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Sikri Mata Temple

The Sikri Mata Temple, officially known as the Shri Mahamaya Devi Temple, is a Hindu temple at Sikri Khurd village, Ghaziabad district, Uttar Pradesh, India. The temple was built in the 15th century by Jalim Giri Baba and his family, who belonged to the Goswami community of the village. Its administration was taken over from the descendants of Giri Baba by the gram panchayat in 1977. Dedicated to the goddess Sikri, who is believed to be an incarnation of Durga, the temple attracts large gatherings of visitors during the biannual festival of Navaratri. During the Chaitra month of Navaratri, marking the beginning of a new year on the Hindu calendar, a large historical fair is organised for nine days. The fair was cancelled in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic for the first time since 1918. There is a banyan tree on the temple premises from which more than 130 revolutionaries were hanged to death during the Indian Rebellion of 1857.

History
The Shri Mahamaya Devi Temple is located in Sikri Khurd village on the periphery of Modinagar city, Ghaziabad district, Uttar Pradesh. According to the Bhaat records (the Bhaats are people from Alwar, Rajasthan, who traditionally write and preserve family lineage and historical records of the Goswami community), the temple was originally constructed in 1532 CE, during the month of Pausha, on Shukla Paksha Navami, Saturday, at around 8:00 AM, during the reign of Badshah Humayun. The Bhaat documents further state that at the time of its construction, the temple measured 210 hands (hath) in length and 76 hands (hath) in width. There was also an ancient banyan tree (bargad) at the site during the temple’s construction, which still stands on the temple premises today. The temple complex had two entrances, one facing east and the other south, along with a well (kuwa) that was 32 hands (hath) deep. Before the construction of the temple, Jalim Giri Baba, a hermit mahant from the Goswami community, lived at the site in a small hut. According to traditional belief, he experienced a divine darśana (holy vision) of Goddess Durga at this very place. The goddess instructed him to build a temple for her here. After sharing this spiritual revelation with his family and community, the temple was established. Hanging of revolutionaries in 1857 During the Indian Rebellion of 1857 against the rule of the British East India Company, many revolutionaries took shelter in the basement of the temple. More than 130 people were hanged to death and around 30 were shot to death. The tree is still present and pilgrims pay their tribute to it in remembrance of the martyrs. == Administration ==
Administration
The temple was built by the Goswami community of Sikri village, and its administration was initially handled by the descendants of Jalim Giri Baba, who still live in the village. In 1977, the pradhan () of the gram panchayat organized a separate temple management committee, and during that process also evicted the Goswami family and its administration from the temple. Before the takeover, all the offerings in the temple were deposited to the gram panchayat, including earnings from wikt == Temple deity ==
Temple deity
The sanctum sanctorum, garbhagriha, of the temple houses the murti of the primary deity of the temple, the goddess Sikri, who is believed to be an incarnation of the goddess Durga. The devotees of Sikri offer chunari, coconut, and prasāda of cardamom in the temple in her reverence. Idols of other Hindu gods and goddesses are also installed in the temple, which is common in most Hindu temples. Animal sacrifice was a common practice in the temple until 1952 when some teachers of the village, including Aditya Goswami, Pandit Hari Dutt Ved, and their colleagues, protested against this ritual and had it banned. An akhand yagya () is held continuously for three days—the sixth, seventh, and eighth days of the Chaitra month—every year at the place that was earlier used for sacrificing the animals, usually goats and roosters. However, live goats and liquor are still offered to the goddess with a belief that it will please her. == Congregation ==
Congregation
The temple attracts large numbers of devotees from Uttar Pradesh, Delhi, Haryana, Rajasthan, Uttarakhand, and Punjab. The Navaratri festivals in the months of Chaitra and Ashvin (Sharada) witness thousands of visitors attending the temple. Like other places of worship in the country, the temple was closed for visitors and its doors were sealed off by the district administration during the nationwide COVID-19 pandemic lockdown. Its doors were reopened on 9 June 2020 in the presence of a tehsildar who was sent as the representative of the Sub-Divisional Magistrate, representatives of gram panchayat, and Ghaziabad Police officials. The temple mahant () Sunil Kumar performed a special puja in the beginning of the door-opening ceremony. == Navaratri fair ==
Navaratri fair
A large fair, the Devi Mela (), is organised by the temple administration during the nine days of the Navaratri festival of the Chaitra month. Chaitra marks the beginning of the Hindu new year and coincides with the months of March and April on the Gregorian calendar. Security during the festival The temple is provided with security by Uttar Pradesh Police during all nine days of the Navratri festival, with senior officials of both police and district civil administration maintaining a continuous presence because of the large gathering that the temple attracts during these days. Sixteen surveillance cameras have been installed on the temple premises. Door-frame and hand-held metal detectors are used and a dog squad of the Ghaziabad police is deployed especially during the Navaratri fair. == See also ==
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