The prime minister’s idea for the Kashi Vishwanath corridor is for preserving pilgrims’ spiritual activity, which was not reaching its conclusion due to congested streets from the Ganga to the temple grounds.

Fifty-one thousand areas across the country have been preparing to broadcast on television the mega ceremony of our Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s opening of the “Kashi Vishwanath” Dham on Monday, followed by a month of cultural exercise in Varanasi. Modi has a long history with this location, dating back to being elected Prime Minister of India. Modi was interested in the spiritual regeneration of the city long before he became Prime Minister of India and restoring the city’s grandeur from a long while ago.

Now that he is the Prime Minister of India, his long-held ambition is beginning to bear fruit.

He began the task of developing the Kashi Vishwanath Corridor.

The age-old ritual of people coming here to take some holy Ganges water almost came to a halt due to land encroachment and rampant illegal construction in the surrounding area. Modi wanted to develop a plan to build the Kashi Vishwanath Corridor, which would connect the Ganga to the Kashi Vishwanath Temple