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Epic Hindu shrine is rising in Hawaii

It will be the first all-stone temple built outside India.

Hindu monks, many of them converts from abroad, pose before the monastery, which will take another decade to complete.
Hindu monks, many of them converts from abroad, pose before the monastery, which will take another decade to complete.Read moreASSOCIATED PRESS

WAILUA, Hawaii - In a clearing within Kauai Aadheenam's lush gardens, the ping-ping-ping of metal chipping at stone can be heard as a half-dozen artisans from India put the finishing flourishes on the Hindu monastery's legacy for the ages.

Hand-carved in granite and shipped in pieces to the island from India, the Iraivan Temple is faithful to the design formulas defined by South Indian temple builders a thousand years ago.

The $8 million temple to Shiva is the first all-stone Hindu temple outside India, according to the Kauai monks. Such a project is a rarity even in India.

The ranks of skilled carvers from India have dwindled in recent centuries, as stone has yielded to concrete and steel. Design modifications in temples outside India have become a necessity to make worship at the traditionally open-air spaces bearable during the winters in Canada or the northern United States.

Lush, tropical Kauai, known as Hawaii's Garden Isle, doesn't have that problem.

"Actually it's the first all-stone temple made anywhere in quite a while. I think our architect in India said he's made two in 50 years," said Sannyasin Arumugaswami, a generously bearded monk enveloped in an orange cotton robe.

Construction began in 1990 and could take 10 more years to finish because of the mass of the structure and the skill needed to build it. The temple already has incorporated 80 shipping containers' worth of stone, and is surmounted by a gold-gilt cupola carved over three years by just four men.

The temple is the vision of a former ballet dancer and Californian who founded the monastery back in 1970, Satguru Sivaya Subramuniyaswami.

Subramuniyaswami, who died at 74 in 2001, embraced Hindu monasticism in the late 1940s. Today his Kauai monastery is home to 22 monks who spend their days in prayer at the monastery's Kadavul Temple, tending the monastery's fruit orchards and livestock, or putting out the order's quarterly publication, Hinduism Today.

While many of the Kauai monks are converts, hailing from about six countries, the order's focus - as reflected in its stone temple - is on tradition.

And the rules are strict.

While day-trippers are welcome, the monastery does not allow the curious to try out monastic life for a few days or weeks. The minimum stay is six months. All the monks are celibate, single and male. Once they take their permanent vows, they do not speak of their lives before the monastery.

"It's like the institution was picked up in India and plopped down here. ... Something our founder purposely tried to do is not dilute it or change it seriously because of where it is," said Satguru Bodhinatha Veylanswami, the guru and abbot of the monastery.

Still, the ascetics' traditional orange, yellow or white cotton robes and shaved or bearded appearances belie their modern savvy. These monks have cell phones, digital cameras, podcasts, and wide-screen computers to put out their magazine, with a worldwide circulation of 15,000 print and 5,000 digital. The monastery's Web site gets up to 40,000 hits a day.

The monastery's partially constructed temple stands at the edge of small valley that plunges down to the Wailua River, a pond and a few rushing waterfalls, and against a distant backdrop of soaring green mountains. Complete with tropical flowers and other plants - some purchased from the National Tropical Botanical Garden headquartered on Kauai - the monastery's landscaped gardens are awe-inspiring.

"Part of the object is to place the temple in just the most beautiful Hawaiian environment possible," said Arumugaswami, explaining that the temple's surroundings are a natural temple.

Among the primary tenets of the order - which has about 8,000 temple supporters and several hundred close disciples - is the belief that Shiva is in everything and everyone. The goal is to understand one's oneness with Shiva, and therefore be freed from the eternal cycle of death and rebirth into the physical world.

Subramuniyaswami left specific instructions for the temple's construction. No machinery may be used to cut the stone, which he believed would destroy the stone's "song." Machines are used only to lift some of the larger stones into place. The guru also required that the temple be built without debt, prompting a fund-raising campaign that so far has raised $10 million toward its goal of $16 million. Half of that will be set aside as an endowment.

The building still awaits part of its roof and its lava rock base that will be an homage to the design of sacred Hawaiian heiaus, ancient stone platforms used for worship in the islands. And the 700-pound crystal lingam - a symbol of the god Shiva - now housed in the monastery's Kadavul Temple has yet to be installed in the new temple's inner sanctum.

But the building began to spiritually "wake up" during a ceremony held last year.

"The way that we look at a temple in Hinduism is that the temple itself is a form of God. And so it is divine. It's not just a building. That's why we go through so much trouble to build it," Arumugaswami said.