Holy Pilgrimage - Hindu temples in USA
South Florida Hindu
Temple, South West
Ranches, FL
13010 W. Griffin Road, South West Ranches
Florida 33330
Phone: 954-252-8802
Pooja Booking (954)43-Temple
Welcome to the Temple Experience !!!
South Florida Hindu Temple is a place where hundreds of people come together for collective prayers each Sunday morning. The Temple’s culture is one of inclusiveness and celebrates festivals from all corners of India.A Weekly schedule includes: Rudra Abhishekam, Hanuman Chalisa, Lakshmi ma puja, Ma Saraswati puja, monthly havan.Beyond it's overwhelming architectural beauty, it also is a place where Education is valued. Children from all corners of India come together in the most appropriate of learning environments to learn the values and principles of Sanatan Dharma.A The program is in English and the focus is on Character Education straight from our scriptures. Adult group studies with various books are also offered.
South Florida Hindu Temple goes beyond religious and education programs. The temple is constantly buzzing with cultural activities through out the week and not just during festivals.
The temple offers, Bharatnatyam classes, Tabla lessons, Kathak classes and Yoga classes to children and adults.
Volunteers, the soul of the temple, run the temple from Prasad committee to Finance committee and devotees are encouraged to get involved and share their talents and time.
Prasad committee always needs peaceful, dedicated cooks, Education program always looks for dedicated volunteers to teach, garlands are made weekly, maintenance and cleaning after each event is always essential, religious committee is always looking for dedicated and dependable volunteers to help before and after each puja or havan.
As much as volunteers are needed, the temple is growing.A Your donations, small or large, are very much appreciated and put to good use.A So come to South Florida Hindu Temple and reacquaint yourself and family with all things Hindu.A The environment will make you feel like home.
Deities
SHRI GANESH , SARSWATI DEVI, LORD SHIVA, DURGA MA, SHRI RAM PARIVAR, RADHA KRISHNA, LORD VENKATESWARA, MAHA LAXMI and SHRI HANUMANJI
Daily Services & Timings
Morning
Session(Monday- Saturday)
|
|
9:00 am
|
Temple opens
|
10:00 am
|
Daily puja
|
11:00 am
|
Arti
|
12:00 pm
|
Temple closes
|
Morning Session
(Sunday)
|
|
10:30 am
|
16 steps puja
|
11:30 am 12:15 pm
|
Bhajan Kirtan and
Discourse. In case of Haven check weekly email for timing.
|
12:15 pm
|
Announcements
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12:30 pm
|
Arti (followed by Mahaprashad)
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2:00 pm
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Temple closes
|
Evening Session
(Monday to Friday)
|
|
6:00 pm
|
Temple opens
|
7:00-8:30 pm
|
Daily puja/Special
puja as follows:
|
Monday
|
Shiva puja and
Rudrabhishekam
|
Tuesday
|
Hanuman Chalisa
|
Wednesday
|
Visnusahastrannam and Krishna puja
|
Thursday
|
Bhagavan
Venkateshwara puja
|
Friday
|
Mahalakshmi puja(1st
3rd and 5th Friday) and
Saraswati puja( 2nd
and 4th Friday)
|
8:30 pm
|
Arti
|
9:00 pm
|
Temple closes
|
Evening Session
(Saturday & Sunday)
|
|
6:00 pm
|
Temple
opens.
|
8:30 pm
|
Arti
|
9:00 pm
|
Temple closes
|
History of Temple
It was a sultry morning in the summer of 1996. Excitement filled the air and everyone was looking forward to the Bhumi puja — the ground breaking ceremony. Torrential rains' during the night had dampened the floor covering under the rain soaked tent but not the spirit of devotees. They kept arriving — by the hundreds; after all they had waited for years for this day. This was the day when on the sacred grounds sanctified by the water from the holy rivers of India and ashes from the 108 kundi Maha Yagnya, a temple was to be built. Not just another building, but an authentic Hindu temple, beautiful and majestic, grand and ornate with Indian carvings, was to rise from the ground. Although still a distant dream, the community was one big step closer to realizing it. After three days of non stop rain, the clouds disappeared, and it seemed as though the heavens granted it’s approval, to complete the joyous celebration. With limited funds but abundant enthusiasm the ground was broken.
