Sacred Places of Interest

Introduction    Krishna Balarama Mandir and ISKCON     Kaliya Ghata
Radha Madan Mohan     Banke Bihari     Radha Vallabha     Seva Kunja
Imli Tala     Radha Damodara, Jiva and Rupa Goswami's Samadhi's and Bhajan Kutira
Radha Syamasundara     Radha Raman     Radha Gokulanada     Kesi Ghata
Radha Gopinatha     Gopisvara Mahadeva     Vamsi Vata     64 Samadhis
Radha Govinda
      Nandagram     Varsana

Radha Govinda Temple  

This Deity was established by Srila Rupa

Goswami who was ordered by Lord Chaitanya to excavate all the lost holy places of Vrindavana. Five thousand years earlier, Lord Krishna's grandson, Vajranaba, installed a number of important Deities in Vrindavana, Govindaji was one of these Deities. Rupa Goswami searched all over Vrindavana to locate the Yogapith, the resting place of the original Deity of Govindaji, but after months of searching, the Deity could not be found. Rupa Goswami, feeling disappointed, came and sat by the bank of the Yamuna and shedding tears, began calling the name of Lord Chaitanya - “Ha Chaitanya, Ha Chaitanya” (Oh Chaitanya). Suddenly, Lord Krishna in the guise of a beautiful brijvasi boy appeared and informed Rupa Goswami that a cow came every day to a nearby hillock, and emptied its milk into a hole on the hilltop. He asked Rupa to accompany him to the place and see what might be in the hole. Rupa Goswami followed the boy and upon reaching the spot, the boy disappeared. Looking within the milk drenched hole, Rupa Goswami immediately fell unconscious in a wave of ecstatic emotions. When he recovered, he summoned the local people who excavated the hole and found the beautiful Deity of Lord Govinda. The loud cries of “He Govinda, He Krishna” suddenly reverberated throughout the sky.

The construction of the temple of Radha Govinda began under the guidance of Raghunath Bhatta Goswami and his disciples headed by Raja Man Singh of Jaipur some time after 1570. It was the most impressive edifice that Hindu art had ever produced in the whole of Northern India. It towered into the sky seven stories high and was built on top of the hill where the Deity was first discovered, making it the tallest building in this part of India. The temple was completed in 1590.
Less than one hundred years later, Emperor Aurangzeb, the Muslim zealot, was standing on the ramparts of his fort at Agra, and noticed a bright light burning in the far distance. Upon being informed that this was a large ghee lamp kept atop the Radha Govinda temple in Vrindavana, he became furious that a Hindu shrine was taller than any Muslim building and immediately ordered its destruction. By the time the soldiers arrived, Lord Govindadeva and all the important Deities of Vrindavana had been moved to safer places. The soldiers of Aurangzeb dismantled the top floors of the Govindaji temple and desecrated the sanctum sanctorum as well as mutilated all the stone carvings within the temple.

Timings: 
Darsana 8 am -12:30 pm and 4 pm-9 pm

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