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  • Tiled ceiling detail at the Shri Swaminaraya Mandir, Neasden, UK. Opened in 1995, the temple is the first traditional Mandir in the UK.
    SFE_050809_0010.jpg
  • Tourist at the Shri Swaminaraya Mandir, Neasden, UK. Opened in 1995, the temple is the first traditional Mandir in the UK.
    SFE_050809_0002.jpg
  • Priests at The Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple), Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_395_1.jpg
  • The Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple), Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_343_1.jpg
  • A monkey walks past a man as he ties his turban after bathing in the pool at The Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple), Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_411_1.jpg
  • The Nritya Gopal Smriti Mandir (known as the Old Library) and a statue of Rabindranath Tagore, Chandannagar, India
    SFE_13039_211.jpg
  • A man ties his turban after bathing in the pool at The Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple), Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_400_1.jpg
  • Boys play cricket inside one of the buildings of The Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple), Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_351_1.jpg
  • Vishwa Hindu Mandir / Temple on Lady Margaret Road. Southall in West London, also known as 'Little India' by some, is an area almost completely populated by people from South Asia. Figures show that the area is approximately 50 percent Indian in origin although walking the streets it would appear far higher as the local people go about their shopping in the many shops specialising in goods specific to this culture. The mix of religions is mainly Sikh, Hindu and Muslim.<br />
<br />
Southall is primarily a South Asian residential district. 1950 was when the first group of South Asians arrived in Southall, reputedly recruited to work in a local factory owned by a former British Indian Army officer. This South Asian population grew due to the closeness of expanding employment opportunities. The most significant cultural group to settle in Southall are Indian Punjabis.
    03082011southallAG.jpg
  • Vishwa Hindu Mandir / Temple on Lady Margaret Road. Southall in West London, also known as 'Little India' by some, is an area almost completely populated by people from South Asia. Figures show that the area is approximately 50 percent Indian in origin although walking the streets it would appear far higher as the local people go about their shopping in the many shops specialising in goods specific to this culture. The mix of religions is mainly Sikh, Hindu and Muslim.<br />
<br />
Southall is primarily a South Asian residential district. 1950 was when the first group of South Asians arrived in Southall, reputedly recruited to work in a local factory owned by a former British Indian Army officer. This South Asian population grew due to the closeness of expanding employment opportunities. The most significant cultural group to settle in Southall are Indian Punjabis.
    03082011southallAI.jpg
  • Vishwa Hindu Mandir / Temple on Lady Margaret Road. Southall in West London, also known as 'Little India' by some, is an area almost completely populated by people from South Asia. Figures show that the area is approximately 50 percent Indian in origin although walking the streets it would appear far higher as the local people go about their shopping in the many shops specialising in goods specific to this culture. The mix of religions is mainly Sikh, Hindu and Muslim.<br />
<br />
Southall is primarily a South Asian residential district. 1950 was when the first group of South Asians arrived in Southall, reputedly recruited to work in a local factory owned by a former British Indian Army officer. This South Asian population grew due to the closeness of expanding employment opportunities. The most significant cultural group to settle in Southall are Indian Punjabis.
    03082011southallAH.jpg
  • Monkeys feeding on the path up the mountainside at Galta and the Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple) Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_489_1.jpg
  • Monkeys feeding and bathing at the pool of the Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple), Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_451_1.jpg
  • Monkeys feeding on the path up the mountainside at Galta and the Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple) Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_479_1.jpg
  • Monkeys feeding on the path up the mountainside at Galta and the Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple) Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_499_1.jpg
  • Monkeys feeding and bathing at the pool of the Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple), Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_445_1.jpg
  • A Langur monkey leaps between buildings at Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple), Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_368_1.jpg
  • A woman laughing at the Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple), Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_441_1.jpg
  • Electric car with tourists seeing the Amber Fort, created in the late 16th century, on 4th February 2018 in Amer Jaipur, Rajasthan, India. Constructed of red sandstone and marble, the attractive, opulent palace is laid out on four levels, each with a courtyard. It consists of the Diwan-e-Aam, or Hall of Public Audience, the Diwan-e-Khas, or Hall of Private Audience, the Sheesh Mahal mirror palace, or Jai Mandir, and the Sukh Niwas where a cool climate is artificially created by winds that blow over a water cascade within the palace. Hence, the Amer Fort is also popularly known as the Amer Palace. The most popular tourist destination of Jaipur it recieves over 5000 visitirs daily.
    _E6A3634 .jpg
  • Umesh Mishra, 26 a sarangi virtuoso tunes his instrument before a concert later that night at the Nrityagopal Smriti Mandir, a concert hall in Chandannagar, India
    SFE_13039_239.jpg
  • Four elderly Indian men sit and have their photograph taken after bathing in the pool at The Surya Mandir (known as the Monkey Temple), Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_426_1.jpg
  • Umesh Mishra, 26 a sarangi virtuoso tunes his instrument before a concert later that night at the Nrityagopal Smriti Mandir, a concert hall in Chandannagar, India
    SFE_13039_238.jpg
  • Umesh Mishra, 26 a sarangi virtuoso tunes his instrument before a concert later that night at the Nrityagopal Smriti Mandir, a concert hall in Chandannagar, India
    SFE_13039_215.jpg
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