It was around twenty years ago, when the community was small and
scattered, that the idea of having a Hindu temple had been conceived. Without a
central place to share and celebrate the spiritual traditions and values, the
children were growing up in a cultural vacuum. It was then that a single family
home was purchased and was utilized by the community as a worship center with
the following vision in mind — above all else, to be committed to preserving
and upholding the spiritual values of Sanatana Dharma — the eternal
principles of righteousness. The goal was to promote religious, educational and
cultural activities for the sole purpose of cultivating faith and devotion,
thus helping the spiritual evolution of one and all who visit this sacred
shrine to receive divine grace.
As the community expanded and became more diverse, the need for a
broad based Hindu temple that embraced regional and cultural diversity of the
Hindu diaspora, but remained firmly anchored to the timeless principles of
Sanatan Dharma was envisioned — and thus the South Florida Hindu Temple was
born. The temple was then incorporated on May 3rd, 1993 by members of the
organization. Incorporation was done with minimal funds and no place to call
home. Yogi Hari, a local yoga teacher had an ashram and one of the rooms was
utilized for worship every other Sunday — but not for long. Yogi Hari had to
sell his place and the temple lost its temporary home. Fortunately, a
devotee̢۪s old home in Miami had a large basement and that is where devotees
gathered on Sundays until the first phase of temple construction was completed.
Shashi Patel was the architect; Bharat Shah the land planner, Shanti Patel did
the engineering work and Joe Miranda was the builder for this phase. The South
Florida Temple opened its doors at the current location on January 30, 1998.
Soon after opening, people gathered for regular worship. Hindu
festivals from all regions of India and from diverse communities were
celebrated with a sense of oneness, for, were they not bonded by a common faith
and belief, even though they may have spoken different languages at home.
People came to celebrate their birthdays, solemnize their weddings and pray for
the departed souls. The temple became the focal point of community activities.
Educational programs which had begun even before the ground was broken,
flourished and around 170 children attended Balvihar. A functional temple
existed, but the vision of an ornate and majestic temple had yet to be
realized. More funds were needed. A devotee, who headed the fundraising efforts
for South Florida Hindu Temple since its inception, had a monumental task
before him. Early on, it had been resolved that this sacred temple will not be
built with borrowed funds, regardless of how long it took. It should be built
only with donations given with love and devotion — after all this was going
to be the abode of Almighty.
God in His infinite mercy and grace did help the community to keep
their resolution of not borrowing any money. Founding donors and other founders
were joined by benefactors, in making generous and timely donations. The
community at large also came forward and donated with unprecedented generosity,
and this temple unlike most temples in the country carries no debt.
November 23, 2002, a grand fund raiser was held and for the first
time funds raised crossed the scheduled target for the first time and that,
too, at a time when the country was passing through an economic recession. This
demonstrated the will and the commitment of the Hindu community in South
Florida to see their dream of an authentic temple come to fruition. While the
temple has been officially open since 1998, it was yet to have its
Kumbhabhishekam.
Those who attended the banquet were treated to a beautiful slide
show depicting the journey of the temple from its humble beginnings in homes to
its present form with carvings being done by the shilpis. The funds raised
touched the whopping $640,000 mark just as midnight approached. The founding
fathers were visibly happy in seeing their hard work of almost a decade come to
near fruition.
The South Florida Hindu community proved once again how much they
valued their heritage and the need to leave a legacy for their children. The
continued support from the community to help complete this monumental task is a
testimony to the confidence they have in the leadership of the temple.
The world famous temple builder and tapathi, Padma Shri Muthiah Sthapati was retained to fulfill the vision of a grand ornate temple. Hindu temple architectural elements were incorporated from all the major regions of India in keeping with the theme of unity in diversity from the basic design stage. Step by step, pillar by pillar, steadily the grand ornate temple that had been envisioned years before began to take shape.
The temple is the core for the society and the venue for socio-religious activities. According to the Agamas and Upanishads there is correspondence between the structure of a temple and the structure of the human body and soul. A Hindu temple is a visual manifestation of the cosmos, which reflects the Hindu philosophy of the Universe as a macrocosm and Man as the microcosm. The temple building is an analogy of both the Universe and the Human body. The purpose of temple architecture is representational rather than structural. The design draws upon principles put forth in the Vastu Shastra — engineering and architecture guidelines, to fulfill the needs of devotees and the multitudes of events that take place on the premises.
