Photo: Ghostface Buddha / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0)
In southern Sri Lanka, the Kataragama temple complex stands as one of the island's most remarkable multi-religious pilgrimage sites, where Hindus, Buddhists, and others come together, and where Shree Ganesh, honored here as Pillaiyar, is revered by devotees of more than one faith.
A Shared Sacred Ground
Kataragama's central significance lies primarily with the deity Kataragama Deviyo, identified by Hindus with Murugan, but the wider temple complex includes shrines to a number of deities, including Pillaiyar, drawing devotees across Sri Lanka's Tamil Hindu and Sinhalese Buddhist communities alike.
Devotion That Crosses Boundaries
Pillaiyar's presence within this shared sacred space reflects the particular character of Sri Lankan religious life, where Hindu and Buddhist devotional practice have long coexisted and, at certain sites, genuinely intermingled, each tradition honoring the same figures in its own way.
What This Site Reveals
Kataragama shows Shree Ganesh's worship in one of its most inclusive settings, honored not within a single tradition's exclusive space, but within a living, shared sanctuary that has drawn devotees of more than one faith for generations.
Sankashti Chaturthi Mandal