Eighteen Attacks, Yet the Lord Never Left
The history of the Jagannath Temple at Puri is not merely the story of a magnificent shrine. It is the story of an unbroken faith that survived the rise and fall of kingdoms, the fury of invasions, and the passage of centuries.
Traditional temple records, especially the Madala Panji, tell us that the temple faced eighteen major attacks. Kings came and went. Empires flourished and faded. Invaders sought its treasures and attempted to silence its worship. Yet, every time darkness seemed to prevail, the light of Lord Jagannath returned.
How?
Because a temple is not made of stone alone.
Whenever danger approached, the devoted Daita servitors and countless unnamed devotees carried the Lord to safety. Sometimes He was hidden in forests, sometimes in caves, sometimes in distant villages and forts. More precious than the wooden forms was the sacred Brahma Padartha, the divine mystery that resides within the deities. Protecting it became their sacred duty.
The temple could be damaged.
Its treasures could be looted.
Its rituals could be interrupted.
But faith could not be conquered.
The most remembered of these invasions is that of Kalapahad in 1568, when the deities were desecrated. Yet even then, the sacred essence of the Lord was preserved. Within a few years, under King Ramachandra Deva I, new wooden deities were consecrated, and worship resumed. The Lord returned to His people, just as the sun rises after the darkest night.
This history teaches a profound lesson.
Evil may win a battle, but it cannot win forever. Dharma has an extraordinary ability to renew itself. What is protected by sincere hearts can never truly be destroyed.
The eighteen attacks on Jagannath Temple are therefore not eighteen stories of defeat. They are eighteen testimonies to courage, devotion, and resilience. Every generation accepted the responsibility of safeguarding the Lord—not because He needed protection, but because protecting dharma transformed ordinary people into extraordinary devotees.
Even today, when millions gather for the Rath Yatra, they celebrate more than a festival. They celebrate the triumph of hope over fear, faith over violence, and continuity over destruction.
Perhaps that is why Lord Jagannath is called the Lord of the Universe.
He reminds us that while buildings may fall and kingdoms may disappear, truth, devotion, and divine grace continue their eternal journey—just as His chariot continues to roll, century after century, carrying hope for all humanity.
This episode of Jagannath's history is ultimately not about repeated invasions. It is about the remarkable resilience of a civilization whose faith endured every trial and emerged stronger each time.
1568: The Day Jagannath Left His Temple, But Never His People
The year 1568 marks one of the darkest chapters in the history of the Jagannath Temple at Puri.
Kalapahad, the general of the Bengal Sultanate, invaded Odisha after the fall of the Gajapati kingdom. His forces entered Puri, plundered the temple, and desecrated the sacred deities. For the devotees of Lord Jagannath, it was a moment of unimaginable sorrow.
Yet this is not a story of defeat.
Long before the invaders reached the sanctum, the temple servitors had acted with remarkable courage and foresight. Their greatest concern was not the temple's wealth, nor even the wooden images of the Lord. Their sacred duty was to protect the mysterious Brahma Padartha—the divine essence that is transferred from one set of deities to the next during the sacred Nabakalebara ceremony.
Tradition tells us that although Kalapahad damaged the deities, the sacred essence was rescued by devoted servants of the Lord. Hidden with great secrecy, it was preserved until peace returned.
Years later, King Ramachandra Deva I restored the worship of Lord Jagannath. New wooden deities were carved according to ancient tradition, the Brahma Padartha was reverentially installed within them, and daily worship resumed. For this great service, the king came to be known as the "Abhinava Indradyumna"—the new Indradyumna, recalling the legendary king who first established Lord Jagannath's worship.
This episode teaches a timeless truth.
Temples may be attacked.
Sacred images may be damaged.
Kingdoms may rise and fall.
But faith, when carried in devoted hearts, cannot be destroyed.
The story of 1568 is therefore not merely about an invasion. It is about the courage of humble servants who risked everything to preserve a tradition. It is about a people who refused to let worship cease. It is about the resilience of dharma, which, though tested, always finds a way to rise again.
Today, when millions pull the chariots of the Rath Yatra, they celebrate more than a festival. They celebrate the enduring truth that Lord Jagannath may leave His temple for a time, but He never leaves His devotees.
For wherever devotion lives, Jagannath is present.
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