The world famous temple builder and tapathi, Padma Shri Muthiah Sthapati was retained to fulfill the vision of a grand ornate temple. Hindu temple architectural elements were incorporated from all the major regions of India in keeping with the theme of unity in diversity from the basic design stage. Step by step, pillar by pillar, steadily the grand ornate temple that had been envisioned years before began to take shape.
The temple is the core for the society and the venue for socio-religious activities. According to the Agamas and Upanishads there is correspondence between the structure of a temple and the structure of the human body and soul. A Hindu temple is a visual manifestation of the cosmos, which reflects the Hindu philosophy of the Universe as a macrocosm and Man as the microcosm. The temple building is an analogy of both the Universe and the Human body. The purpose of temple architecture is representational rather than structural. The design draws upon principles put forth in the Vastu Shastra — engineering and architecture guidelines, to fulfill the needs of devotees and the multitudes of events that take place on the premises.
The Vastu Shastra, revealed by Bhagwan Vishwakarma, is possibly
the oldest known architectural treatise in the world. It provides a grammar
book of visual forms that are required for the design and execution of the
architectural structures and construction. Shilpa (sculpture) refers to the
vision or form that appears in the inner space of the sculptor, complete with
all the features and measures that go into the composition of a sculptural form
- virtually a visual poem.
The Brahmasthanam of the temple houses nine vimana garbhagrahas,
one of the unique features in the design reflecting the plurality of the
congregation. The entrance to the Brahmasthanam is through an elaborate torana
(gateway), adorned with sculptures of rivers, flowers, snakes and birds. The
nine garbhagrahas (abodes of the deities) starting from the left are: Ganesha
garbhagraha, Saraswati garbhagraha, Shiva Parivar garbhagraha, Durga
garbhagraha, Rama Parivar garbhagraha, Krishna Parivar garbhagraha, Balaji
garbhagraha, Lakshmi garbhagraha and Hanuman garbhagraha. Each garbhagraha has
a unique shikhar or vimana, ornamentation, and column designs inspired by
mythological associations with the deity.
Each element of the temple, such as the walls, columns, doors,
windows and Brahmasthanam are decorated with sculpted decorative motifs
inspired by traditional Indian design motifs such as flowers, birds and
animals. Imagine an ancient temple in the midst of a rural setting with
elements of nature such as trees, plants, flowers and accompanying fauna
adoring its environs. While those same flora and fauna cannot be present on the
interior of modern day temples, they nevertheless continue to adorn the temples
with the same elements of nature. They depict the origins of Hindu religion,
temples and the very way of life in the simple rural ashrams where great sages
performed deep meditations and rituals.
This temple's architecture is mainly based on the North Indian
Gujarati style and each and every vargam — space is carved as per the Silpa
Sastram; Prasada Mandapam; Viswakarmya Vasthu Sastram and Samarangana
Suthrataram.
All of the temple vimanams are based on Gujarati style
architecture while the Sri Balaji shrine is built based on South Indian style.
The inside main shrines of Sri Ram Parivar, Durga, Krishna, Matha ji, Shiva,
Balaji, Lakshmi, Ganapathi and Hanuman were all constructed below the roof level.
The top vimanams were constructed in such a way that it was exposed above the
roof. The temple has 3 vimanams over the garbhagarahas of the deities and two
other shikaras – one at the North entrance and one at the East entrance. Â
Shivalingam and Sri Balaji vigrahas were carved in black granite stone and the
rest of the vigrahams in marble stone.
This 11, 113 square feet temple was built strictly as per the
sastras under the supervision of Shri Muthiah Sthapathi. A group of ten shilpis
came from the southern part of Tamilnadu, India and created a master piece..
Recognizing the cultural diversity of Hindu diaspora in South
Florida Shri Muthiah Sthapathy has done an outstanding job in blending the
architectural styles of different regions of India so that a Hindu from any
part of India can sense familiarity and feel at home. This architectural blend
does make South Florida Hindu Temple unique.
