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Standing on the western bank of India's holiest river Ganges, Varanasi is
the oldest surviving city of the world and the cultural capital of India. It
is in the heart of this city that there stands in its fullest majesty the Kashi Vishwanath Temple in which is enshrined the Jyotirlinga of Shiva,
Vishweshwara or Vishwanatha. Here gravitate the teeming millions of India to
seek benediction and spiritual peace by the darshan of this Jyotirlinga
which confers liberation from the bondages of maya and the inexorable
entanglements of the world. A simple glimpse of the Jyotirlinga is a
soul-cleansing experience that transforms life and puts it on the path of
knowledge and bhakti. Vishweshwara Jyotirlinga has a very special and unique
significance in the spiritual history of India. Tradition has it that the
merits earned by the darshan of other jyotirlinga scattered in various parts
of India accrue to devotee by a single visit to Kashi Vishwanath Temple.
Deeply and intimately implanted in the Hindu mind, the Kashi Vishwanath
Temple has been a living embodiment of our timeless cultural traditions and
highest spiritual values. The Temple has been visited by all great saints-
Adi Shankaracharya, Ramkrishna Paramhansa, Swami Vivekanand, Goswami Tulsidas, Maharshi Dayanand Saraswati, Gurunanak and several other spiritual
personalities. The Kashi Vishwanath Temple attracts visitors not only from
India but abroad as well and thereby symbolises man's desire to live in
peace send harmony with one another. Vishwanath being a supreme repository of
this spiritual truth thus strengthens the bonds of universal brotherhood and
fellow feeling at the national as well as global levels. On January 28, 1983
the temple was taken over by the Govt. of Uttar Pradesh and it's management
ever since stands entrusted to a Trust with Dr. Vibhuti Narayan Singh.
Former Kashi Naresh, as president and an Executive Committee with Divisional
Commissioner as Chairman. The Temple in the present shape was built way back
in 1780 by Late Maharani Ahilya Bai Holkar of Indore. In the year 1785 a Naubatkhana was built up in front of the Temple by the then Collector Mohd.
Ibrahim Khan at the instance of Governor General Warren Hastings. In 1839,
Two domes of the Temple were covered by gold donated by Punjab Kesari
Maharaja Ranjeet Singh. Third dome still remains uncovered, Ministry of
culture & Religious affairs of U.P. Govt. is taking keen interest for gold
plating of third dome of Temple.
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