Saturday, November 15, 2025

Bathed in golden light.

 On the banks of the sacred Ganga,

Where time itself bows low,

Stands Kashi — Shiva’s ancient city,

Where light forever glows.


Before the stars were woven,

Before the sun first shone,

Shiva placed His jyoti there —

A flame that’s never gone.


A temple rose around Him,

Where sages walked in grace,

Where bells woke up the morning,

And peace filled every space.


But winds of fate were restless,

And storms of war blew near,

Invaders struck the holy shrine

Again and yet again, year after year.


Stone walls fell, but not the faith

Of hearts in Kashi’s lane.

Though temples broke a thousand times,

Devotion stood unstained.


Todar Mal restored the shrine,

With Akbar’s gentle nod,

And once again the city sang

The praises of its God.


But Aurangzeb’s command arrived—

Dark clouds across the sky,

The temple fell, a mosque arose,

And many hearts ran dry.


Yet still a lamp kept flickering

Beside the Gyanvapi well,

For no one stops the river’s flow,

And faith no force can quell.


Then came a queen with moonlit soul—

Ahilyabai, the brave.

She built anew the golden home

For Vishvanath, to save.


Under her hands, the temple bloomed,

A lotus in the dust;

She carved with love, she built with hope,

And offered it in trust.


Ranjit Singh crowned its domes with gold,

That caught the morning light,

So Kashi glowed like Shiva’s smile

Through every sacred night.


Centuries turned like prayer beads,

Yet Kashi stayed the same—

A living hymn, a whispered vow,

A spark of Shiva’s flame.


And in our time, the Lord returned

With pathways wide and free;

The Corridor once more revealed

The Ganga’s melody.


Today the bells ring stronger,

The lamps burn high and bright;

The Lord of all the universe

Stands bathed in golden light.


And so the tale of Vishvanath

Is not of stone alone—

It is the tale of endless love

Where Shiva keeps His throne.


For temples rise and temples fall,

But hearts that chant His name

Will guard His city, guard His light,

And keep alive His flame.

History of the Kashi Vishvanath Temple

1. The Sacred Beginning

Kashi (Varanasi) is considered the oldest living city in the world. Scriptures say:

Lord Shiva himself established this city.

On the bank of the river Ganga, he manifested as the Jyotirlinga – Shri Vishvanath, the Lord of the Universe.

References to the temple appear in the Skanda Purana, Kashi Khanda, and numerous ancient texts. For thousands of years it has been considered the spiritual heart of Bharat.

2. Ancient Temple (Pre-11th Century)

The earliest known structure stood in Gyanvapi area. Pilgrims, sages, and scholars visited Kashi to see the Jyotirlinga.

Kashi was a center of knowledge, philosophy, and devotion; the temple stood at its centre.

3. Medieval Era — Destruction and Rebuilding

The temple’s story is a story of resilience. It has been destroyed and rebuilt several times due to invasions.

a) 1194 CE — First Major Destruction

Qutb-ud-din Aibak, commander of Muhammad Ghori, destroyed the temple.

A simple shrine soon came up again because the people of Kashi refused to let the deity fade.

b) 15th Century

During the rule of Iltutmish and later sultans, the temple faced restrictions, yet devotees continued worship in temporary shrines.

c) 1585–1594 CE — Rebuilt by Raja Todar Mal

With support from Akbar and his finance minister Raja Todar Mal, the temple was re-established in grandeur.

This was a flourishing period for Kashi.

d) 1669 CE — Aurangzeb’s Demolition

Aurangzeb ordered the temple’s destruction.

A mosque named Gyanvapi Masjid was constructed at the site.

The Gyanvapi Well and a part of the temple complex survived; devotees continued to worship these remnants.

This period marks one of the most sensitive phases in Kashi’s history.

4. The Modern Temple — Queen Ahilyabai Holkar (1777–1780 CE)

A turning point.

The Maratha queen Ahilyabai Holkar of Indore, known for building temples across India, decided to restore the sacred Jyotirlinga.

With great devotion, she built the present Kashi Vishvanath temple a short distance from the original spot.

This structure largely resembles the temple we see today.

Her contribution is celebrated every year in Kashi.

5. 19th Century – The Golden Spires

In 1839, Maharaja Ranjit Singh of Punjab donated one tonne of gold to plate the temple’s domes.

Later additional gold plating was done by the Holkars and other patrons.

Thus the temple became famous as the Golden Temple of the North.

6. 20th Century – Protection, Renovations

Various kings of Kashi (the Kashi Naresh) and later the Government of India continued restoration, ensuring the temple remained accessible and sacred for devotees.

7. 21st Century — The Kashi Vishvanath Corridor

A landmark transformation.

In 2019–2021, the Kashi Vishvanath Corridor project was undertaken.

The aim was to connect the temple directly to the Ganga ghats, open up the congested area, and restore the ancient city’s dignity.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated it in December 2021.

The corridor has enlarged the complex, beautified the surroundings, and revived Kashi’s spiritual heritage.

This marks a new era—restoring the ancient glory of Vishvanath’s city while preserving its living traditions.

8. Religious Significance

The Kashi Vishvanath temple is one of the 12 Jyotirlingas and is believed to:

Grant moksha to devotees.

Be the place where Lord Shiva whispers the Taraka Mantra in the ear of a dying person, liberating the soul.

Be the spiritual axis of the universe, according to many scriptures.

A visit to Kashi Vishvanath is considered equivalent to visiting all the other tirthas.

The history of the Kashi Vishvanath Temple is a story of devotion stronger than destruction, a flame that has never been extinguished:

Established in antiquity

Destroyed multiple times

Rebuilt with unwavering faith

Crowned in gold

Revived again in the 21st century

Kashi stands as the eternal city, and Vishvanath the eternal Lord at its heart.

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