As preparations for the Maha Kumbhabhishekam began, the search for
a capable priest to under take such an auspicious, once in a life time event
started in all earnestness. The detail and precision required to ensure that
the ancient traditions were maintained on this occasion, was crucial. The
search led them to Shivacharya Devanathan who has been a devoted and loyal
priest for the Greater Cincinnati Hindu Temple for over 10 years.Â
After Shivacharya arrived and during the course of the week, Â he
coordinated with the nine accompanying priests from various parts of the United
States. The congregation arrived early for the havan ceremony early in the
morning, which followed the Kalasha yatra around the temple. As the final
touches were made on the temple and they got ready for the big event, it gave
them a unique occasion to review all the parts that made this temple — the
visible design features and decorations, the principles, philosophies and ideas
behind those. Nonetheless, equally vital were the invisible aspects, viz. the
spiritual, the social and the cultural. The visible beauty, forever cemented in
this structure houses the immortal; it is the home of the Hindu faith.
A beautiful cultural program was presented by the students of
temple, depicting the Krishna Lila — an original dance composition performed
in the traditional Bharatnatyam style. The event was graced by Bhramacharni
Aparna Chaitanya — Chinmaya Mission, Pujya Swami Jyotirmayananda — Yoga
Research Foundation, Shri Yogi Hari, Baladev Mahashay and the guest of honor
Dr. David Frawley who mesmerized the crowd of over one thousand people. Every
one squeezed into the temple hall waiting for the curtains to open in order to
reveal the newly ornate devasthanam which had the deities consecrated earlier
that morning. Using a helicopter, devotees flew over the temple offering
flowers blessing the shikaras and temple.Â
The Maha Kumbhabhishekam, which is a sacred ritual, was attended
by over one thousand Hindus. They came from across the USA and priests from
Boston, Cincinnati and New York took part in the festivities including the
Pranaprathistha Mahotsav. The ceremony invokes spiritual energy that transforms
sculptured images into the vivid incarnation of divinity. The event marked the
end of a decade of planning and building.
In the Hindu faith, the dedication of a new temple is a very
sacred event, and something that happens very rarely. The temple is expected to
serve 10,000 Hindus in the South Florida area. Currently more than 1,000 people
use the facilities on a regular basis, many from India or the Caribbean. One of
the founding members said that the organisation spent nearly a decade raising
almost $5 million to build the ornate temple, which was partly designed by
master temple builders from India. The temple is open daily for Hindus to
perform pujas.
We have currently one priest, Shree Shivachrariarji Devnathan.Â
Shri Shivachariayarji is familiar with our temple and spiritually connected to
it since he was the presiding priest for our Kumbha Abhishekam and Prana
Pratishtana Mahotsavam. He caters all the needs of the community at the temple
and at home as required.
The South Florida Hindu Temple provides and educational program
for adults and children consisting of 11 classes for religious studies and 5
classes for language studies. They utilize the Chinmaya Mission curriculum.
Adult study groups take on various books or topics of interest for discussion
purposes
The State of Florida has declared February as the Hindu Heritage
Month. In honor of this declaration, the temple puts together educational
events for both the Hindus and Non Hindus every weekend. Many communities are
invited to see the displays which are meant to break the myths and
misconceptions of Hinduism and educate them on the facts.
The temple offers classes in Bharatnatyam, tabla and yoga on a weekly or biweekly basis and is blessed to have devotees who work hard selflessly.
The temple offers classes in Bharatnatyam, tabla and yoga on a weekly or biweekly basis and is blessed to have devotees who work hard selflessly.
Sanatana Sandesh is the newsletter, full of important information
on the scriptures and events at the temple. It has a wonderful outreach program
and hosted an interfaith meeting where clergy from various religions met to
discuss a specific issue of Women In Distress. The clergy from various faiths
such as the Catholic, Jewish, Bahai, Hindu and the Sikh came together to listen
to a professional speaker, rather than talk themselves. The temple participates
in the World Religion Day every January.
