Hindu Temples Take Up new Community Role in Germany
2008-08-08 Published by Hinduism Today
Gathered by Hindu Press International
www.hinduismtoday.com
GERMANY, August 2, 2008: (Religion Watch Newsletter)
Although the trend is not yet as developed as it has become
in the US or UK, Hindu temples in Germany tend increasingly
to play a role beyond providing rituals, especially in
educating Hindu children born in the West and conveying to
them Hindu traditions, writes German scholar Carina Back
(Hanover University) in her book, "Hindu-Tempel in
Deutschland".
While Indians in Germany have rarely attempted to open
temples, Tamils who fled the conflict in Sri Lanka have been
eager to establish their own places of worship, as have
members of the (smaller) Hindu community from Afghanistan.
Focusing on Tamil Hindu temples, Back remarks that, despite
financial and other constraints, to a large extent they
follow traditional Hindu teachings regarding the arrangement
of temples. Opening places of worship has gone along with
the creation of institutional structures necessary for
organizing and maintaining the temples. Hindu traditions are
kept as much as possible, but it is usually not possible to
hold the full daily schedule of religious services.
Out of two dozen Tamil temples in Germany (the first one
established in 1988), only one is purpose built (in Hamm,
opened in 2002), while another one is under construction in
Berlin; all the others have been installed in converted
factories or warehouses, in flats or in basements.
Consequently, many of them are still seen as temporary
places, to be enlarged or replaced by new temples in the
future. The author expects that future temples will align
more closely with the traditional south Indian models; for
the time being, financial considerations or zoning
regulations have been preeminent in decisions such as the
orientation of the temples and the choice of
locations.
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