SINGAPORE – The air at 5 Chander Road reverberated with the sound of sacred chants on Feb 25 as the Siddh Peeth Shree Lakshminarayan Temple (SLNT) celebrated its first consecration ceremony in 56 years.
The rare spiritual milestone follows an extensive seven-year renovation and expansion project.
Costing close to $3 million – funded entirely by community donations – the upgrade added 4,000 sq ft of space to the historic temple to accommodate Singapore’s growing North Indian Hindu population.
Established in 1969 and gazetted as a heritage site by the Urban Redevelopment Authority in 1989, the temple is a spiritual anchor for the North Indian Hindu community in Singapore.
Unlike South Indian temples, which typically undergo a kumbhabhishekam or consecration every 12 years, North Indian traditions do not usually require frequent re-consecration.
But the scale of the recent renovations necessitated a spiritual “re-energising” of the space, said Professor Balram Chowbay, president of SLNT.
“During the renovations, we had to remove some of the deities and reinstall them,” he said. “To do so, we have to re-energise the deities. That is why we had to consecrate the temple.”
The redevelopment works were made possible by generous donations from devotees and community members.
PHOTO: TAMIL MURASU





