Budhasubba : A Place For True Love And Pilgrimage
Budhasubba
Budhasubba
Budhasubba : St. Valentine’s Day is celebrated every February 14 in his name by working for love. But even without being connected with love, we don’t have to wait till February 14 to reach Buddhasubba, the ‘temple of love’ in Dharan. Every day priests of love come here. The name is engraved on the bamboo trunk without upper part . They tie the thread. And wish them successful love.
The Budhasubba temple complex at Sirani in Dharan is very popular with bamboo lovers. After coming to the Buddhasubba temple, it is customary to write the name on the bamboo and tie the thread. Lately, the fear of losing the originality of bamboo has increased. At present, the temple management has banned the use of names. After not being able to write their names, the love couples started tying the thread.
There is no prohibition on tying a thread to a loving couple. Nowadays, every day when Budhasubba comes and sees a crowd of people tying a pair of threads, it seems that Budhasubba is a god of love. And Buddhasubba is not a loving temple of lesser importance than the Taj Mahal. However, art experts say that the Budhasubba temple itself is not a temple that originated with love.
The story of the Buddhasubba temple and the bamboo
Some consider Budhasubba as the site of the tomb of Kiranti King Buddhikarna Rai, who was killed during the expansion of Nepal by Prithvinarayan Shah. According to Ekthari, a temple was gradually built in the memory of King Roy, who was killed by Prithvinarayan’s army in the Kiranti capital Vijaypur area.
Others say that Budhasubba is the tomb of a perfect Kiranti man. It is said that a perfect man named Budha Subba, Kiranti and his sister Subbini came and tried to kill the crow with a bow. According to the same legend, the bamboo tops of the Buddhasubba temple premises in Dharan were cut off by the bow of Budha Subba.
Some even describe the Budhasubba region as the tomb of Eklavya, a participant in the Mahabharata war from the Kauravas. Tourist activist Vasudev Baral says that Eklavya, who came to perform penance in Buddhasubba of Dharan, has done penance in Budhasubba of Dharan, realizing that even if he loses in the battle of Mahabharata, his brother will lose and even if he wins, his brother will win.
Baral argues that there is a myth that the Ekalavya of the Terai region could not withstand the cold of the Himalayas and was buried in the Budhasubba region.The story of the origin of the Budhasubba temple is connected with mythological, historical and modern angles, so people of all faiths come to it. People of all faiths, Kirati, Vedic, Sanatan and Buddhist come to Buddhasubba temple.
St. Valentine’s Day is celebrated every February 14 in his name by working for love. But even without being connected with love, we don’t have to wait till February 14 to reach Buddhasubba, the ‘temple of love’ in Dharan. Every day priests of love come here. The name is engraved on the bamboo trunk of Tuppobina. They tie the thread. And wish them successful love.
The Buddhasubba temple complex at Sirani in Dharan is very popular with bamboo lovers. After coming to the Budhasubba temple, it is customary to write the name on the bamboo and tie the thread. Lately, the fear of losing the originality of bamboo has increased. At present, the temple management has banned the use of names. After not being able to write their names, the love couples started tying the thread
How to engrave name and pair thread?
The Budhasubba temple is a mythological temple associated with the Mahabharata, a historical temple connected with the Siddha Kirati called Budha Subba and a temple with a modern history connected with the Buddhikarna Rai kingExperts in Budhasubba say that there are some reasons why the Buddhasubba temple, which is associated with war, power games and penance, is not connected with the story of love.
Journalist Bhairav Angla, who is familiar with the history of Buddhasubba, says that the name may have been inscribed gradually as it is a quiet, secluded and unique bamboo of Budhasubba area. “Gradually, the younger generation started coming to this solitude and started writing their names on bamboo,” says Angla. “Later, the same trend may have become like a place of love.”
Basudev Baral, a tourist from Dharan, has the same argument as Angla.As the Budhasubba temple complex is an attractive area surrounded by bamboo, Baral estimates that the temple gradually became a temple of love after people reached Budhasubba with a ‘romantic’ feeling. “How many things come into being, how many things come into being,” says Baral. Now the love couples have made it even more beautiful by making it a love temple. ‘
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