Wednesday, 18 December 2019

Arghakhanchi

Arghakhanchi is one of the districts of Province no.5 in Nepal. The district headquarter is Sandhikharka . The district covers an area of 1,193 km2 (461 sq mi) and has a population (2011) of 197,632. Its neighboring districts are Palpa in the eastGulmi in the north, Kapilvastu in the south and Pyuthan in the west.


History 
The district consists of two pre-unification principalities Argha and KhanchiArgha (Nepali:अर्घा) was the name given to ritual offerings made at the former principality's main Bhagwati TempleKhanchi may come from the word Khajanchi (Nepali:खजाञ्चि) or tax collector since the center of the latter principality was known for its tax office. Both were two of the Chaubisi Rajya (24 principalities) middled in the Gandaki Basin. In 1786 A.D. (1843 BS) during the unification of Nepal the two were annexed by Gorkha.Later the merger was renamed “Arghakhanchi” and added to Gulmi district. Arghakhanchi became a separate district in 1961 A.D. (2018 BS).


Geography & climate 

Arghakhanchi lies between 27'45"N and 28'6"N latitude, and 80'45"E to 83'23"E longitude. It covers 1,193 km2. The altitude of the district varies from 305 to 2515 meter above the sea level. 68% of the district is in the mountainous Mahabharat range and the rest is in the Siwalik hills. Elevations range from 305–2575 m above sea level and about 40% of the total area is forested.

The major rivers of the district are Bangi khola, Bangsari Khola, Mathurabesi Khola, Banganga Khola, Durga khola, Sita khola, Khakabesi Khola, Rangsing Khola, Ratne Khola, Jhimruk Khola, and Khankbesi Khola. The major lakes of the district are Thada lake and Sengleng lake.

ZoneElevation range% of area
Lower Tropical below 300 meters (1,000 ft) 0.2%
Upper Tropical300 to 1,000 meters
1,000 to 3,300 ft.
50.5%
Sub Tropical 1,000 to 2,000 meters
3,300 to 6,600 ft.
49.1%
Temperate2,000 to 3,000 meters
6,400 to 9,800 ft.
 0.2

Administration

The district consists of six municipalities , out of which three are urban municipalities

 

  • Sandhikharka municipality
  • Sitganga municipality
  • Bhumikasthan municipality
  • Chhtradev Rural municipality
  • Panini Rural municipality 
  • Malarani Rural municipality.

Cities and villages 

The major town in the district is Sandhikharka which is the headquarter of Arghakhanchi district in the province no.5 of Nepal. It is located almost 300 km (190 mi) southwest of Country´s capital Kathmandu .

Due to a high literacy rate, Sandhikharka once attracted people from outside Arghakhanchi district for its good schools.

There are many small villages in the district, including Mareng, Bhagawati, Asurkot,Chhatradev, chhatragunj,Lamchi,  Balkot, Bangi,Dharapani,  Dhikura , Dibarna, khachikot, Kimdada,Kura, Phudbang, wangla, Adguri, Khana,Khanadaha, Pali, Nuwakot, Ghorakhori,Patundada,Khilji,Dharapani and Dhatiwang.

One of the famous schools of Arghakhanchi is in Hatari Neta which provides one of the finest education in the level of government sector. They are said to have good facilities in terms of roads, electric power, education, etc. Villages in the west and south part of the district have relatively little development as compared to the villages of the north and east side. 


Place to Visit

1.Supa Deurali

Supa Deurali is one of the magnificent hill station and pilgrimage site situated at Sandhikharka municipality  of Arghakhanchi. It is in road of Gorusinge to Sandhikharka. It lies 81 km away north from Butwal. This place is worth visit for pilgrimage purpose as well as sightseeing panoramic view. As Arghakhanchi is well known for its magnificent view of Himalayan panoramic view to the north. It includes Mt. Machhapuchhre, Mt. Annapurna, Mt. Dhaulagiri and also wide plains of Nepal can be viewed.

