Click here for Part3
Visiting Dwarka (the second home of Lord Krishna) and Somnath (one of the holiest dwadash Jyotirlinga, of Lord Shiva, in Part2) with my parents was my long term dream which finally came true this Diwali. Considering the fact that most of me is very lazy in advance planning, I got tickets easily during Diwali season, which is a big celebration time in Gujarat. Everything went comfortably smooth without us getting tired during such a long journey covered in those 5 days where we traveled 1800+ kms on road and 2½ hours in air (Delhi- >Ahmedabad -> Delhi). “Jai Shree Krishna”.
We started our journey from Haridwar on 27th October early morning and Delhi being our first stop. It’s the very next morning after Diwali, perfect time to travel northern India. We reached Delhi Railway station and then IGI Airport at around 1:30 PM to catch our 5PM flight to Ahmedabad.
Our plan for next 4 days was like this:
Day1: Reach Ahmedabad by evening on 27th, the same night start to Dwarka, the land of Krishna.
Day2: Reach Dwarka on morning of 28th, take rest and visit temples, meet lord Krishna and visit surrounding places whole day, and start for Somnath on 28th night.
Day3: Reach Somnath, (the holy land of Shiva) on early 29thmorning, take rest, visit temples and surrounding places, stay in Somnath on 29th night.
Day4: on 30th Start for Gir forest reserve, be lucky to see some lions, visit temples and places in Junagarh. In Junagarh, catch night bus to Ahmedabad.
Day5: Reach Ahmedabad on 31st morning, take rest, visit ISCON temple, Akshardham temple etc if time allows and in night fly back to Delhi. Reach Delhi; catch a bus/car/train to Haridwar/Hardwar ( हरिद्वार )
I thought I should share the etymology of the word Haridwar. “Hari” ka “dwar” and “Har” ka “dwar” both make sense and have great significance. In Sanskrit “Hari” means Lord Vishnu who resides in Badrinath Dham and Har means Lord “Shiva” who lives in “Kedarnath” . So, Haridwar means "Gateway to Lord Vishnu" and Hardwar stands for "Gateway to Lord Shiva". So, to reach Badrinath and Kedarnath, Haridwar is the place to start your pilgrimage.
Visiting Dwarka (the second home of Lord Krishna) and Somnath (one of the holiest dwadash Jyotirlinga, of Lord Shiva, in Part2) with my parents was my long term dream which finally came true this Diwali. Considering the fact that most of me is very lazy in advance planning, I got tickets easily during Diwali season, which is a big celebration time in Gujarat. Everything went comfortably smooth without us getting tired during such a long journey covered in those 5 days where we traveled 1800+ kms on road and 2½ hours in air (Delhi- >Ahmedabad -> Delhi). “Jai Shree Krishna”.
We started our journey from Haridwar on 27th October early morning and Delhi being our first stop. It’s the very next morning after Diwali, perfect time to travel northern India. We reached Delhi Railway station and then IGI Airport at around 1:30 PM to catch our 5PM flight to Ahmedabad.
Our plan for next 4 days was like this:
Day1: Reach Ahmedabad by evening on 27th, the same night start to Dwarka, the land of Krishna.
Day2: Reach Dwarka on morning of 28th, take rest and visit temples, meet lord Krishna and visit surrounding places whole day, and start for Somnath on 28th night.
Day3: Reach Somnath, (the holy land of Shiva) on early 29thmorning, take rest, visit temples and surrounding places, stay in Somnath on 29th night.
Day4: on 30th Start for Gir forest reserve, be lucky to see some lions, visit temples and places in Junagarh. In Junagarh, catch night bus to Ahmedabad.
Day5: Reach Ahmedabad on 31st morning, take rest, visit ISCON temple, Akshardham temple etc if time allows and in night fly back to Delhi. Reach Delhi; catch a bus/car/train to Haridwar/Hardwar ( हरिद्वार )
I thought I should share the etymology of the word Haridwar. “Hari” ka “dwar” and “Har” ka “dwar” both make sense and have great significance. In Sanskrit “Hari” means Lord Vishnu who resides in Badrinath Dham and Har means Lord “Shiva” who lives in “Kedarnath” . So, Haridwar means "Gateway to Lord Vishnu" and Hardwar stands for "Gateway to Lord Shiva". So, to reach Badrinath and Kedarnath, Haridwar is the place to start your pilgrimage.
tour de gujarat |
Our flight landed at around 6:30 PM at Sardar Patel Airport in Ahmedabad. There is a direct train between Ahmedabad and Haridwar but takes close to 20hrs. If you have enough time and you are big group then there is no better way than railways to do overnight journey , provided you have tickets and reservations which are more like lottery tickets now a days. We hired a prepaid taxi from Airport to “Paldi”. Paldi is the place where most of the private bus operator offices are located. I had booked our bus tickets to Dwarka using Redbus website around 20 days prior to our travel, ours was Patel travels sleeping coach.
