Global Stories · UAE

The Oasis of Tolerance

← Back to Global Stories The pink sandstone spires of the BAPS Hindu Mandir in Abu Dhabi, with devotees gathered on its steps. Photo: Unknown authorUnknown author / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

In Abu Dhabi, the BAPS Hindu Mandir stands as the first traditional stone Hindu temple built in the Middle East, its pink sandstone walls, quarried from Rajasthan, carved with a full pantheon of deities including Shree Ganesh himself.

A Temple of Remarkable Scale

Rising 108 feet, the mandir was constructed using more than 25,000 individually hand-carved pieces of stone, its exterior of durable Rajasthani pink sandstone chosen specifically to withstand the extreme summer heat of the UAE, its interior featuring intricate white marble work.

Ganesha Among the Family of Kailash

Within the temple's shrines, marble murtis depict Shiva alongside Parvati and their two sons, Ganesha and Kartikeya, placing Shree Ganesh at the heart of one of the temple's most significant devotional spaces.

What This Temple Reveals

The BAPS Mandir in Abu Dhabi stands as a powerful modern symbol of religious accommodation and craftsmanship, Shree Ganesh's carved image now a permanent part of the Gulf region's own architectural and spiritual landscape.