There is a Supa Deurali temple connected with a myth story of a Lahure (the soldier in Indian army). While he was passing by the temple on his way back home to India. He was worried that he might never be able to see his country again so he stopped at the temple and prayed. He promised the deity that if he is able to go back home safely, he will return and give a golden chain to the temple. Even though he successfully made it home, he never fulfilled his promise.

2.Siwalik Hill

Siwalik hills also known as Churia hills are a mountain range of the outer Himalayas.

Sano Gaun is the most popular place to visit. Lamchi is another popular village in Arghakhanchi. In context of visiting religious places, Deurali temple is one of the famous temples in this district. Beside this temple there are lots of temples and monuments which includes Chhatraganj temple, Argha Bhagawati Mandir and others too. One of the attractions of this district is Narapani Bajar.

3.Mahabharat Range

The Mahabharat range also called the lesser Himalaya or the Himachal is a major east-west mountain range with elevation of 3700m to 4500m. Most ethnic groups found along the Mahabharat range and northward into the middle hills includes Nepalese origins of Magar, Newar, Gurung, Rai, Tamang and Limbu.

4.Panini Tapobhumi

Place where sanskrit philologist, grammarian, and a revered scholar got knowledge by the way of dhyana and tapasya . 




Thursday, 4 October 2018

मिट्टी मेरि जान


                         "मिट्टी मेरी जान "



जान न पहेचान तु मेरा महेमान
अरे देख देख वह आगे बढ रहा उसका पैर तान। 

कोहि कहता है कि तु मेरी  मा है 
कोहि कहता है कि तु मेरी सान है 
लेकिन उन्हे क्या पता तु तो मेरी जान है। 


दुनियाका पेट पालना तेरी धर्म है 
अपने सन्तानको आगे बढ़ाना तेरी कर्म है 
बस तु चाहे जो कुछ भी कर और बोल तु मेरी मर्म है। 



चाहे बसन्त चाहे गृष्म तेरेको कभी नही मिलता सुकुन 
अन्न हो या बालि तेरी अपनि पहेचान नन्हे मुन्हे मिलते है अपुन 
तु कितनी हि बेकसुर हो तु तो मेरी प्यार मे कसुर वर झुलाति  है। 



आज एक बेटा तेरेसे क्या मागे या क्या दे 
तु तो पूर्ण है तेरे बिना क्या बोलु या क्या कहु बे 
मिट्टी तु मेरी मा नही पिता नही ख्वाइस नही लेकिन तु तो मेरी जान है।  
तु तो मेरी जान है 





                                            









Monday, 17 September 2018

Lumbini

Lumbini, the Birthplace of the Lord Buddha
UNESCO World Heritage site
Lumbini 4.jpg
LocationRupandehi District, Nepal
CriteriaCultural: iii, vi

Inscription1997 (21st Session)
Area1.95 ha
Buffer zone22.78 ha
Coordinates provine no: 5
Lumbini is located in Nepal
Lumbini
Location of Lumbini in Nepal
Lumbinī (Nepali and Sanskrit: लुम्बिनी  "the lovely") is a Buddhist pilgrimage site in the Rupandehi District of Province No. 5 in Nepal. It is the place where, according to Buddhist tradition, Queen Mayadevi gave birth to Siddhartha Gautama in 563 BCE. Gautama, who achieved Enlightenment some time around 528 BCE, became the Buddha and founded Buddhism. Lumbini is one of many magnets for pilgrimage that sprang up in places pivotal to the life of the Buddha.

Ashoka Pillar in the 1930s

The Ashoka inscription on the pillar.

Maya devi Temple
Lumbini has a number of temples, including the Mayadevi Temple and several others which are still under repair. Many monuments, monasteries and a museum, the Lumbini International Research Institute, are also within the holy site. Also there is the Puskarini, or Holy Pond, where the Buddha's mother took the ritual dip prior to his birth and where he had his first bath. At other sites near Lumbini, earlier Buddhas were, according to tradition, born, then achieved ultimate Enlightenment and finally relinquished their earthly forms.
Lumbini was made a World Heritage Site status by UNESCO in 1997.

