India needs to provide its plethora of pilgrims comfort along with the available spiritual solace. And, in the bargain, Indian tourism will make considerable material gains. The ₹85,000 crore infrastructure investment in and around Ayodhya underscores the seriousness with which this temple town is viewing its visitors.
If Rome can provide splendour as it leads the tourist – both religious and secular – into St Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City, or if Mecca can have first-world facilities and infrastructure on the way to the Kaaba, there is no reason why the likes of Mathura, Ajmer, Kashi, Bainguinim, Sanchi, Hazratbal, Sarnath, Amritsar and other pilgrim sites in India can’t provide equal comfort to the tirth yatri. Attention to logistics – flights and roads, and hotels – are integral to this makeover. More than 60% of India’s tourism is religion-based. In 2022, 1,433 million domestic tourists visited pilgrimages. Rising affluence will require retaining top-tier Indian tourists. Ayodhya may well provide a blueprint.