Sita Mai Temple

The Sītā Māī Temple is an ancient structure situated in the village of Sitamai in the Karnal district of Haryana in North India. It is at a distance of 19 kilometers from Nilokheri and lies on one of the alternative routes available to travel between Karnal and Kaithal. This is perhaps the only temple in the whole of India that is solely dedicated to the Hindu Goddess Sita, the divine consort of Sri Ram of Ayodhya.

Contents

The structure

The temple is made of bricks and the striking feature is the elaborate ornamentation, which covers the whole shrine. The pattern of the shrine is formed by deep lines in the individual bricks, which seem to have been made before the bricks were burnt. This means that the forms they were to take must have been separately fixed for each brick when the temple must have been originally designed.[1]

History

During the period of the Delhi Sultanate, the invaders tampered with the shrine. Mughal soldiers were asked to pull down the temple and the bricks were thrown into the tank. The original bricks have been put together again without any regard to the original pattern.[2]

Kaushiks are the major mahants of this Math.

Significance

The temple stands on the spot where the Goddess Mother Earth split open, to allow Sita to repose in her bosom, in answer to Her appeal, in proof of Her sinlessness.

References

  1. ^ Page 226, Report on the Revision of Settlement of the Panipat Tahsil & Karnal Parganah, By Denzil Ibbetson, Published 1883, Printed at the Pioneer Press
  2. ^ Page 46, Karnal District, 1975 By K. K. Aggarwal, Published 1975 by N. K. Tandon