Islamabad: As many as 200 Hindu pilgrims, most of them from India, were overwhelmed with emotions as they prayed at the 100-year-old renovated Maharaja Paramhans Ji mandir in Pakistan on Sunday amidst tight security, a year after the temple was demolished by a mob belonging to a radical Islamist party.
The delegation of Hindus -- nearly 200 from India, 15 from Dubai and the rest from the US and other Gulf states -- performed religious rituals at a sacred shrine of the temple in the restive northwestern Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province on Sunday, the Dawn newspaper reported.
The temple and 'Samadhi' of Paramhans Ji in Karak district's Teri village of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa underwent extensive repair last year after it was demolished by an angry mob in 2020, an incident that was condemned globally.
The Indian pilgrims crossed over through the Wagah Border near Lahore, and were escorted to the temple by armed personnel.
The pilgrims were overwhelmed with emotions as they praised the security as well as other arrangements, the report said.
We felt as if we had entered paradise when we reached here, said Varona Malohtra, a pilgrim from New Delhi.
She said that she was fortunate enough to visit this Samadhi' and she felt so much spiritual peace at such a holy place.
The visibly emotional pilgrim hoped that in future, pilgrims from both India and Pakistan would be visiting holy sites situated in both the countries.
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Because of the hospitality extended to us in Pakistan and specially in this province, we felt ourselves at home, Malohtra said.
Another pilgrim, Aishwar Das, said around 200 of the pilgrims had come from India of which 15 were from New Delhi.