For Indians, UAE’s
new temples bring
feeling of home away
from home for Indians

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22

By Sanjay Kumar

NEW DELHI: As works are underway on the largest Hindu temple in Abu Dhabi, and another one was just inaugurated in Dubai, India’s ambassador and expats living in the UAE say they are a “shining example of tolerance” that makes them feel home away from home. 

About 3.5 million Indians are living and working in the UAE. The first Hindu temple built for this community was opened in Dubai in the 1950s. Recently expanded to 15 acres of land donated by local authorities, in a style blending Indian and Islamic architecture, it was reinaugurated earlier this month by UAE Tolerance Minister Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak. 

“The presence of the minister of tolerance, His Highness Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak as chief guest and the fact that the Dubai government has provided the land for the Hindu temple means how proactively the government of the UAE is involved in making sure that the Indian community here is comfortable,” India’s ambassador to the UAE, Sunjay Sudhir, told Arab News. 

“The coming of the temple is very symbolic of the fact that the Indian community here feels very comfortable and at home.” 

ABU DHABI: The first marble pillar is raised at the construction site of a new temple in the UAE capital in the presence of Abu Dhabi officials and Indian Ambassador Sunjay Sudhir on Sept. 10. (BAPS Hindu Mandir)

Open to people of all faiths, besides serving religious purposes, it also has a knowledge center dedicated to Hindu heritage. 

For Raju Shroff, whose family was involved in managing the first temple, and who serves as a committee member of the new one, its opening will help strengthen cultural ties between India and the Gulf state. 

“India and UAE always had close ties and those ties were either business or political now it will become cultural also,” he said. 

“Ties between the two nations have become even deeper as they are opening up different avenues, not only commercial avenues. So, now there would be greater sharing of culture and ideas.” 

Foundation stone-laying ceremony for first Hindu temple in Abu Dhabi

Even more such exchanges are likely to come when another temple, the largest in the UAE, currently under construction, will be inaugurated in Abu Dhabi. 

Developed on 27 acres of land, its groundbreaking ceremony was held in the presence of three UAE ministers in 2019, the year which was proclaimed by the government as the Year of Tolerance. 

“The level of support and respect that the local government has given us has moved us and encouraged us to take this message for the community members in India,” Pranav Harikrishan Desai, member of the temple’s committee, told Arab News. 

“The UAE is a shining example where tolerance and coexistence of various cultures and religions happen.”