The voices of musicians singing at the entrance of the Shri Bhadriya Mata Ji temple begin to fade as we descend a flight of stairs below the almost 200-year-old structure. Suddenly all sounds die out completely – we are now 20 feet below ground.
A labyrinthine library spread across 15,000 square feet opens up ahead. Narrow corridors lined with 562 cupboards, holding over two lakh books, are placed at intervals. Leather-bound texts, an old manuscript on bark, old editions and paperbacks on subjects ranging from Hinduism, Islam, Christianity and other religions, to bristling new titles on law and medicine, philosophy, geography, history and more. The fiction section too is well endowed with classics and recent novels. A majority of the books are in Hindi, with a few in English and Sanskrit.
It was Harvansh Singh Nirmal, a religious scholar from Punjab whose idea it was to set up the library. He is said to have lived in solitude in a cave on the temple’s premises for 25 years, and decided to build the library underneath it. Nirmal passed away in 2010, but not before drumming up funds for his causes – education and animal welfare.
“He was a humanitarian. All religions have the same message: that man’s skin may be different, hair may be different, inside we are all the same,” says Jugal Kishore, Secretary of the Shri Jagdamba Seva Samiti, a trust that runs the temple and the library, and manages the trust’s shelter for over 40,000 cows.





















