The Largest Hindu Temple in the USA

Beltane                                    Waxing Planting Moon

The largest Hindu temple in America is in Maple Grove.  Who knew?  I dare  you to find it there, though it’s a big place, set on 80 acres and rising high above the plowed fields to its south.  The location makes it intriguing as it sits next to farms and has a large marshland on its property.  This was my fourth visit to the temple, the first since Indian sculptors finished all the smaller temples, 21 in all, and since the carvings have come almost all the way down the temple facade pictured here.  Not a usual sight in Minnesota.

The Woolly’s met there tonight and heard a presentation on Hinduism by Dr. Sane, the founder of the Children’s Hospital and the energy behind the development of the Hindu Mandir of Minnesota.  We then had a fine Indian dinner served by a temple cook.  Great desert, as usual, but the best nan I’ve ever had.  Worth coming back for the food.

After the meal we adjourned to the main room of the temple which has smaller temples built inside housing the living statues of various Hindu deities. (Sri Durga) The main temple deity is Vishnu and he has the largest temple.  He faces the large ceremonial doors which, when opened, shine the light of the rising sun on his body.  Shiva, Lakshmi, Ganesha and Saraswati also have temples.  Each temple has the superstructure of a particular temple located somewhere in India.

All during our presence in the main temple area, Hindu priests with the Brahmanic thread, shirtless and shoeless, chanted prayers, offered pujas and lit incense.  The smells of the incense transported me to Singapore where my sister Mary and I celebrated Diwali by visiting a couple of temples, shopping in Little India and watching the fire walking in the early am hours of a November morning.

This mandir incarnates the global cosmopolitanism that cities across the world have begun to display.  We’re lucky to have it here.

Potatoes in the Ground

Beltane                               Waxing Planting Moon

Potatoes take some energy to plant.  First you have to dig foot-deep trenches, then you plant the seed potatoes.  After that, you fill the trench back in about 8 inches or so.  Even in my plot’s highly organic soil this involves lifting a lot of mother earth.  Having said that, I love finding potatoes in the soil, like little treasures.  And they taste really good straight out of the ground.  Really good.  (these are not our potatoes.  what a lot of work there.  Whew)

Vega snuck in the garden when my hands were full.  She put the hammer down and raced in a full suspension gallop all around the garden, then came up to me, rolled over and stuck her legs in the air.  Daddy, daddy, I know it was wrong, but I just couldn’t help myself.

Now a nap, then a workout then out to the Temple.

Under the Planting Moon

Beltane                                Waxing Planting Moon

Under the planting moon a large batch of potatoes will hit the soil, companion planted with bush beans.  Nasturtiums go in today, too.  I may have to replant a few things I optimistically sowed a couple of weeks ago.  I knew better.

Finished Wheelock chapter 15.  Gonna let that sink in for today, then I’ll hit the Ovid tomorrow.

Kate and I head out to the new Hindu Mandir in the northwestern burbs tonight for a tour and a meal.  Should be fun.

Goin’ outside.