11 Spine-Chilling Mysteries in India Which No Scientific Reasoning Has Been Able To Solve..

Naresh V
envigblogs
Published in
5 min readApr 3, 2022

India has always been called a land of mysteries, for its natural phenomena or eccentricities associated with religion and cultures since time immemorial. Mysteries that are difficult to explain. There are events that occur that probably have no explanations whatsoever. Such tales are born out of rumours or imagination. Most of these may be fabricated and can be put off the table, but some tales are strange enough to be shrugged off. These have the ability to change the perception of modern science. Let me take you through some of these mystical unsolved mysteries that are still asking for answers. No scientific reasoning has been able to solve these cases. Check the list and see if you have answers to these mysteries:

Located in a small village is a 700 years old Hazrat Qamar Ali Darvesh Dargah. It is famous for a 90 kg stone that can be lifted in no other way except 11 people in total gather around it, place their index fingers under it and shout the name of the Sufi saint who put a curse on the stone; and that is when it levitates automatically higher than their heads. No matter what you do there is no other way to levitate that rock except this one.

The Red Rain also known as Blood Rain was a phenomenon that occurred in 2001 in Idduki, Kerala. This legend of Red Rain has baffled the people of the place. Numerous people observed red rain falling over the place. The rain colours, even laundry left in open to dry and reminds of human blood. Such incidents are unexplained through scientific reasons and render them so mysterious that they are marked in our minds forever.

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Every monsoon a small strip of land in Jatinga, Assam, experiences a very bizarre and sad phenomenon. Over the last 100 years, thousands of birds have flown to their death in this strip. Between September — November, year after year, several migratory birds and local birds commit suicide in the village between 7–10 pm. Hundreds of birds descend from the sky plummeting to their deaths by crashing into buildings and trees. What is more mysterious is that these birds are diurnal and there is no explanation why they would fly at night.

In Surat, a city in Gujarat, India, there is a beach by the name of Dumas Beach, which is said to be as haunted as Bangarh and Kuldhara in Rajasthan. While the beach looks like God’s home during the daytime, it becomes Devil’s paradise after the sun goes down. People claim that they hear weird sounds coming from the beach- like people laughing and some crying while there is not even a soul present. There have been reports that a lot of people have also disappeared on this beach.

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The marshes in West Bengal is where you can observe these ghost lights called Aleya or jack-o-lantern. These are nothing but a flickering ball of light and have caused many a death of fishermen who have followed it in West Bengal and Bangladesh. The local fishermen believe that these lights are the ‘evil spirits’ of dead fishermen who lost their lives while fishing in the marshes. Once you follow them, they just diminish in size and disappear, causing people to panic and lose their way. These marshes are some of the most mysterious places in India owing to these strange lights.

Also known as the Lepakshi Temple, this temple is located in the village of Lepakshi in Anantpur district, Andhra Pradesh. The mysterious and unique feature of this temple is that one of the 70 pillars that it stands on, hangs in the air without any support from the ground. There is a small gap between the temple floor and the base of the pillar, and people pass thin objects such as a paper or a piece of cloth from one side to the other. Such a huge solid granite pillar, 20 feet high to be precise, that hangs from the roof defies the law of gravity.

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Deep in the Thar desert is located the Karni Mata temple, which is also known as the temple of rats. This temple is known as the temple of rats because there are approximately 20,000 rats living in it. The temple was built in the early 1900 to honour Karni Mata together with her furry and reincarnated devotees the rats. Rats in the temple are fed milk, grains, and coconut shells in large metal bowls. These rats are referred to as little children or “Kabbas”. It is believed that eating the leftovers of the rats brings good fortune to the devotees who visit the temple.

Shetpal is a village in Maharashtra, where cobra snakes have a permanent abode in each and every house; it is an established custom and mandatory for every household to have a resting place for cobras. Snakes roam around in every corner of the village without any restrictions on their movement, are like family, and are worshipped daily in every heart and home in this village! Neither the cobras nor the residents live in fear of each other. Snakes are treated as pets in this village, and kids often play with them at times. It is mysterious for the reason that there has been no snake bite reported in the village.

Suggested read : 13 One Thousand Years Old Temples in India

Roopkund Lake, Uttrakhand, known as ‘Mystery Lake’, is situated at an altitude of 5,029 meters, in the Himalayas. It is also commonly known as the ‘Skeleton lake’, as the name suggests, one can see hundreds of scattered skulls and skeletons lying at the bottom of the lake, which makes for a distinct natural spectacle when the snow melts. The lake is about two meters deep and invites hundreds of trekkers and pilgrims every year.

Tulsishyam is a place in Gir National Park, Gujarat, which defies gravity. This 150-meter stretch is a steep road where vehicles start moving upward if left in free gear. It is believed that you can drive here, even without the car being switched on, and the hills will be pulling the cars towards themselves. It is also reported that travellers when tried pouring water on the road, the water started flowing upward due to the anti-gravitational pull.

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Jwalaji Temple is a Holy shrine located in the Jwalaji Town of Kangra, Himachal Pradesh. and esteemed by the Hindu devotees of the country. The main attraction of the temple is the mysterious eternal flame that comes out of the cervices of the rocks and has kept burning endlessly for over 100 years. As there is no idol in the temple the deity Jwalaji is worshipped in the form of the flame. It is believed that the tongue of Goddess Sati fell on this ground.

Suggested read: Kailasha-The Largest Monolithic Temple in the World

Pics & Inputs: Google, Wikipedia, envigblogs.com, magicpin.in,

Originally published at https://www.envigblogs.com on April 3, 2022.

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Naresh V
envigblogs

Writer, Poet, Blogger, Motivator, a human being