Contents

  • 1In Buddha's time
  • 2Rediscovery
    • 2.1Excavation at the Mayadevi Temple in 2013
  • 3Present-day
  • 4On the Nepali rupee
  • 5Transport
  • 6New Hotel Construction in Lumbini
  • 7Foreign visitors (2012–2014)


In Buddha's time

In the Buddha's time, Lumbini was situated in east of Kapilavastu and southwest Devadaha of Shakya, an oligarchic republic.According to Buddhist tradition, it was there, that the Buddha was born. A pillar discovered at Rummindei in 1896 is believed to mark the spot of Ashoka's visit to Lumbini. The site was not known as Lumbini before the pillar was discovered.[11] According to an inscription on the pillar, it was placed there by the people then in charge of the park to commemorate Ashoka visit and gifts.[12] The park was previously known as Rummindei, 2 mi (2 mi (3.2 km)) north of Bhagavanpura.
The Sutta Nipáta (vs. 683) states that the Buddha was born in a village of the Sákyans in the Lumbineyya Janapada. The Buddha stayed in Lumbinívana during his visit to Devadaha and there preached the Devadaha Sutta.

Rediscovery

In 1896, General Khadga Samsher Rana and Alois Anton Führer discovered a great stone pillar at Rummindei, according to the crucial historical records made by the ancient Chinese monk-pilgrim Xuanzang in the 7th century CE and by another ancient Chinese monk-pilgrim Faxian in the early 5th century CE. The Brahmi inscription on the pillar gives evidence that Ashoka, emperor of the Maurya Empire, visited the place in 3rd-century BCE and identified it as the birth-place of the Buddha. The inscription was translated by Paranavitana:
When King Devandmpriya Priyadarsin had been anointed twenty years, he came himself and worshipped (this spot) because the Buddha Shakyamuni was born here. (He) both caused to be made a stone bearing a horse  and caused a stone pillar to be set up, (in order to show) that the Blessed One was born here. (He) made the village of Lummini free of taxes, and paying (only) an eighth share (of the produce).
— The Rummindei Edict, one of the Minor Pillar Edicts of Ashoka.
At the top of the pillar, there is a second inscription by king Ripumalla (13-14th century CE), who is also known from an inscription at the Nigali Sagar pillar:
"Om mani padme hum May Prince Ripu Malla be long victorious"
— Inscription of King Ripumalla on the Lumbini pillar of Ashoka, (13-14th century). 
Excavation at the Mayadevi Temple in 2013
According to Robin Coningham, excavations beneath existing brick structures at the Mayadevi Temple at Lumbini provide evidence for an older timber structure beneath the walls of a brick Buddhist shrine built during the Ashokan era (3rd-century BCE). The layout of the Ashokan shrine closely follows that of the earlier timber structure, which suggests a continuity of worship at the site. The pre-Mauryan timber structure appears to be an ancient tree shrine. Radiocarbon dating of charcoal from the wooden postholes and optically stimulated luminescence dating of elements in the soil suggests human activity began at Lumbini around 1000 BCE.The site, states Coningham, may be a Buddhist monument from 6th-century BCE. Other scholars state that the excavations revealed nothing that is Buddhist, and they only confirm that the site predates the Buddha.

