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praying to Lord Balaji, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, Asia
Prayers being offered to Lord Balaji at a temple in Mumbai. Photograph: Dinodia Photos/Alamy
Prayers being offered to Lord Balaji at a temple in Mumbai. Photograph: Dinodia Photos/Alamy

‘We’re fed up with scary dreams’: thieves return temple treasures in India

This article is more than 1 year old

Gang who stole statues from Hindu temple in India return most items, with note saying they had suffered nightmares

A gang of thieves have returned more than a dozen idols they stole from an ancient Hindu temple in India, saying they had been haunted by nightmares since the crime, according to police.

Last week, the group stole 16 statues from a 300-year-old temple to Lord Balaji – an incarnation of the Hindu god Vishnu – in Uttar Pradesh, police inspector Rajiv Singh told Agence France-Presse.

On Monday night, they left 14 of them near the house of the temple’s chief priest in Chitrakoot district, he said.

“They also left behind a confession letter which said they were returning the idols because they were having scary dreams,” Singh said. The note begged for forgiveness.

One of the idols was made of Asthadhatu, an alloy of eight metals, and weighed around 5kg. The haul also included silver ornaments used to decorate deities.

The thieves have not yet been identified.

In their Hindi-language confession letter, they said: “We have not been able to sleep, eat and live peacefully. We are fed up with the scary dreams and are returning your valuables.”

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