The right toe of Sati — Kalika, the Dark Goddess, at Kalipeeth in Kolkata, the city whose name and soul belong entirely to the Mother.
Kaliipeeth marks where the right toe of Sati fell. The Goddess is Kalika (the Dark One — Kali) and the Bhairav is Nakuleesh (Lord of Serpents/Mongooses). This Peetha is distinct from Kalighat (Peetha #25) — the two entries in the traditional list reflect two distinct sites of Sati's body in the Kolkata region, both associated with the Kali tradition that defines the spiritual character of Bengal. Kali — destroyer of time, ego and illusion — is the presiding deity of Kolkata and the city's fierce protectress.
Kali worship in Bengal is among the most theologically sophisticated and devotionally intense in all of Hinduism. The Bengal Shakta tradition — expressed in the poetry of Ramprasad Sen, Kamalakanta Bhattacharya and the songs of the Bauls — represents a unique synthesis of Tantric practice, devotional intensity and philosophical depth. The right toe Peetha connects to Kali's cosmic act of standing on the prostrate Shiva — her right foot pressing on his chest, awakening him from his ego-dissolution.
Kolkata is superbly connected by air (Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport) and rail (Howrah and Sealdah stations). The Peetha is within Kolkata.
Year-round. Kali Puja (Diwali night) is the supreme festival in Kolkata — spectacular city-wide celebrations. October–February is most pleasant.
October's Kali Puja night in Kolkata — when every neighbourhood has its own illuminated Kali pandal — is one of the most visually extraordinary religious spectacles in India.
The Right Toe of Goddess Sati fell at Kaliipeeth, consecrating this land as a Shakti Peetha. The Shakti here is Kalika and the guardian Bhairav is Nakuleesh.
One of the 51 sacred Shakti Peethas — explore its unique significance in the divine circuit.
Explore →One of the 51 sacred Shakti Peethas — explore its unique significance in the divine circuit.
Explore →One of the 51 sacred Shakti Peethas — explore its unique significance in the divine circuit.
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