The community has finally realized its dream — which would never
have been possible without the leadership of the founders who brought the
vision to this point, without the selfless work of so many dedicated community
volunteers, the support of so many generous donors, and most importantly
without the Grace of the Almighty — for people can build structures but it is
only with Divine Grace that a community gets blessed with a sacred temple. What
is seen now is truly a masterpiece which will serve as a glorious vehicle to
pass the grandeur of the ancient Vedic heritage to the future generations in
form and in spirit.
Mission and Values
Mission
Statement
Above all
else,
We are
committed to
Preserve and
uphold the spiritual values of
Sanatana
Dharma- The eternal principles of righteousness.
Our goal is to
promote religious, educational and cultural
activities for
the sole purpose of cultivating faith and devotion,
thus helping
the spiritual evolution of one and all,
that visit
this sacred shrine to receive
Divine grace.
How to book Pooja
BOOK YOUR NEXT PUJA AT THE TEMPLE, HOME
OR OFFICE
CALL (954) 43-TEMPLE
Send the email @ pooja@sfht.org
LEAVE A CLEAR, DETAILED MESSAGE AND WE WILL GET BACK TO YOU IN ONE DAY
About Rental Hall
All hall rentals are at the discretion of the South Florida Hindu Temple . The temple is a place of worship and all event held at the temple should maintain the sanctity of the temple.Weekly And Monthly Program
Weekly
Programs:
Monday 7:00pm – Shiv Puja &
Abhishekam
Tuesday 7:00pm – Hanuman Chalisa
Wednesday 7:00pm & Saturday 9:00 am – Yoga Classes
Friday 7:00pm – Devi Puja
Sunday 5:00 pm – Sri Aurobindo devotees meditate
Tuesday 7:00pm – Hanuman Chalisa
Wednesday 7:00pm & Saturday 9:00 am – Yoga Classes
Friday 7:00pm – Devi Puja
Sunday 5:00 pm – Sri Aurobindo devotees meditate
Monthly program:
First Sunday of Month 9:00 am - Arya Samaj Havan
Second Sunday of Month 10:00 am – Sunderkand Path and Hanuman Chalisa
Third Sunday of Month 10:30 am – Senior Citizen’s Talk
First Thursday of Month 7:00 pm – Shri Satya Sai Baba Bhajan
Second Sunday of Month 10:00 am – Sunderkand Path and Hanuman Chalisa
Third Sunday of Month 10:30 am – Senior Citizen’s Talk
First Thursday of Month 7:00 pm – Shri Satya Sai Baba Bhajan
. Founding Trustees & Benefactors
List of Founding Trustees
No.
|
Name
|
1.
|
Chander
Shaykher
|
2.
|
Subhash
Puranik
|
3.
|
Vinod Patel
|
4.
|
Raj Gupta
|
5.
|
Shanti
Agarwal
|
6.
|
Mahendra
Gupta
|
7.
|
Mohan Gupta
|
8.
|
Late
Niranjan Sinha
|
Volunteer
The temple is
managed by the most dedicated volunteers in the Exec Committee and in the
Governing Body however a non-profit organization relies on the services and
support of the volunteers like you for helping in running the temple
successfully.
Guidlines
All Committee
Chairs will have specific jobs when the volunteers arrive so that they can get
to the work and leave with a sense of accomplishment in a given period of time.
2. Everyone will be respectful and fair to all those who volunteer. 3.
Encourage a positive and Å“can do attitude. 4. When we work for more than three
hours we will provide a small snack and drink to keep our energy and spirit
going. 5. Service to the temple and the community is very satisfying and a
great opportunity to meet people who are as dedicated as you. - See more at: http://www.sfht.org/volunteer.
We encourage you to join us in any way that
would benefit our temple and the community. We currently need assistance in the
following areas:
We need you
volunteers
Mahaprasad
Committee
Sundays
10 AM to 11 AM
|
Washing vegetables and cutting them
|
11AM to 12 PM
|
Cooking Prasad
|
12:00 PM to 12:20 PMÂ Â
|
Setup of prasad on the serving table
|
12:30 PM to 1:00PMÂ Â Â
|
Serving prasad by 1st shift volunteers and  water
|
1:00 to 1:30 PM
|
Serving Prasad by 2nd shift volunteers
|
1:45 PMÂ Â Â
|
Clean-up
|
Other volunteering
opportunities:
- Grocery shopping – weekly
- Preparing sweets for special pujas and festivals
Shopping for
temple grocery weekly
- Vegetables, lentils, masala, paper products, cleaning supplies
- Making rotis every Sunday-10 ladies to make 20-25 each
Senior Citizens
Program
- First Saturday of every month 11am -2 pm we need volunteers for senior citizens, to bring them from home to temple and back home in your zip code.
