Banaras is the most visited pilgrimage destination in all of India.  One of the seven Holy Cities, one of the twelve Jyotir Linga sites and  also a Shakti Pitha site, it is the most favored place for Hindus to die  and be cremated. Myths and hymns speak of the waters of the Ganges  River as the fluid medium of Shiva's divine essence and a bath in the  river is believed to wash away all of one's sins. The particular  river-side location of Banaras is considered especially potent because,  in less than six miles (ten kilometers), the Ganges is met by two other  rivers, the Asi and the Varana. Commenting of this specific location of  Banaras along the river Ganges, the Hindu scripture Tristhalisetu  explains that,
There whatever is sacrificed, chanted, given in  charity, or suffered in         penance, even in the smallest amount,  yields endless fruit because of         the power of that place.  Whatever fruit is said to accrue from many         thousands of  lifetimes of asceticism, even more than that is obtainable         from  but three nights of fasting in this place.
Known in different eras as Avimukta, Varanasi and Kashi, meaning  “where the supreme light shines”, this great north Indian center of  Shiva worship has had more than 3000 years of continuous habitation. Few  standing buildings are older than the 16th century, however, as Muslim  armies raiding from the 11th century onward destroyed the ancient Hindu  temples and erected mosques on their foundations. Qutbuddin Aibak's  armies were said to have destroyed more than a thousand temples in 1194,  and Shah Jahan, the builder of the Taj Mahal, had seventy-six temples  demolished. The city's primary Shiva shrine, the Jyotir Linga Visvanatha  or ‘Golden Temple’, was rebuilt in 1776 across the road from its  original location (now occupied by the Jnana Vapi mosque). Adjacent to  this mosque is the Jnana Vapi well, the ritual center and axis mundi  of Banaras. The Jnana Vapi, or Well of Wisdom, is said to have been dug  by Shiva himself, and its waters carry the liquid form of Jhana,  the light of wisdom. The imposing Alamgir mosque stands on the site of  another of Kashi's most ancient and sacred shrines, the temple of Bindu  Madhava.
In Hindu Kashi, it is said there are thirty-three hundred million  shrines and a half a million images of the deities. Since a pilgrim  would need all the years of his or her life to visit each of these  shrines, it is considered wise to come to the holy city and never again  leave. While this enormous number of shrines is perhaps a trifle  exaggerated, Kashi does indeed have many hundreds of beautiful temples.  Some of these temples are named after the great tirthas, or  pilgrimage centers, in other parts of India - Rameshvaram, Dwarka, Puri,  and Kanchipuram, for example - and it is said that merely by visiting  Kashi one automatically gains the benefit of visiting all other sacred  places. Most pilgrims make only short visits of days or weeks to Kashi,  while others come to spend their remaining years in the holy city. Those  who come to live in Kashi with the intention of dying there are called jivan muktas meaning those who ‘are liberated while still alive’.
Kashi is also traditionally called Mahashamshana, ‘the great cremation ground’. Hindus believe that cremation at the holy city insures moksha,  or 'final liberation of the soul from the endless cycle of birth,  death, and rebirth'. Because of this belief, dying persons and dead  bodies from far-off places are brought to Kashi for cremation at the  Manikarnika and other cremation sites (five principal and eighty-eight  minor cremation/bathing sites lie along the Ganges). In her book, Banaras: City of Light, Diana Eck writes:
"Death in Kashi is not a feared death, for here the  ordinary God of Death, frightful Yama, has no jurisdiction. Death in  Kashi is death known and faced, transformed and transcended."
Encircling the holy city at a radius of five miles is the sacre   d  path known as the Panchakroshi Parikrama. Pilgrims take five days to  circumambulate Kashi on this fifty-mile path, visiting 108 shrines along  the way. If one is unable to walk the entire path a visit to the  Panchakroshi Temple will suffice. By walking round the sanctuary of this  shrine, with its 108 wall reliefs of the temples along the sacred way,  the pilgrim makes a symbolic journey around the sacred city. Another  important Banaras pilgrimage route is the Nagara Pradakshina, which  takes two days to complete and has seventy-two shrines.
Today, a crowded, bustling, noisy, dirty city, Banaras was in  antiquity an area of gently rolling hills, lush forests, and natural  springs bordered by the magical waters of the river Ganges. A favored  hermitage site for many of India's most venerated sages - Guatama Buddha  and Mahavira, Kabir and Tulsi Das, Shankaracharaya, Ramanuja and  Patanjali all meditated here - Banaras has been and continues to be one  of the most visited holy places on the planet. First-time visitors to  Banaras may find themselves initially overwhelmed by sensory  stimulation, yet just beneath the surface is a presence of peacefulness  and spiritual wisdom.
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