The Land Where Krishna Was Born
Mathura and Vrindavan, separated by just 15 km on the banks of the Yamuna river in Uttar Pradesh, together form the most sacred geography of Vaishnava Hinduism. Mathura is the birthplace of Lord Krishna; Vrindavan is the forest of his childhood — where he played, danced, stole butter and performed the cosmic Rasa Lila with the Gopis. These two towns contain over 5,000 temples between them, and the experience of walking their lanes — past sadhus chanting the names of Krishna, flower sellers at every corner and pilgrims from every part of India — is unlike anywhere else in the country.
Mathura: The Birthplace
The Krishna Janmabhoomi complex marks the spot where Lord Krishna is believed to have been born in a prison cell, the son of Devaki and Vasudeva. The site is shared with the Shahi Eidgah mosque (built on the ruins of the original Keshavadeva temple by Aurangzeb), making it one of India's most historically complex sacred sites. The current temple complex, rebuilt in the 20th century, contains the "Garbhagriha" — the dark cell that represents the prison — along with a magnificent main temple. The Dwarkadhish Temple in the old city, built in 1814, is the most beautiful in Mathura and is especially magnificent during Janmashtami celebrations.
Vrindavan: The Forest of Rasa
Vrindavan — meaning "forest of Tulsi (basil)" — is the landscape of Krishna's divine childhood and adolescence. The town contains several extraordinary temples. The Banke Bihari temple, housing the most beloved image of Krishna in north India, is unique in that the curtain before the idol is drawn every few minutes, as the darshan of Banke Bihari is said to be so intense that prolonged eye contact causes the devotee to lose consciousness. The Radha Raman temple, established in the 16th century by Gopal Bhatta Goswami, houses one of the oldest and most revered Krishna images in Vrindavan — a self-manifested Shaligrama stone image. The ISKCON temple (Sri Sri Krishna-Balarama Mandir) is among the most beautifully maintained in India.
The Parikrama: Circumambulating the Sacred Land
The Vrindavan Parikrama — the circumambulation of the town along a 10 km path — is one of the most atmospheric walks in India, taken barefoot by devotees at any hour. The longer Braj Parikrama — a 270 km circuit of the entire Braj region, passing through 12 forests and 24 major groves associated with Krishna's life — takes 30 days on foot and is completed twice a year (Kartik month and Phalgun month) by tens of thousands of pilgrims.
When to Visit: The Festival Calendar
- Janmashtami (August): Krishna's birthday — the most spectacular night of the year, with the entire Braj region lit up, theatrical performances of Krishna's birth and midnight celebrations at every temple
- Holi (March): Vrindavan and Nandgaon celebrate Holi for an entire week before the main festival — the Lathmar Holi at Nandgaon and Barsana is extraordinary
- Radhashtami (September): The birthday of Radha — Vrindavan's own festival, celebrated with particular intensity at the Radha Raman and Radha Damodar temples
- Kartik (October–November): The most sacred month in the Vaishnava calendar — the town fills with pilgrims completing month-long residencies
Getting There and Around
Mathura Junction is on the main Delhi–Mumbai and Delhi–Chennai rail lines and is well-served from Delhi (2 hours), Agra (40 minutes) and Jaipur (3 hours). Vrindavan is 15 km from Mathura — shared autos, e-rickshaws and private taxis operate constantly between the two towns. Both towns are best explored on foot or by e-rickshaw within their respective old quarters — cars and motorcycles are inefficient in the dense lanes around the main temples.