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Kedarnath: Lingam, Idols and Nandi Survive the Monsoon Fury

DEHRADUN: Devastated by Sunday afternoon's flash-floods, the whole of Kedarnath town in Rudraprayag stands virtually razed but for the 1200-year-old temple built by Adi Shankaracharya jutting out amid the six feet deep layer of mud and rocks. However, heartening news for the faithful is that the statues and the lingam inside the Lord Shiva temple, as well as his mount, Nandi the bull, adorning the 250ft x70ft courtyard, are intact.

"Call it a miracle but the Nandi statue and the other idols in the temple are intact," an official told news agencies here, adding that the few pilgrims who were inside the temple when the cloud burst, too, have survived. The temple isn't free of any damage, though. Made of large stone slabs on a rectangular platform, the temple exhibits fine masonry and sits at 3,584 metres in the Himalayas around 140 miles north of Rishikesh.

Adi Shankaracharya's samadhi, or the place where his soul consciously exited his body and where his body lies buried, is under the debris. There's no sight of another ancient Bhairav temple not far from the Kedarnath shrine, though.

"The destruction all around the temple has been terrible," said the official, adding that the real death toll would eventually be much higher than officially stated 150 so far.

Quote of the day

May He who is the Brahman of the Hindus, the Ahura-Mazda of the Zoroastrians, the Buddha of the Buddhists, the Jehovah of the Jews, the Father in Heaven of the Christians give strength to you to carry out your noble idea.…

__________Swamy Vivekananda