There are plenty of people here on Sundays and it is recommended that you choose other times to visit. Prepare something to cover your head and take off your shoes, which helps you enter the museum at a slower pace to learn more. There is also a movie that will give you a better understanding of the place, but Hindi. A volunteer from the reflection pool explained to us the various beliefs of Sikhism. The temple has a community kitchen that can provide food for anyone for free. It is run by volunteers. If you don’t like crowds, however, it may not be a good place for you.
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There are plenty of people here on Sundays and it is recommended that you choose other times to visit. Prepare something to cover your head and take off your shoes, which helps you enter the museum at a slower pace to learn more. There is also a movie that will give you a better understanding of the place, but Hindi. A volunteer from the reflection pool explained to us the various beliefs of Sikhism. The temple has a community kitchen that can provide food for anyone for free. It is run by volunteers. If you don’t like crowds, however, it may not be a good place for you.
This building itself is also one of the classic good places. Many of the content in the building is also very good. I will like it very much. The religion of India is very rich. Many locals are also very religious. Visiting here, many things are quite wide.
India’s culture is indeed very diverse and unique, and Sikhism is one of them. I was slightly impressed by India, the Sikhs wrapped in the headscarf, thinking that it was Indians, and later I learned more, only to know that it was just a minority in India, but the believers were only1-2%, but it was indeed special, which made people more impressed than other Indian nationalities. The guide is Sikh, he is proud of the Sikh charity, free food for the poor, actually know that Sikhism actually provides 50% of the food in India, respectable!
Gurudwara Bangla Sahib is one of the most important Sikh gurdwara, aka Sikh house of worship, in Delhi, India and known for its association with the eighth Sikh Guru, Guru Har Krishan, as well as the pool inside its complex, known as the 'Sarovar.' It was first built as a small temple by Sikh General Sardar Bhagel Singh in 1783
It's very nice to go, you have to find a chance to go once ^^
blessed 🙏
Located near Connacht Square, the golden roof is easily recognisable, and the pool water in this small temple is holy water for Sikhs, who believe that, like the Ganges water in Varanasi for Hindu maps, these holy water can cure diseases and exorcise evils.