King and Queen visit Neasden Temple on its 30th birthday

Image gallerySkip image gallerySlide 1 of 5, King Charles III receives a ceremonial welcome from the head priest of BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir in Neasden. He has a garland of red and white flowers around his neck and is wearing a dark suit. The head priest is to his left and is wearing an orange head dress and robes. Both men have their hands clasped in prayer., King Charles III received a ceremonial welcome from the head priest
  • Published

King Charles III and Queen Camilla were garlanded with flowers when they celebrated the 30th anniversary of a landmark Hindu temple with its devotees.

The King and Queen wished worshippers a belated "Happy Diwali" - the Hindu festival of lights celebrated earlier this month - when they toured BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir, in west London, known as the Neasden Temple.

Priests dressed in flowing orange robes placed garlands of roses and carnations around the necks of the royal couple when they first arrived.

And sacred threads called nada chadi were tied around their right wrists "to show our bonds remain ever sweet", the King was told by a priest.

The temple is covered in ornately carved stone and is built using classical Vedic architectural principles, with no structural steel and its ceilings and pillars are decorated with figures reflecting the devotion and craftsmanship.

Marble and limestone were hand-carved in India by skilled artisans, then shipped to London and assembled with the support of thousands of volunteers and donors from across the UK and abroad.

This was the King's fourth visit to the temple.

He toured it with his wife in 2009 when he was the Prince of Wales and also made solo trips in 2001 and 1996.

Related internet link