Present-day


Mayadevi Temple and ruins of ancient monasteries in Lumbini
Lumbini is 4.8 km (3 mi) in length and 1.6 km (1.0 mi) in width. The holy site of Lumbini is bordered by a large monastic zone in which only monasteries can be built, no shops, hotels or restaurants. It is separated into an eastern and western monastic zone, the eastern having the Theravadin monasteries, the western having Mahayana and Vajrayana monasteries. There is a long water filled canal separating the western and eastern zones, with a series of brick arch bridges joining the two sides along the length. The canal is serviced by simple outboard motor boats at the north end which provides tours.
The holy site of Lumbini has ruins of ancient monasteries, a sacred Bodhi tree, an ancient bathing pond, the Ashokan pillar and the Mayadevi Temple, where the supposed place of birth of Buddha is located. From early morning to early evening, pilgrims from various countries perform chanting and meditation at the site.
A non-governmental organization named Samriddhi Foundation started in 2013 working extensively in the field of education and health specially in government schools of the area where underprivileged children study. A non-governmental organisation called "Asia Pacific Exchange and Cooperation Foundation" (APECF) backed by chairman of the Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) and then Prime Minister Prachanda, the Chinese government and a UN group called "United Nations Industrial Development Organization" (UNIDO) signed a deal to develop Lumbini into a "special development zone" with funds worth $3 billion.[22] The venture was a China-UN joint project. A broader 'Lumbini Development National Director Committee' under the leadership of Pushpa Kamal Dahal was formed on 17 October 2011.[23] The six-member committee included Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist) leader Mangal Siddhi Manandhar, Nepali Congress leader Minendra Rijal, Forest Minister Mohammad Wakil Musalman, among other leaders. The committee was given the authority to "draft a master plan to develop Lumbini as a peaceful and tourism area and table the proposal" and the responsibility to gather international support for the same.

Lumbini
Nipponzan Myohoji decided to build a Peace Pagoda in the park in 2001, which is visited by many different cultures and religions every day.
Because some Hindus regard the Buddha as an incarnation of Vishnu, thousands of Hindus have begun to come here on pilgrimage during the full moon of the Nepali month of Baisakh (April–May) to worship Queen Mayadevi as Rupa Devi, the mother goddess of Lumbini.
Lumbini was granted World Heritage status by UNESCO in 1997.

On the Nepali rupee

Nepal's central bank (Nepal Rastra Bank ) has introduced a 100-rupee Nepali note featuring Lumbini, the birthplace of Buddha. The Nepal Rastra Bank said the new note would be accessible only during the Dashain, Nepal's major festival in October 2013. It displays the portrait of Mayadevi, Gautam Buddha's mother in silver metallic on the front. The note also has a black dot which would help the blind recognise the note. The name of the central bank in Latin script would be printed on the note along with the date of printing in both the Christian Era and the Bikram Era. The new note is being issued following a cabinet decision 27 August.

Transport


The words "Bu-dha" and "Sa-kya-mu-nī " in Brahmi script, on the Rummindei pillar of Ashoka.
Lumbini is a 10-hour drive from Kathmandu and a 30-minute drive from Bhairahawa. The closest airport is Gautam Buddha Airport at Bhairahawa, with flights to and from Kathmandu.
The India border town Sonauli is 1 hour drive from Lumbini and Gorakhpur railway station in India is 4 hours drive from Lumbini.

New Hotel Construction in Lumbini[

The nearest airport to Lumbini, that is, the Gautam Buddha Airport in Bhairahawa, is currently undergoing upgradation work. This small domestic airport is soon expected to become an international airport, with latest deadline set for 2019. The upgradation work of the airport has also caught the eye of investors and hoteliers, and a series of new hotels are being constructed now in and around Lumbini, hoping to catch in on the expected international tourist boom once the airport upgradation work is complete.

Foreign visitors (2012–2014)

YearJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSeptOctNovDecTotal
20148,35617,96420,0376,8432,5532,1112,72614,1237,99916,43321,08912,765132,926[27]
20139,37117,86922,5817,1013,6543,5523,6219,6857,35113,61016,48310,618125,496[28]
20126,59120,04520,5198,2951,3161,3662,65117,9247,95513,09921,74014,566136,067[28]

Gallery

Arghakhanchi

Arghakhanchi is one of the districts of Province no.5 in Nepal. The district headquarter is  Sandhikharka . The district covers an area of...