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The fortnight becomes a time when the town itself turns into a bridge between the living and the departed. Gokarna’s sacred identity stretches back to the Treta Yuga.

Ancestral rites in Karnataka’s Gokarna are believed to carry greater spiritual weight than elsewhere
Every year during Pitru Paksha (period of ancestral rites followed by Hindus), the coastal town of Gokarna in Karnataka fills with devotees from across India and even abroad. Families travel here to perform rituals for their ancestors, believing the rites free their forefathers from suffering and bring peace across generations.
The fortnight becomes a time when the town itself turns into a bridge between the living and the departed. Gokarna’s sacred identity stretches back to the Treta Yuga. Tradition says the warrior-sage Parashurama created the land from Konkan to Malabar, with Gokarna at its heart.
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Later, Lord Ganesha placed the Atma Linga here to humble Ravana. Unable to lift it, Ravana cried “Mahabala,” giving the deity its name Mahabaleshwara. Since then, the Mahabaleshwara temple has stood as the soul of Gokarna.
The Power of a Single Day
Scriptures describe the town’s greatness in emphatic terms. A single day of penance in Gokarna is said to equal one hundred thousand years of penance elsewhere. The Skanda Purana even notes that Lord Brahma himself serves as the chief priest of the Mahabaleshwara shrine.
Around the temple, the gods are believed to reside in each direction: Indra and Vishnu in the east, Yama and Agni in the south, Varuna and Ganga in the west, and Vayu, Kubera, and the Sapta Matrikas in the north.
Among Gokarna’s many holy waters, Kotiteertha holds special importance. It is believed that Krishna himself bathed here to be absolved of the sin of killing Kamsa. Mythology says the teertha was formed when drops from Shiva’s matted hair fell during Ganga’s descent.
Rishis invited countless sacred waters to gather here, giving it the name Kotiteertha. Bathing here during Pitru Paksha, especially on new moon day, is said to grant salvation to twenty-one generations of ancestors.
Rituals That Draw the Faithful
The Skanda Purana describes Gokarna as a place where even grave sins can be washed away. Charity, chanting, and penance performed here are said to yield results a million times greater than elsewhere.
Families perform Shraddha, Pinda Pradana, Narayana Bali, and other rites at Kotiteertha. The belief is not only that ancestors are given peace, but that descendants are freed from difficulties linked to ancestral debts.
While Pitru Paksha rituals can be observed anywhere, Gokarna is believed to magnify their effect. The Atma Linga, the sanctity of Kotiteertha, and the repeated praise of this site in the Puranas make it a unique destination.
During these two weeks, the town becomes a meeting point of myth and memory, where people come not just out of obligation but with hope for their ancestors’ liberation and their own relief from life’s burdens.
About the Author
The News Desk is a team of passionate editors and writers who break and analyse the most important events unfolding in India and abroad. From live updates to exclusive reports to in-depth explainers, the Desk d…Read More
The News Desk is a team of passionate editors and writers who break and analyse the most important events unfolding in India and abroad. From live updates to exclusive reports to in-depth explainers, the Desk d… Read More
September 09, 2025, 15:33 IST
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