We risk becoming a lost generation, say young Hindus
JOANNA TAYLOR/BBCYoung Hindus say they risk becoming a "lost generation" and disconnected from their culture and traditions because they have nowhere to worship.
Hindu families living in Northstowe, Cambridgeshire, say they will now have to drive to temples in London and Birmingham to worship after the closure of the Bharat Hindu Samaj Temple in Peterborough.
Some of the families say they moved to Northstowe specifically in the hope the Hindu Samaj Northstowe group would win a bid to build and run the town's first faith hub, but it lost out to the Northstowe Church Network.
"Compared to my friends who go to church every week, I go to temple maybe twice a year," 16-year-old Eyva, who lives in Northstowe, says.
"My friends like to come and see festivals and how we celebrate, but I can never take them to a temple.
"I can never show them how our traditions are done properly, because there are no facilities to support that," she adds.
"You've already lost this generation," Eyva says, adding that "you've lost the next generation as well" if a temple is not built soon.
The Hindu Samaj Northstowe group's bid scored 65 out of 100 against South Cambridgeshire District Council's criteria, while the Northstowe Church Network scored 81.
The council said the Hindu Samaj Northstowe bid "presented clear evidence of both regional and local need for a temple", but that it could have done more to "address local needs outside the faith community" and that there was "insufficient practical detail".
JOANNA TAYLOR/BBCThree further opportunities for groups to bid for faith land are planned by South Cambridgeshire District Council.
The first faith and community hub in Northstowe is due to be built on 0.25 hectares (0.6 acres) of land off Stirling Road, overlooking Bug Hunter Waters lake.
Keisha, 10, said her family "purposefully moved to Northstowe because there was such a big Indian community and because there was going to be faith land".
JOANNA TAYLOR/BBC"I think there's a definite need for a temple in Northstowe so we don't need to go so far away," Keisha says.
Her dad, Abhishek, explains that the family currently drives about an hour and a half to Watford to worship.
Aishwarya says she faces a similar drive with her two children, which made visiting a temple feeling like it has "become a job".
JOANNA TAYLOR/BBC"It's supposed to be a place of joy," Aishwarya says, but "everyone is exhausted by the time we get there."
Jeetendra, from Northstowe, who has a 10-year-old son, said his child is likely to be "much older" by the time a dedicated place to worship is established nearby.
"I'm not going to have another child," he said. "The need is now."
JOANNA TAYLOR/BBCAparna Nigam, the chair of the Hindu Samaj Northstowe group, says she hopes other faith land becoming available would help provide "that missing piece of the puzzle", by supplying a shared space for people of different faiths, including Hindus, Sikhs, Jains and Buddhists.
JOANNA TAYLOR/BBCNigam adds the group "poured our souls" into writing the 200-page bid for five years and were disappointed to receive an 150-word feedback summary from South Cambridgeshire District Council.
The council says there is a "wealth of information to help potential bidders develop their proposals" and that applicants could ask for a breakdown of their scoring, which was agreed upon by six council officers and two external specialists.
Abhishek Srivasdava, who is also involved with the Hindu Samaj Northstowe group, says the new faith hub would be "no better" than booking out an existing community centre if Hindus were not given a permanent base.
He adds the community will still face having to carry their deities from place to place and would not be able to worship on consecrated ground or properly celebrate multi-day festivals.
JOANNA TAYLOR/BBC"We're looking for social harmony; bringing everybody together," he says when speaking of the existing proposal.
"We would request they provide us a dedicated space," he adds.
Reverend Beth Cope, from the Northstowe Church Network, says her group has a "track record of working well together" with Hindus in Northstowe after having organised community events together including a Remembrance Day Service.
"There are four sites in Northstowe and we long to see every faith group have their home, but in the meantime where we've got shared spaces and where there's gaps in the schedule we'd love anybody to talk to us about booking those spaces," she said.
South Cambridgeshire District Council is due to finalise awarding a 999-year lease on the land on Tuesday.
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