-
 Argentinians sing bhajans in their own Hastinapur
Buenos Aires: Few in India would know about the city of Hastinapur in
Argentina. People here too pay obeisance to Indian gods and the Pandava
princes who ruled the Indian city by the same name thousands of years ago.

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    [image: Argentinians sing bhajans in their own Hastinapur]
 Hastinapur was the capital of an ancient Indian kingdom. The throne of this
kingdom was the prize over which the Kurukshetra war was fought between the
Kauravas and their cousins, the Pandavas. But far away in place and time
exists its namesake.
Spread across 12 acres near the Argentine capital of Buenos Aires,
Hastinapur houses about a dozen temples of Indian gods. The air around this
holy place is filled with the scent of agarbatties (incense sticks) as
devotees gather in droves to gain wisdom.
Statues of deities are placed in a flower garden, some stand on pedestals,
while some hang on the side walls and pillars. Lord Ganesh, Krishna, Surya,
Narayana and Shiva have their own temples, and the Pandavas too have one.
"The dozen Argentines who live there look after the gods and the place.
During weekend, the human population increases to over one hundred," says R.
Viswanathan, Indian ambassador to Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay.
"Many Argentines visit Hastinapur as a retreat from the hectic life of
Buenos Aires which is about 50 km away," he says. They meditate and read
books on philosophy in the quiet natural environment of Hastinapur.
Argentinians go there for wisdom. They learn philosophy, practise yoga,
meditate and sing bhajans. That is why it is called 'ciudad de la
sabiduria', or the city of wisdom The temple caretakers cook vegetarian food
and share it with the children from poor families in the neighbourhood.
The only sound here comes from the nesting of birds in trees and the humming
of bhajan songs by devotees. The place, surrounded by a serene greenery of
rosewood trees, witnesses over a hundred visitors during weekends.


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