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NEW DELHI, INDIA, March 8, 2012 (The Guardian): The trustee of a temple in Bihar is building a full-scale replica of the 12th century temple of Angkor Wat on the banks of the Ganges river, near the state capital Patna. “The Angkor Wat temple in Bihar will be as majestic as the original, and slightly larger, it will be 222ft by 222ft, and its five shikharas [towers] will also be 222ft high,” said Kishore Kunal, who runs the Mahavir Mandir temple trust in Patna. “And when it’s ready in 10 years time, it will be a functioning temple, employing at least a dozen priests.”

The project, Kunal estimates, will cost at least 600m rupees (around US$12 million), half to create the basic structure, the rest for the embellishments, including sculptures of gods and goddesses.

The original Khmer temple at Angkor, built in the 12th century by a Hindu king from a dynasty linked to southern India and now a Unesco world heritage site, was dedicated to Vishnu. Bihar’s replica will be called the Virat Angkor Wat Ram Mandir, and will have Ram as the main Deity, flanked by his consort Sita, who is said to have been a native of the state. Ram, though, is an avatar of Vishnu and, according to legend, the Hindu god once crossed the Ganges at the very spot where the temple dedicated to him will be constructed.

Kunal, a 61-year-old retired police officer, has never visited the original temple complex in Cambodia, which moved from Hindu to Buddhist use in the 13th century. He is planning his first visit soon but hopes that thousands of Indians who cannot afford to visit Angkor Wat will be able to experience its grandeur by visiting the replica nearer home.