Eastern Eye (UK)

Dubai temple will offer support to Indians

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A PURPOSE-BUILT Hindu temple opened in Dubai on Tuesday (4), the first ever in the United Arab Emirates, to provide a place of worship and support network for the large Indian community, including migrant labourers.

The large white marble building with Indian as well as Emirati architectu­ral flourishes sits in the officially Islamic country’s Jebel Ali port district, which is also home to churches and a Sikh temple. Thousands of south Asian workers live in labour camps nearby and will be provided with special buses to allow them to visit the 2,300 square metre (25,000 square feet) temple and its community centre.

Committee member Raju Shroff, who runs a textiles business, said it was the realisatio­n of his father’s five-decade dream to open a dedicated temple in Dubai. “It’s an amazing feeling because it’s a dream come true, at least for my father, who’s been in this country since 1960,” he said.

“I got involved in this project only five years ago, but he’s been on it for five decades. So the journey has been quite (long),” added Shroff.

The temple, with a distinctiv­e lotus pattern decorating the central skylight, was built at a cost of about 60 million dirhams (£14 million/ $16m) and can house 1,000 people at a time.

In anticipati­on of high demand, visitors must apply for a QR code online that they scan for entry.

Indians are the UAE’s biggest expatriate community, making up about 35 per cent of the population of 10 million.

As well as a temple for all different forms of Hinduism, it will act as a support centre for Indian expatriate­s, particular­ly labourers, with experts such as lawyers and medical doctors providing voluntary services.

When labourers face distress or special requiremen­ts, “they can reach out to us and we will reach out to the community at large,” Shroff said.

“There’s so many labourers here that we would like to help. And there are so many profession­als that would like to help, so we become the platform really... to bridge the gap,” he added.

The UAE government has heavily promoted “tolerance” of different religious views.

 ?? ?? BRIDGING THE GAP: The new Hindu temple in Jebel Ali, Dubai
BRIDGING THE GAP: The new Hindu temple in Jebel Ali, Dubai

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