Each offering is carried in your name-gotra as part of the same ritual at the temple.





Complete your Vedic ritual, choose the package for your family.




Many devotees add one of these alongside the puja, for gratitude, ancestral remembrance, or a simple act of giving.
Watch real puja & chadhava deliveries, sent to devotees on WhatsApp after completion.
Khatu Shyam Mandir at Sikar enshrines Khatu Shyam — Barbarik, the grandson of Bhima, whose strength was so great that Krishna, to test him, sought his head in daan; and to whom Krishna gave his own name and the boon that he would be worshipped as the Haare ka Sahara, the refuge of the fallen and the defeated. It is said Barbarik had vowed to fight always for the weaker, losing side. Vijaya Ekadashi, the Phalguna Krishna Ekadashi, is the very victory vrat that Bhagwan Ram is held to have kept, on the counsel of a sage, before crossing the ocean to Lanka — and won. On this tithi a sankalp is offered in your naam-gotra so that the tide of a battle you are losing turns, victory comes in a hard-fought cause, and you gain ground where you were losing, with the Haare ka Sahara at your side. This is offered as faith and effort together; it is never a guarantee of winning, and is meant to strengthen your own courage and effort, not replace them.
The Vijaya Ekadashi vijay sankalp is carried at Khatu Shyam Mandir, Sikar, in your naam-gotra, on the Ekadashi tithi, with lal-pushp, tulsi and itra before Baba Shyam.
Devotees want the sankalp carried with care and reverence, a clear ritual, a clear video, and a clear naam-gotra spoken before Baba Shyam at Sikar.
Khatu Shyam Mandir at Sikar enshrines Khatu Shyam, Barbarik who vowed to fight for the losing side, the Haare ka Sahara. Vijaya Ekadashi is the victory vrat Ram kept before crossing to Lanka. On this Vijaya Ekadashi of 4 March 2027, a sankalp is offered in your naam-gotra to Baba Shyam for the tide of a losing battle turned and victory in a hard-fought cause.