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​5 things one must always donate in temples and why

etimes.in | Last updated on - Dec 22, 2025, 07:08 IST
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5 things one must always donate in temples and why

Donating at temples has always been woven into the rhythm of Indian spiritual life. It was never just about money. Traditionally, offerings were chosen for what they symbolised: nourishment for the body, light for the mind, service for the community, and release from attachment. The value lay in intention, not cost. A simple offering, given with awareness, carried more weight than abundance without meaning. Even today, these gestures continue to reflect gratitude, humility, and trust in the unseen. Scroll down for five meaningful things you can donate in temples, and why they still matter...

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Food or grains

Donating food is considered one of the highest forms of daan. In many temples, food offerings support langar, annadanam, or daily bhog preparation. Spiritually, food represents life energy. By offering grains, rice, wheat, pulses, or even cooked meals, one participates in sustaining others.

Texts like the Bhagavad Gita speak of food as sacred, something that nourishes not just the body but the mind. Giving food is believed to balance karmic debts linked to scarcity, hunger, and survival fears. It also cultivates gratitude for one’s own nourishment.

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Clothes

Donating clothes, especially new or gently used ones, symbolises dignity and protection. In temple traditions, clothing is not seen as a luxury but as basic respect for the human body.

Many temples distribute clothes to priests, workers, pilgrims, or nearby communities. Spiritually, donating clothes is associated with releasing attachment to identity and appearance. It is said to help soften ego and pride, reminding the giver that the body itself is temporary.

In Indian belief systems, this form of donation is often recommended during times of personal transition, career shifts, emotional changes, or life milestones, as it supports inner renewal.

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Oil or ghee for diyas

Oil and ghee donations are deeply symbolic. Diyas represent awareness, clarity, and the removal of inner darkness. When oil or ghee is offered, it is believed to support not only the physical lamp but also the flame of wisdom itself.

Many devotees donate mustard oil, sesame oil, or cow ghee for daily temple lamps. This act is linked to clarity in decision-making, reduction of mental confusion, and strengthening inner discipline.

Unlike decorative offerings, oil burns away completely, symbolising surrender without expectation of return.

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Cow-related donations

In many Indian temples, especially those linked to Krishna or Shiva traditions, donations connected to cows hold special significance. This may include fodder, green grass, grains, or contributions toward gaushala care.

The cow is traditionally associated with abundance, nourishment, and gentleness. Supporting cow care is believed to cultivate compassion and stability in life. It is also seen as a way of balancing karmas related to consumption, greed, or excess.

Temples often use these donations to maintain shelters or support daily feeding rituals, making the act both spiritual and practical, quietly reinforcing community responsibility, ecological awareness, and the ethic of care woven into temple life.

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Time and service

Perhaps the most overlooked donation is time. Many temples quietly rely on volunteers, for cleaning, managing queues, helping elders, serving food, or arranging offerings.

Offering time is called seva and it holds a special place in spiritual tradition. It is considered purifying because it demands presence without reward. Unlike material donations, time cannot be stored or reclaimed.

Saints and teachers across Indian philosophy have emphasised that seva dissolves ego faster than any ritual. It aligns action with humility, turning everyday effort into worship.

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Copyright © Jun 1, 2026, 04.53AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service