Updated On: 15 February, 2026 08:06 AM IST | Mumbai | Devdutt Pattanaik
The physical structure of Badrinath evokes ambiguity. It does not resemble a classical Hindu temple but looks closer to a Buddhist vihara.

Illustration/Devdutt Pattanaik
The name Badrinath carries a quiet ecological memory. Badri means the berry (Ziziphus mauritiana), or jujube tree. Nath means lord. Badrinath is the lord who dwells among berry trees. Myth explains this landscape by saying that when Vishnu meditated in the twin form of Nara and Narayana, the goddess Lakshmi transformed herself into a berry tree to shelter him from the cold and to nourish him. Food, shade, and devotion merge, turning vegetation into theology. The shrine that emerges is not merely a temple but a reminder that divinity survives through sustenance.
The physical structure of Badrinath evokes ambiguity. It does not resemble a classical Hindu temple but looks closer to a Buddhist vihara.