Hala Jain Mandir
About Hala Jain Mandir
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Updated April 15, 2024
## Hala Jain Mandir (Beawar, Rajasthan): what to know before you visit
If you’re in Beawar and want a quiet, local religious site to include in your day, Hala Jain Mandir is a straightforward stop: a Jain temple located in Krishna Colony, Beawar (Rajasthan 305901).
Because smaller neighborhood temples are often lightly documented online (and listings can get mixed up with similarly named places), this guide sticks to what can be verified and flags anything that looks unreliable.
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## Quick facts (verified)
– Name: Hala Jain Mandir
– Type: Jain temple
– Address: 38W7+FRR, Krishna Colony, Beawar, Rajasthan 305901, India
– Coordinates: 26.0962297, 74.3145253
– City/district context: Beawar is in/associated with the Ajmer region/district (administrative references vary across sources).
– Public ratings (source-specific): Justdial lists it at 4.0 based on 37 ratings.
Outdated-data flag (ratings): crowd ratings can drift quickly and may be aggregated “across the web,” so treat them as a rough signal, not a promise.
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## A note on name/location confusion (important)
You may see a page online describing “Hala Jain Mandir” as being near Jaisalmer and giving historical details (deity, century built, etc.). That description conflicts with the Beawar address above and looks like a generic write-up not tied to this Beawar listing. I’m not treating those claims as reliable for this specific place.
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## How to get there in a way that actually works
### Use the plus code (best for drivers)
The most dependable locator here is the Plus Code-style address:
38W7+FRR, Krishna Colony, Beawar, Rajasthan 305901
That’s typically more resilient than temple names (which can be duplicated or misspelled across maps).
### Coming by train
If you’re arriving by rail, Beawar railway station code is BER. It’s a functioning Indian Railways station on the Jaipur–Ahmedabad line per station references.
From the station, a short local ride (auto-rickshaw/taxi) is the normal pattern for reaching a residential neighborhood like Krishna Colony—route and time depend on traffic and your exact pickup point.
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## What you can expect on-site (kept general on purpose)
I can’t verify temple-specific features (main idol, sect affiliation, specific rituals, interior photography rules) from high-quality primary sources. What is safe and practical is how most Jain temples operate, especially neighborhood mandirs in North India:
– Quiet, respectful atmosphere: Jain worship typically emphasizes calm darshan and personal prayer rather than loud congregation-style services.
– Shoes off: Expect to remove footwear at the entrance.
– Dress considerations: Modest clothing is a safe default (covered shoulders/legs).
– Leather caution: Many Jain visitors avoid bringing leather items (belts/wallets) inside; if you carry them, be ready to hold them discreetly or ask where to keep them.
– Food etiquette: Don’t bring food inside; avoid eating right at the entrance.
These points are intentionally framed as general norms—if signage or local guidance differs at Hala Jain Mandir, follow that.
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## Opening hours: don’t trust listings blindly
One travel listing says “contact the attraction to confirm specific opening hours.”
Another directory-style listing shows “Open until 12:00 am,” which is a common red-flag placeholder in business directories and not something I’d treat as confirmed temple hours.
Best practice: plan for a daytime visit and treat anything outside that as “verify on arrival.”
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## How to fit Hala Jain Mandir into a Beawar day
If you’re using Beawar as a practical stop (rather than a destination city), this temple works best as:
– A short, low-friction cultural pause between meals/errands
– A reset stop if you’re doing a long road segment through central Rajasthan
– A local neighborhood snapshot—less “monument,” more everyday religious life
If you want to build a more “temple-focused” loop inside Beawar, listings suggest multiple Jain temples in the city (for example, Shri Shantinath Jain Temple is also listed in Beawar).
(Again: treat directories as discovery tools; confirm details on the ground.)
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## Responsible visiting tips (especially if you’re not Jain)
– If a prayer is underway: stand to the side and observe quietly; don’t step between worshippers and the shrine.
– Photography: ask first. Some temples allow exterior photos but discourage interior photography.
– Donations: if you choose to donate, use official donation boxes and avoid anyone “guiding” you to pay for access (neighborhood temples typically don’t operate that way).
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## Final sanity checks before you go
– Navigate using 38W7+FRR rather than the name.
– Assume daytime access unless verified on-site.
– Treat ratings as non-authoritative and potentially outdated.
If you want, paste your site’s existing Beawar/Ajmer/Rajasthan URLs and I’ll swap the internal link suggestions into exact, live links (and keep the anchors natural).
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