmada River in Madhya Pradesh, some fifty miles southeast of Indore, there is a temple and a holy spot (tirtha).

According to the early speculative books known as the Upanishads, the temple is called after its presiding deity, the god Shiva in his appearance as the "Lord of [the sound] Om," an utterance said to signify the whole universe.

Omkareshvar is one of the twelve jyotirlingas, or Shiva's special places on the planet.

According to the legendary charter of the place, Shiva arrives to thank the sage Mandhata for his hard asceticism (tapas) in order to see Shiva.

The depiction at the site is of Shiva as a "self manifested" (svayambhu) form—an unshaped, roundish black stone coming from the soil, with a white stone adjacent said to represent a manifestation of Shiva's bride, Parvati.

Viewing this sight, like it did for Mandhata, is said to grant all of one's wishes.

The location is open for worship throughout the year, but there is a significant bathing (snana) event on Kartik Purnima, the full moon in the lunar month of Kartik (October–November).

~Kiran Atma


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