Lord Ram
Maryada-purushottam Ram — the ideal king, in stillness.
Two sprawling thematic gardens — Rasleela Udyan and Nilkanth Leela Udyan — and a long avenue of saintly statues. Walk slowly. The garden is a darshan.
रासलीला उद्यान · श्रीकृष्ण की लीलाएँ
Within the Rasleela Udyan, life-size murti-tableaus retell the most beloved stories of Krishna — Kaliya-daman, Govardhan-dharan, the Gopi-talab. Peacocks roam free between the trees. Children stop and ask the names of the gopis.
Each season the gardeners replant — marigolds in the cool months, jasmine in summer, lotus in monsoon. The garden never wears the same face twice.
Across the gardens and the highway leading to Nilkanthdham, statues of Lord Ram, Lord Shyam, Kaliya-daman and other leela-scenes await.
Maryada-purushottam Ram — the ideal king, in stillness.
The blue Krishna of childhood — flute, peacock-feather, eternal smile.
The young Krishna dancing on the hood of the serpent in the Yamuna's depth.
The child Sahajanand — bal Ghanshyam — playful, watchful, eternal.
Where the gopis bathed; where Krishna stole their cloth, and their hearts.
Lord Swaminarayan seated upon a lion-drawn rath — an iconic statue at the entrance.
राजमार्ग पर अनेक संतों एवं मुक्तों की मूर्तियाँ
As you approach Nilkanthdham, the highway itself becomes a darshan: a long row of statues of saints and liberated souls — devotees of Lord Swaminarayan from across two centuries — stand in vigil along the road. Each is named, each is remembered.
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