Udupi Cafe Menu |
Bus’s departure was at 11 PM so we had ~3 hours for our dinner. We left our luggage at the Patel’s office , I was quite impressed , the booking person politely said don’t worry about your baggage’s and I realized we were in Gujarat , a different state , different culture than other northern states .We found a nice restaurant/cafe near the Paldi traffic signal. It was “Udupi” café/restaurant, a clean place ,little bit crowded but they served delicious food a real value for money. Even small time restaurant in Haridwar are almost twice as expensive as Udupi café @ Paldi.
*DWARKA* is derived from 'Dwar', a door, and in ancient times its flourishing port was considered to be the gateway to the main land. As 'Ka' means 'Brahma' meaning, gateway to Moksha. So our sleeper bus started on time and reached Dwarka town around 6 AM. Road from Ahemdabad to Dwarka was fantastic , around 450kms we covered within 6 hours that’s amazing, if you want to hear , till 1 year back it used to take me around 7-8 hours to cover 200KM from Delhi to Haridwar. That’s where gujarat is shinning. Good roads, good transport , fast connectivity leads to great business.
This was Diwali season so tariff surged even in small time hotels and loadges. We found a hotel , hired a room till 10 PM in 1400 Rs ,it was small but a neat place, recently built. We rested till 10 AM , got freshed , had breakfast in a tea shop , fantastic “Milky tea”, Jalebi , hot Gathia &, dhokla, what else do u need in a place like this.
*DWARKA* is derived from 'Dwar', a door, and in ancient times its flourishing port was considered to be the gateway to the main land. As 'Ka' means 'Brahma' meaning, gateway to Moksha. So our sleeper bus started on time and reached Dwarka town around 6 AM. Road from Ahemdabad to Dwarka was fantastic , around 450kms we covered within 6 hours that’s amazing, if you want to hear , till 1 year back it used to take me around 7-8 hours to cover 200KM from Delhi to Haridwar. That’s where gujarat is shinning. Good roads, good transport , fast connectivity leads to great business.
This was Diwali season so tariff surged even in small time hotels and loadges. We found a hotel , hired a room till 10 PM in 1400 Rs ,it was small but a neat place, recently built. We rested till 10 AM , got freshed , had breakfast in a tea shop , fantastic “Milky tea”, Jalebi , hot Gathia &, dhokla, what else do u need in a place like this.
street @dwarka |
@dwarka |
Dwarkadheesh |
The main Dwarkadheesh temple was nearby so we walked. It’s a very small town, so narrow are the lanes, similar to any other holy Hindu town in India.A walk takes you back in past , many people I saw dressed in typical white or in bright yellow , green , orange clothes just like another “Gopalak” you see in those movies and TV serials.
I could feel the “Krishna Magic” in air everywhere. Camera, cell phones were not allowed. These prohabited gazzettes were kept safe in their locker rooms outside the main temple’s premises. We then entered the Temple through a long queue passing a security check, finally after waiting for 30 minutes in that crowd in the main Hall. The hall looked like a human sea, worshipers standing on their toes to get "darshan" of their beloved “Madhav Murli Manohar”.
gomti river |
Loud chants of “Krishna the Mahayogi” were easing out the long waits for doors to open and curtains to fall while it was becoming difficult to stand in that human pool. And meanwhile few “nutkhat” devotees were trying to enter and join from sides which others didn’t welcome. We had a quick darshan and then came out of temple. Took a walk nearby , had lunch and went back to hotel room till 3 PM. After 3 PM we were part of a guided tour package to visit Beth Dwarika ,Okha, with others in a bus.
On the way we visited “Rukmani Mandir”, “Nageshwar Mahadev”(a dwadash Jyotirlinga), “Gopi Talav”. I loved the legends behind Ruksmani mandir and Gopi Talav. Our guide was Brahmin/pandit cum guide an interesting person. He narrated these stories and everyone in bus believed him.
Gopi Talav |
One legend for Gopi Talav(pond) says, Gopikas were unable to live away from Krishna, offered their lives to the soil of this pond , merged into the soil and turned into yellow clay, known as Gopi Chandan. The soil of the Gopi talav is smooth and yellow in color. It can be bought outside the Talav(pond).
