India's Pilgrimage sites are also known
as tirathas(fords), crossings between the worldly and
divine spheres. A tiratha may be a river such as, Ganges, or a mountain peak,
such as mount Kailash - the mysthical Himalayan retreat of Lord Shiva. Several tirathas
are places where the Gods are belived to descended to earth, and which may then
act as gateways for thr pilgrim to divine realms. There are seven sacred cities
in Hindu India, which are the principal pilgrimage centers : Varanasi and
Hardwar on the river Ganges, Ayodhya, the birthplace of lord
Rama; Mathura, Lord krishna's Birthplace; Dwarka, where the
adult Krishna ruled as a king and where the krishna Vasudeva was born; Kanchipuram,
the great Shaivite temple city of Tamil Nadu; and ujjan, site every twelve
years of Kumbha Mela.
The most holy pilgrimage for a Hindu is
to make is around the four divine "abodes" that stand
at the cardinal compass points of the mythological map of India :
Badrinath(in the north)high in
the Himalayas near the source of Ganges,associated with Lord Shiva.
Puri(in the east),important to
devotees of lord krishna. Puri holds a "Rath Yatra" every year at the end of
the june month.The Jagannath Temple of Puri is one of the four most famous holy
pilgrimages of the Hindus.Images of the god Jagannath(a form of
Krishna) and his brother Balbhadra and sister Subhadra are placed in giant
large yellow chariots or raths which are then drawn by pilgrims.
Rameshwaram(in the south), as
the name suggests is related to Lord Rama;and Dwarka (in the west), is
also associated with Lord krishna. Rameshwaram is an island between mainland
India and srilanka, which Rama is said to have crossedon his journey to rescue
his wife Sita from Ravana.