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Rameswaram is the Varanasi
of the south and a major pilgrimage centre for both Saivaites and
Vaishnavaites as it was here that Rama offered thanks to Siva. At
the town's core is the Ramanathaswamy Temple, one of the most important
temples in southern India. Rameswaram is on an island in the Gulf
of Mannar, connected to the mainland at Mandapam by rail, and by
one of India's engineering wonders, the Indira Gandhi Bridge.
The bridge
took 14 years to build and was opened by Rajiv Gandhi late in 1988.
The town lies on the island's eastern side and used to be the port
from which the ferry to Talaimannar (Sri Lanka) departed before
normal passenger services were suspended more than a decade ago.
As a result, there are now very few foreign visitors.
The town itself
is small and dusty, with most of the hotels and restaurants, the
ferry jetty, railway station and post office clustered around the
Ramnathaswamy Temple. The bus stand is some two km west of the town
centre and from here there are frequent shuttle buses to the town
centre. The Thiruvalluvar booking office is on North Car St, next
to the Hotel Chola. It can be difficult to get accommodation here
if there's a festival on, especially if you arrive late in the day.
There's a tourist office in the railway station but it has only
a map of the town and nothing else.
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