The world is such an eclota temple, where the mother is worshiped by stones, not of coconut, the connection is related to the Dwapar Yuga
AWESOME NEWS DESK !!! We all worship the idol of God in the temple with great reverence and offer offers. We worship that idol as God. But do you know that there is also a temple where people offer stones to God, not flowers. You couldn’t believe, but it is true. Actually, the idea of worshiping Bagdai Mai van Bilaspur is something like this, where people offer stones to the mother, not to tell you that Mata Bagdai is sitting in the town of Khamtarai, just 5 kilometers from the city of Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh. What puts the tradition of stones on Mata Bagdai here, says Pandit Ashwani Tiwari, the lead priest of the temple, that everything that is said about the glory of Adishakti Mata Bagdai Devi is much less. According to historians about Mata Bagdai, there was a dense forest in the village of Khamtarai. There was no way to come here and Stranger was afraid before coming here. At the time, only a few people lived in Khamtarai Village. The sidewalk was the only way to reach the temple. Because of what people traveled earlier. People who go through the road often began to realize the glory of the goddess and her divine power. He went through the footpath at any time. One day, the priest of the temple sees a divine light shining with a footstone coming out of the ground in the dream. After seeing it, Pandit called his dreams to the locals and then went to look with some people. But at the time, the pandit understood nothing, because the scene that Pandit saw in the dream was visible to Pandit’s eyes. After seeing this whole scene with their own eyes, the people present there decided that this country is basically no ordinary stone, it is a divine power. At the time, people had less understanding, so to please the divine power, only the spine stone was offered on the ground instead of coconut, flowers, incense sticks and sweets. Since then, the people of the town of Khamtarai have begun the tradition of offering stones and living a happy life. Because of his stay in the forest for the worship of divine power, he got his name Vanadevi. Share this story -tags