Shree Vajreshwari Yogini Devi Mandir
Located in the town Vajreshwari, 75 km away from Mumbai, the Shree Vajreshwari Yogini Devi Mandir is a famous temple dedicated to the goddess Vajreshwari. Earlier the town was known as Vadvali and renamed to Vajreshwari in the honour of the presiding deity of the temple. The original temple of Vajreshwari was at Gunj, five miles (8 km) north of Vadavli and was moved to Vadvali after its destruction by the Portuguese. In 1739, Chimaji Appa - the younger brother and military commander of Peshwa Baji Rao I ordered his Subhedar Shankar Keshav Phadke to build the Vajreshwari temple in honour of the Goddess to celebrate his victory against Portuguese.
location Maharashtra, Thane, Mumbai
Legend
According to the legends, thousands of years ago, a demon
named Kalikala or Kalikut or Kali troubled the people in the region of Vadvali
and waged a war against the devas. Distressed by the demon, the gods and sages
headed by Vashishta performed the TriChandi yagna to please the Goddess. An
aahuti (offering of ghee in yagna) was not granted to Indra. Enraged by this,
Indra hurled his Vajra at the yagna and the terrified gods and sages prayed to
the Goddess to save them. The Goddess appeared in all her glory at the site and
not only swallowed the Vajra but also killed the demons. Rama requested the
Goddess to stay in the region of Vadvali and be known as Vajreshwari. Thus, the
Vajreshwari temple was established in this region. According to another legend,
Indra and other devas went to goddess Parvati and requested her to help them to
kill the demon Kalikala. Goddess Parvati assured them that she would come to
their aid at the right time and ordered them to fight with the demon. In the
battle, Kalikala swallowed or broke all weapons thrown at him. Finally, Indra
threw the Vajra at the demon, which Kalikala broke into pieces. From the Vajra
emerged the Goddess, who destroyed the demon. The devas extolled her as
Vajreshwari and built a temple for the Goddess.
Architecture
The Nagarkhana in the main entrance gate was built by the
Gaikwads, Maratha dynasty of Baroda. The temple is also surrounded by a stone
wall like a fort. The fifty two stone steps leading to the temple and the
Deepamala (a tower of lights) in front of the temple were built by Nanasaheb
Chandavadakar, a moneylender from Nashik. The main shrine has three sections:
the main inner sanctum (Garbha graha), another sanctum, and a pillared mandapa
(assembly hall). The Grabha-griha houses six idols. The sanctum outside the
Garbhagriha has idols of Ganesha, Bhairava, Hanuman and local deities like
Moraba devi.
Culture
The Mumbai culture is a blend of traditional festivals,
food, music and theaters. It is the busiest cosmopolitan city of India holding
its age-old culture. Marathi is the official language of the people of Mumbai.
Darsan Info
Morning 05:30 AM To 09:00 PM
Darsan Dresscode
Wear traditional dress code on festival days and avoid
shorts for men
Famous Festival
Vasanti Navaratra, Ashwin-Kolagiri pournima, Deepavali, Shri
Dattajayanti, Holi, Hanuman Jayanti
Temple Rituals
Temple Opening and First Aarti Time : Morning 05:30 AM
Second Ritual /
Aarti of Goddess : 11:15 AM
Naivedya timings :
11:30 AM to 12:00 PM
Evening Ritual
(Paadha Pooja) : 07:00 PM
Evening Aarti :
08:15 PM
Final Ritual and
Temple Closed : 09:00 PM
Kindly note, During festive season ritual timings may change
as required.
Additional Info
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