Our guide shared a different legend which is , because thousands of Gopikas flooded to Dwarka to live with Krishna. Overwhelmed Krishna asked Arjun to send them off back to Mathura. Arjun agreed, but he was a bit arrogant on his DhanurKala(archery skills) so Krishna thought of teaching him a lesson. So he magically created some tribe people (bheels) to give Arjun a tough time on his way while he was accompanying by several thousands of those gorgeous Gopikas. Poor Mayavi bheels defeated Arjun and claimed all gopikas , so out of shame all gopi jumped in to this pond and got converted into gopi Chandan.
Rukmani temple |
For Rukmani temple the leagend was narrated by the main priest, it says , once Lord Krishna and his wife Rukmini went to invite Durvasha rishi (sage) at Dwarka. Rishi agreed but on a condition that, if Krishna and Rukmini pull the chariot, later while pulling his chariot, thirsty Rukmini drank water without offering it to Durvasha. So the insulted Rishi cursed Rukmini that she would be separated from her beloved husband. Hence Rukmini temple is located few kms away from main Dwarka mandir. And just FYI as per the priest this is the only Rukmani devi temple in the whole world.
Rukmani temple, CFL |
Rukmani Devi temple's holy water |
Nageshvar Temple |
Nageshvar Temple |
Nageshawar : Located on the way between Dwarka and Bait Dwarka. It is
one of the twelve swayambhu (self-existent) jyothirlingas. The 25 meters
high Shiva statue in the temple premises can be seen far from the road
side.
It’s also known as “Nagnath” temple and represents the removal of evil activities from earth and has myths about its origin.
It’s also known as “Nagnath” temple and represents the removal of evil activities from earth and has myths about its origin.
Our Guide. |
Finally we reached Okha, a small coastal town , you can see fishing village, colonies on route , the dead dried fishy smell welcomes you in this Naval town. Bait Dwarka (भेंट द्वारका ) is located on an island; local boats do ferries between Okha port and Bait Dwarka. We boarded one such boat, getting on to this boat was little scary actually, it was around 5 PM , Sun started setting down ,the unbarricaded down stairs to the boat were overcrowded, a slight stumble by any foot could have lead in a deadly stampede , I opposed to go but no one wanted to leave this opportunity to visit Bait Dwarka after coming so close. Ticket was cheap 10 Rs/person so was around 200 lives. We finally reached the other side of sea , visited the place, "Bait Dwarka temple" and returned Okha in total total dark in a different boat this time. It was scarier this time ; everybody pushing each other and wanted to board the boat first . To add more anxiety the boat’s driver captain stopped it in the middle of sea in dark. Unless ticket collector finishes collecting rupee 10 from each passenger Captain refused to move the boat, now this act was horribly cheap. most of us were in panic as we had buses to catch from Dwarka and it was getting late in the middle of the sea.
@boat, see the captain |
port from boat, a waiting human sea |
'Bait Dwarka' main gate |
boat while returning from bait dwarka, it was a real bait |
We finally reached Okha port, ran to reach our mini bus in that pitch dark parking. Dwarka was still 30 KMs away. From there we had to catch bus to “Somnath”. So a very tiring day well spent in visiting so many important holy places in Lord Krishna’s town.
Next day it’s Somnath , in Part2, till then "Jai Shree Krishna.Please do leave your comments (good oR bad) about my attempt. Else you can also click on this Google's +1 button ,below. It means a lot to me.
BD |
jai shree krishna!
ReplyDeletelovely post!
Your journey, your description of your journey, your photographs and your retelling of the stories behind this place are a wonderful testimony of your faith, your mission, and the importance of your being. May you continue to bring value to the lives of others through your blog.
ReplyDeleteI realized its importance today, well thanks a lot for your time and so inspiring comments and ignoring my mistakes in this writeup.
DeleteNice trip... +1'd...
ReplyDeletehave spent a lot of years in Gujarat...
tnx alot for reading it and cool that you +1'd
DeleteBeautiful post! Reading it, I felt like visiting it in person.. Thanks for sharing..
ReplyDeleteLooks great!! Have to plan a visit to Gujarat soon..
ReplyDeleteGreat Blog Bhupi!! I being a gujarati can visualize lot of things..Description is amazing.. You should visit more place and write about it.
ReplyDeleteThanks alot for visiting blog, @magiceye , @Subhorup Dasgupta, @quetzalcoatl @Arti and @Arun .I wish you visit Gujarat soon.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jyoti!! I really loved this trip and Gujarat. The Gir Reserve and Junagarh visit are still to write. I hope you will read and like the last edition of this trip as well.
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