LONDON: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and British Secretary of India from India Priti Patel celebrates Diwali and New Year Hindu with worshipers at Baps Shri Swaminarayan Mandir, London – known as the Temple of Neasen – on Sunday.
Johnson was served with a long-sleeved t-shirt with the name Wilfred and a picture of the temple on it for his one-year-old son by a seven-year-old girl, Amisha Patel, on behalf of BAPS, also as a “Onesie” for the second child, his wife, Carrie is currently being Brought.
The secretary of the house, wearing Pink Salmon Hehenga, joined PM to offer a fruit basket in the Sanctum Inner Temple central temple where they observed Annakut – “Mountain Food” – arranged artistically before God as the first food as the first meal.
new Year.
They then did “Abhishek” Sri Nilatkanth Varni, Young Form “Bhagwan Swaminarayan”.
They saw exhibitions that summarized the relief effort of Covid-19 Covid-19 Neasen, and met several fathers who had become the main workers and volunteers during a pandemic.
Johnson praised “the extraordinary contribution of Hinduism made to England”, from serving in the police and the NHS to launch the Covid vaccine.
He said: “What His Majesty Pramukh Swami Maharaj has contributed to England.
I see it here today at the Temple of Neasden.
I have been here many times, but I have never been here at A time when the Neasen Temple has become the center of life The entire London community.
“Patel also visited Iskcon Bhaktivedana Manor near Watford at Hertfordshire, the largest center in Iskcon in England.
The plantation was donated to the Hare Krishna movement in 1973 by The Beatles’ George Harrison who was interested in Indian spirituality.
“It is an honor to return to Bhaktivedanta Manor for diwali blessings today.
Thank you all for the beautiful welcome you give me,” Patel said.
There Patel is served with a book in Vrindavan above.
He received a blessing in front of the god and saw a private room where Srila Prabhupada, founder of Iskcon, lived.
He also feeds cows at organic dairy farms, which are carried out in accordance with the principle of Ahimsa (without violence) and ancient agriculture techniques.