2 Jun
Baladevi Mandir - Balhama
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Information uncovered during the Shaankara Jyoti Prakasha initiative to document Adi Shankara's continuing civilizational legacy.
Adi Shankaracharya's Visit
- The Bālā Devī Āsthāpana at village Balahama is situated approximately thirteen kilometres from Srinagar, bounded by the villages of Wuyān to the east, Khānmoh and Zewan to the north, and Pampore to the west, accessible via link roads from the national highway through Sempore and Pampore.
- The sacred heart of the Āsthāpana is a massive ancient tree — itself an object of veneration — beneath whose canopy a structured precinct has been raised housing multiple vigrahas in a single sacred assembly: the central image is that of Bālā Devī herself, to her left stands the vigraha of Lalitā, and to her right Śrī Devī. Around this central assembly, around twenty stone images of gods and goddesses painted with vermilion are enshrined within the precinct, alongside a Śivalinga — the entire complex constituting an open-air, tree-centred sacred enclosure.
- The vigraha assembly under the great tree carries a layered history of consecration that the living tradition at the Āsthāpana preserves with precision. The Devī vigraha itself is identified as pre-Śaṅkara in origin — the oldest stratum of the site's sacred life — while four further vigrahas are held to be direct anugraha installations by Ādi Śaṅkarācārya: Śrī Rāma in the Koḍaṇḍarāma form, two Añjaneya vigrahas, and a Gaṇapati vigraha, installed upon two pillars within the precinct.
- The tradition records that Jaganmātā gave darśana to Ādi Śaṅkarācārya at this very kshetra in her Bālā rūpa — and that Parameśvara himself appeared and confirmed to the Ācārya that it was indeed Jaganmātā who had manifested before him in that form — a double divine confirmation of the site's Śākta identity that places the Āsthāpana among the most theologically significant Devī-darśana events in the Kaśmīra corridor of the Digvijaya.
- Behind the temple stands a second massive tree — distinct from the great tree of the central precinct — which local memory identifies as the tree beneath which Ādi Śaṅkarācārya rested and stayed during his time at this kshetra, its living presence carrying the unbroken oral memory of his sojourn here across the centuries.
The above findings are based on local recitations and living traditions, as well as inscriptions and markers observed at the site, supported by available historical references, certain scientific observations, and guidance from the Shastras. As our understanding continues to evolve, we will update this account from time to time as additional insights and information emerge from local communities and further study.
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