Regional Sacred Stories · North India

Khajrana Ganesha of Indore

← Back to Regional Sacred Stories The white spires and tall stambh of the Khajrana Ganesh temple in Indore, set against a clear sky. Photo: Vishwa Sundar / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

The Khajrana Ganesha temple in Indore holds a history shaped by hardship and quiet preservation — an idol kept safely hidden through a difficult period in history, and a queen's devotion that brought it back into the light.

An Idol Hidden for Safety

During the reign of the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb, tradition holds that this ancient idol of Shree Ganesh was deliberately hidden within a well to protect it from harm, remaining concealed there for a considerable span of time.

A Priest's Dream, A Queen's Temple

The idol's location came to be known through a dream experienced by a local priest, Pandit Mangal Bhatt, and it was Maharani Ahilyabai Holkar of the Holkar dynasty who, learning of this, oversaw the idol's retrieval and the construction of the temple that houses it today, completed in 1735.

What Devotees Seek

Devotees who visit Khajrana carry requests of every kind, trusting a local belief, held for generations, that sincere prayer offered here does not go unanswered — a temple built, after all, on an act of devotion that itself overcame considerable hardship to succeed.