Deep in the saffron-field valleys of the Kashmir Himalaya, in the forests above Shopian district, the throat of Sati fell from the sky and became Sharvani — the Goddess who belongs to Shiva the archer, who holds in her sacred throat the sound that sustains the universe.
The Sacred Story
The Ramarnath Shakti Peetha is located in the Shopian district of Jammu & Kashmir, in the forested Pir Panjal ranges south of the Kashmir Valley. The shrine sits within the precincts of the ancient Ramarnath (Rameshwara) Shiva temple complex — a Shaiva site of great antiquity — giving this peetha the unusual character of a Shakti presence nested within a Shiva temple.
The Goddess here is called Sharvani — "she who belongs to Sharva (Shiva the archer, destroyer of enemies)" — and also Trisandhya, "she of the three junctions" (the three daily sandhyas: dawn, noon, and dusk — the three thresholds of the day when the veil between the worlds is thinnest). The Bhairava who guards the peetha is Trimukha — the three-faced one — whose three faces correspond to the three sandhyas and the three aspects of time: past, present, and future.
The Ramarnath temple complex in which the peetha sits is an ancient Kashmiri Shaiva site. The convergence of Shakti peetha and Shiva linga within the same complex reflects the theological truth that the Shakti Peethas are, at their core, sites of Shiva's grief and devotion — every peetha is also a site of Shiva's presence, because it is a site where he stood, bereft, over the body of his beloved. Here, at Ramarnath, the Shaiva and Shakta traditions share a single sacred enclosure.
The Kashmir Valley holds a unique place in the history of the Goddess tradition. The Devi Mahatmyam, the foundational Shakta text, has deep connections with the Kashmir Shaiva school. The valley's tradition of Trika philosophy — which places the Goddess as the supreme creative principle — gives the Shakti Peethas of Jammu & Kashmir a philosophical depth that few regions can match. Visiting Ramarnath means entering this living tradition of Kashmiri Shakta-Shaiva thought.
Why People Visit
In the saffron valleys of Kashmir, at a site where Shakti and Shaiva traditions share a single sacred enclosure — Sharvani Devi, the throat of the Goddess, in the land of the most refined spiritual philosophy in India.
Getting There
The shrine is in Shopian district, J&K — approximately 60 km south of Srinagar via the Srinagar–Jammu National Highway (NH-44) and then south through Shopian. Srinagar is the primary gateway.
Visitor Guidelines
In the saffron valley ringed by snow peaks, where the most refined philosophical tradition in India grew from the soil and the stone and the sound of sacred rivers — the throat of Sati rests in the forest above Shopian. Sharvani Devi holds in her sacred gala the mantra that sustains everything. She is Trisandhya: she lives at the threshold, at the three transitions of the day when the ordinary world momentarily becomes transparent and the sacred is visible beneath it. Come at dawn. Hear the puja when the Kashmir sky turns gold over the Pir Panjal. Let the Goddess of the throat restore your voice — the voice you were born with, the voice that knows what is true, the voice that the world sometimes makes you forget.