New Delhi: Because the preparations for the Ram Mandir Pran Pratishtha (the consecration of the Ram temple) are in full swing, a 57-year-old postage stamp of Sri Ram and Sita from Nepal has surfaced. The stamp was issued on April 18, 1967, on the event of Ram Navami (the birthday of Lord Ram). The stamp bears the yr 2024 in Vikram Samvat, the Hindu calendar that’s adopted in Nepal and a few elements of India.
This yr coincides with the yr of the Ram Mandir Pran Pratishtha, which has sparked a number of dialogue. The reason being that the Vikram Samvat is 57 years forward of the Gregorian calendar. Due to this fact, the yr 1967 within the Gregorian calendar was 2024 within the Vikram Samvat. And therefore, the stamp issued in 1967 has 2024 written on it.
A Outstanding Synchronicity Of The Ram Mandir Conscretation
It’s noteworthy that numerous outstanding synchronicities have emerged relating to the Ram Mandir. The coincidence of the Nepalese stamp has amazed everybody, because the yr of its issuance matches the yr of the temple’s consecration. Nobody would have thought 57 years in the past, when the stamp was issued, that Lord Ram would return to his temple in 2024.
A lion-roaring drum will sound on January 22
The 550-year-long wait of the devotees of Ram is about to finish. On January 22, Lord Ram might be put in within the sanctum sanctorum of his grand temple. In the meantime, a drum from Ahmedabad has arrived in Ayodhya. The drum is 56 inches tall and produces a lion-like sound when performed. A procession was taken out in Ayodhya with the drum and now it will likely be positioned within the temple.
An eight-metal conch might be at Ram’s ft
Additionally it is vital to say that throughout the Pran Pratishtha, an eight-metal conch might be positioned at Ram’s ft. Satya Prakash Prajapati, a resident of Aligarh, has donated the conch to the Shri Ram Janmabhoomi Teerth Kshetra Belief, the physique overseeing the temple building. The chairman of the belief, Mahant Nritya Gopal Das, stated that it’s praiseworthy that Ram might be current at his birthplace.