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When Pollution Tries to Kill God (standard:non fiction, 859 words) | |||
Author: Juggernaut | Added: Jun 30 2013 | Views/Reads: 3001/1919 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
The air pollution around the Hindu temple was so bad, god has to reincarnate to protect himself from the pollution. | |||
When Pollution Try to Kill God Subba Rao The temple of Lord Venketeswara in South India is the richest in the country only comparable to the famous Golden Temple of Amritsar for annual revenues amounting to millions of dollars from worshipers. The deity of Lord Venketeswara was adorned with layers of gold jewelry studded with diamonds, rubies and emeralds; each gold necklace could weigh several pounds. The jewelry on the deity would put crown jewels in London to the shame. Plans are now under way to cover the entire temple with gold. Kings in ancient past donated enormous wealth to the temple after victories in the battle fields as a gratitude for the Lord's blessings. The Lord demands and collects payback for rewarding the wishes of his devotees. If a devotee was to promise the deity100 dollars if his wish comes true to get admission into an American University, he would certainly fulfill his promise on getting the admission. If he fails, an unexpected hurdle could scuffle his prospects of getting a student visa in the last minute at the US embassy. No devotee never ever even thinks of braking promise to the deity. If a devotee delays payback, the Lord was known to collect it with compound interest in some other form sooner or later. Thus, the Lord is also goes by a favorite nickname debt collector. Most towns have a small temple of Lord Venketeswara to serve the local devotees so they don't have to travel a long distance to the original temple to see real deity. The cash flow at the Hindu temples were so lucrative, the British during their rule demanded a cut and came out with a cash sharing plan with the temple priests. Money offerings dropped into the donation lock-boxes at the temple belongs to the government and the priests would keep any money dropped on the collection plate. When country got independence from Britain, the new government continued the British business model and went further to nationalize the temples to place the priests on a salary like government workers. The priests fought back and retained their rights to keep the money left by the devotees on the collection plate. This cash sharing plan still operates in many temples. On the break waters of deep sea port, the temple of Lord Venketeswara on a hillock was very popular in southern city of Visakhapatnam. Juggernaut was born and raised in this seaside town. Click here to read the rest of this story (83 more lines)
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