Few years ago, I had to visit Jaipur in Rajasthan  (India) along with my son and stayed there for couple of days. On reaching there  we could get some nice accommodation at a moderately priced hotel near the  Railway Station. After we freshed up, the Manager of the hotel was kind enough  to tell us about the options available for sightseeing. We, however, decided to  first accomplish the purpose of  our visit and once it was was over, we lunched  in a different Rajasthani restaurant  and hired  an Auto Rickshaw to take us  straight to the famous Amer/Amber Palace/Fort which was actually at a distance  of 16 kms.When we were just near  the fort the Auto driver  stopped his vehicle and advised us to either take the elephant ride or a Jeep to  go to the top. The Elephants were lined up waiting for passengers. We preferred  a Jeep as an Elephant ride seemed to be too expensive. While travelling in the  Jeep, the driver cum guide told us about Lal Bazaar which was on the left and  that it is a Bengali settlement. I wondered as to how there is a Bengali  settlement here and while I was conversing with my son, the driver also informed  us that the Priests of the temple inside the fort are also Bengalis. I  remembered that the owner of the hotel, we were staying at as well as the  Manager there, were also Bengalis. Very soon we were parked at a place above the  top and the driver asked us to visit the fort/palaces and return back to find  him at that point.
We entered the complex through the entrance known  as Sinh Pol, At right through a flight of steps there was a temple dedicated to  Goddess Durga known here as Shila Devi. The main door is made of silver on which  images of Durga and Saraswathi were carved out. There were two lions of large  proportions as if standing guard to the Goddess. We had the darshan and  thereafter started loitering around the marvelous complex. 
Back home, in our own complex we have a Bengali  friend Shri Subhash Bhattacharya, a DIG with CBI (Central Bureau of  Investigations). We  knew that he had his house at Pilani, Rajasthan. An animal  lover and a staunch environmentalist. We told him about our visit to Jaipur and  about the Bengali settlement there. To our surprise he told us that for over 400  years his ancestors were the head priests of the Shila Devi temple in the Amer  Palace complex. Even today his eldest  brother  Shri Mahesh Bhattacharya is the  head priest there. He narrated his experiences when as a child he used to beat  the drums while his father used to perform the rites (Pooja) inside the temple’s  sanctum sanctorum. He also showed us his family album and an important  photograph was that of a Raja Chood Singh Palace which was provided to the  Bhattacharya’s for their residence. 
It is now their property and is being sought after by a heritage hotel chain. Their family also have their own temple known as “Mansa Mata Mandir” of which Shri Mahesh Bhattacharya is the Trustee. It is believed that all your wishes get accomplished if you pray to the deity (Goddess) there. However, one needs to bow to the Bhairava as well, at the top of the Jaigarh Fort which is visible from that point. It is needless to emphasize that the Goddess alone cannot fulfill your wishes without her better half !.
It is now their property and is being sought after by a heritage hotel chain. Their family also have their own temple known as “Mansa Mata Mandir” of which Shri Mahesh Bhattacharya is the Trustee. It is believed that all your wishes get accomplished if you pray to the deity (Goddess) there. However, one needs to bow to the Bhairava as well, at the top of the Jaigarh Fort which is visible from that point. It is needless to emphasize that the Goddess alone cannot fulfill your wishes without her better half !.
Apart from the information we received from our  dear Bhattacharya, we also made some independent searches and learnt that one  Shri Vidyadhar Bandopadhyay, an architect was instrumental in the town planning  of Jaipur which was established in 1727. He belonged to a Goswami (Gosai) clan  who are the priests in the Shri Krishna temple in the City Palace. One Shri  Sansar Chandra Sen, a highly accomplished personality, was  earlier the Prime  Minister of the Pricely State. A road in the city is named after him. Late  Rajmata Gayatri Devi hailed from Cooch Behar (West Bengal) and therefore there  was further influx of Bengalis into the city.
The present day Amer/Amber Fort cum Palace was  built in 1592 AD  by Raja Man Singh, the trusted lieutenant of Akbar, the Moghul  ruler. Man Singh was appointed as the Governor of Bengal which included today’s   Bangladesh. Man Singh wanted the Raja of Jessore (Bangladesh)to be subdued.  However, this was not an easy task. Man Singh understood the perils which  awaited him. He is then supposed to have worshipped Goddess Kali (Durga) to help  him to win the battle. Mother Kali is supposed to have come into his dreams and  instructed him to dig out the black stone slab lying in the river bed which was  her own sculpture. She wanted the sculpture to be installed at the Amer/Amber  Palace with human sacrifices every day. If this condition was acceptable, he  could win the battle other wise not. Man Sinh relented and finally won the  battle. The sculpture was traced out and moved to Amer Palace some where in  1596. However there was a need for performing the daily rites. Man Singh got a  family of the priestly class identified for the purpose and brought them to Amer  with promises of hereditary priesthood to that family as also some villages by  way of grants. This is how the Bengali priests arrived.
The Goddess needed a human head everyday. The  Prisoners of War came handy. This continued as long as Man Singh was there until  his natural death at Ellichpur in 1614. We may well imagine the number of heads  that might have been severed out to appease the Goddess. After Man Singh’s death  his, son Mirza Raja Bhan Singh is supposed to have prayed to the Goddess to  accept Goats instead of humans and some people suggest that the Goddess turned  her head away. Even today the head of the deity in the temple remains swayed to  the right. Although the sacrifice of a horned goat is carried out everyday, even now,  the downfall of the Kachhwaha clan to which Man Singh belonged is attributed to  the negation of human blood to the presiding deity in the Amer  Palace!.
After the  Goat is butchered, the head is kept in  a silver vessel and offered to the deity early in the morning at about 5.30 AM.  Wine is also a part of the offering which is kept in two silver vessels. The  rituals are carried out behind the curtain and a visit to the temple after the  rites are over is supposed to be rewarding as the deity is supposed to be in a  happy mood after relishing the offerings. The slaughter was  being  carried out  publicly but due to the laws being enforced, it is now done in a separate room.
Photo Credit (except the goat): GIL trotter@sapo.pt
Photo Credit (except the goat): GIL trotter@sapo.pt





