A Punishment from the Gods?
Exploring the religious fallout from the earthquake in Nepal
Renu Augul travels to Kathmandu to find out how Hindus and Buddhists there have looked to their faith in the aftermath of the earthquake in 2015.
Renu explores how many in Nepal feel the earthquake had a divine motive, and that the quake occurred because sins had increased on earth, and that it was cleansing itself of the sins and the sinners.
She travels to Sankata Temple, right in the heart of Kathmandu, which miraculously sustained no damage and witnessed no deaths in the immediate vicinity. Most of the faithful here credit their patron deity for their safety. 鈥淪ankata le thapyo sabai,鈥 (Sankata took on the damages) says one believer, implying that the Sankata goddesses protected them.
But many others communities were devastated and Renu meets the faithful who have looked to the Gods for answers. She witnesses the various 鈥楶oojas鈥 (forgiveness rituals) carried out as the people here attempt to atone for the sins they feel they have afflicted on their land.
The reconstruction of the country is just at the beginning but Renu finds that for the people of different faiths in Nepal, it鈥檚 the relationship with their religion, Buddhist and Hindu, which needs the most work.
(Photo: A temple in Kathmandu)
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- Sat 5 Sep 2015 02:32GMT大象传媒 World Service
- Sat 5 Sep 2015 23:32GMT大象传媒 World Service
- Sun 6 Sep 2015 08:32GMT大象传媒 World Service except West and Central Africa
- Sun 6 Sep 2015 18:32GMT大象传媒 World Service
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