- We need committed and accountable group leader to conduct seniors meetings and activities, 3 to four per meeting-we need about 12 leaders
- Volunteers to teach computers, and other electronic gadgets to seniors.
Finance Committee
- Sundays 1 2 pm Count aarti money
Temple cleaning
day
- Sign up for cleaning day
- Organizing all rooms, kitchen, office, stage back room, puja back room
Festival
volunteers
Shiv Ratri,
Ramnavami, Ganesh Chaturti, Janmastami, Navratri & Divali
- Temple decoration: rangoli, flower arrangements, stage setup
- Event volunteers
Cultural programs
- Every Sunday lead and chorus bhajan singers, tabla, and harmonium players.
- Performing artists for dance, music and drama
- Volunteers to teach garba/raas/bhangra-during holidays
Mandir Volunteers
- Volunteers to make phone calls
- Volunteers for Information desk
- Volunteers to make copies, help in mailing.
- Update information on notice boards
- Remove all out dated info from walls, windows etc
- Greeters, help in parking for bigger functions--diwali, annakoot etc
- Rangoli artists with fresh flowers, sand, traditional-for festivals
- Wedding decorators, mithai/gifts wrapping
- Help in audio/visual/power point presentations
- Help in web designing
- Singers to help in puja and cultural programs
- Help in fundraising
- Help in creating new variety in our SFHT cultural events
- Help in membership-making phone calls etc
- Become a bal bihar sevak or teachers
Volunteering
Committee Work Opportunities
- Scheduling volunteers to different committee & temple events
- Calling volunteers
- Volunteer Relations
- Youth Volunteer Log
- Annual Volunteer Picnic
- Annual Volunteer Appreciation ceremony
Puja Committee
Volunteer Opportunities
Making weekly fresh flower garlands for deities.
- Buying flowers for special pujas
- Cleaning Puja area
- Assisting in special pujas.
- Making puja thalis during special havans or pujas.
- Special puja setup assistance
- Need volunteers to sing bhajan on Sundays
- Looking for Harmonium and Tabla Players
If you have any
questions please send Email
About Education
Our Bala Vihar Classes are based on thousands of years of Hindu spiritual values enshrined in our scriptures. We take this ancient knowledge , passed on by our Rishis , and teach the children how to apply it in their daily lives in an interactive manner thru story telling, discussion, homework and games.This way the experience for children becomes fun filled and enjoyable . Children also learn prayers and bhajans.Our focus is on Character building and Values, taught in English, in age appropriate groups. Our Curriculum, drawn from various sources such as Chinmaya Mission , Arshad Vidya Gurukulam , is continually updated based on the feedback ,and is age appropriate beginning from age 4.
Teenage students have a discussion based class to help them better understand and cope with their current issues and pressures of life faced particularly by our children due to their cross cultural background.
Adult classes run parallel during bala vihar
time for parents to get involved. We encourage all Parents to be involved in
adult education as parents are the role models. Hindi, Gujarati and this year,
Marathi will be offered at 11:30 am for children and adult age 5 and above. -
See more at: http://www.sfht.org/about-education.htm#sthash.3ntP0uzL.dpuf
All sevaks are
volunteers and give of their time for preparation and classes. We would also
like to invite all Youth and Parents to Join the bhajan group that has formed
at the temple. Practice for bhajan group are immediately after Aarti. -
See more at: http://www.sfht.org/about-education.htm#sthash.3ntP0uzL.dpuf
The education
program goes one step further offering Bharat Natyam Classical Dance Classes,
Kathak Dance Classes, Tabla Classes, and Yoga classes with
professional teachers.
For more information,Please contact : Education Department at Balvihar@sfht.org
Education Services
|
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-
Om Tat Sat
(Continued...)
(My
humble salutations to the great devotees
, wikisources and Pilgrimage tourist guide for the
collection )
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