Char Dham , the guru of
Advaita, who is believed to have started the
Char Dhams The temple is one of the holiest
Hindu Char Dham (four divine sites) sites comprising
Badrinath,
Puri,
Dwarka and
Rameshwaram. Though the origins are not clearly known, the
Advaita school of Hinduism established by
Sankaracharya, who created Hindu monastic institutions across India, attributes the origin of Char Dham to the seer. The four monasteries lie across the four corners of India and their attendant temples are
Badrinath Temple at Badrinath in the North,
Jagannath Temple at Puri in the East,
Dwarakadheesh Temple at Dwarka in the West and Ramanathaswamy Temple at Rameswaram in the South. The temples are revered by the various spiritual traditions of Hinduism, such as
Saivism and
Vaishnavism. The Char Dham pilgrimage is an all Hindu affair. The journey across the four cardinal points in India is considered sacred by Hindus who aspire to visit these temples once in their lifetime. Traditionally the trip starts at the eastern end from Puri, proceeding in clockwise direction in a manner typically followed for circumambulation in Hindu temples. To settle their dispute,
Shiva pierced the three worlds as a huge and endless pillar of light called the
jyotirlinga. Vishnu and Brahma split their ways downwards and upwards respectively to find the end of the light in either directions. Brahma lied that he discovered the end of the pillar in his direction, while Vishnu conceded his defeat. Shiva cursed Brahma that he would have no place in ceremonies while Vishnu would be worshipped till the end of eternity. The
jyotirlinga is regarded to be the supreme partless reality, out of which Shiva partly appears. The
jyotirlinga shrines are believed to be the places where Shiva is said to have appeared as a fiery column of light. Originally, there were believed to have been 64
jyotirlingas, of which the present 12 are considered to be sacred to Shiva. At all these sites, the primary image is the
lingam representing the
stambha pillar, symbolising the infinite nature of Shiva (without beginning or end). The twelve
jyotirlinga are
Somnath at
Veraval in
Gujarat,
Mallikarjuna at
Srisailam in
Andhra Pradesh,
Mahakaleswar at
Ujjain in
Madhya Pradesh,
Omkareshwar in
Madhya Pradesh,
Kedarnath in
Himalayas,
Bhimashankar in
Maharashtra,
Viswanath at
Varanasi in
Uttar Pradesh,
Triambakeshwar in Maharashtra,
Vaidyanath at
Deoghar in
Jharkhand,
Nageswar at
Dwarka in
Gujarat, Rameshwar at
Rameswaram in
Tamil Nadu and
Grishneshwar at
Aurangabad, Maharashtra. This temple is the southernmost of all the twelve Jyotirlingas. ==In the news==