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Social Distancing is the Simple Medicine for Stampedes

Ai generated article, credit to orginal website, November 2, 2025

In recent days, tragic incidents in Andhra Pradesh temples have reminded us that faith without proper safety can lead to disaster. From Tirumala to Simhachalam and now Kasibugga in Srikakulam district, temple stampedes are claiming innocent lives. What should be a peaceful moment of devotion is turning into panic and tragedy.

At the Kasibugga Venkateswara Swamy Temple, thousands of devotees gathered on the occasion of Karthika month Ekadashi. The temple could only handle a few thousand people, but nearly 25,000 devotees turned up. Overcrowding, weak railings and lack of separate entry and exit paths created chaos. When one railing collapsed, the crowd panicked and people began to fall on one another. Within minutes, a holy gathering became a scene of horror.

In recent times, devotional YouTube videos and social media reels trend have inspired more people to visit temples. While this shows growing faith, the problem is that temple infrastructures have not grown with the same pace. Many temples are small and built to accommodate a few thousand devotees, not tens of thousands. When the crowd multiplies without proper control or safety arrangements, accidents are bound to happen.

Social distancing is not just a health rule used during the pandemic. It is also the simplest and most effective way to prevent stampedes. People need space to move, breathe and exit freely. When space disappears, fear spreads and panic begins. Maintaining distance, moving in lines and following directions can save lives more than anything else.

Temples and authorities should immediately set limits on how many people can enter at once. If a temple can hold 2,000 to 3,000 people, it should never allow 25,000. Proper crowd management plans must be prepared for every major festival day. There should be separate routes for entry and exit, proper barricades, alert volunteers and emergency teams ready to act.

At the same time, devotees also share responsibility. People should not push, rush or try to move ahead in crowds. Coming early, following queues and respecting the system is also part of worship. Faith does not mean ignoring safety.

After every tragedy, we usually see inquiry reports, compensation announcements and blame games. What is needed now is a permanent solution and a mindset change. Instead of reacting after each incident, the system must prevent such disasters before they happen.

Temples are meant to give peace, not pain. But without space, control and proper planning, even the most sacred place can become dangerous. It is time for both temple authorities (government and private) and devotees to understand that social distancing is not just about staying away from others—it is about saving lives.

If we truly respect faith, then we must also respect life. The medicine for stampedes is simple: space, discipline and awareness. Let Kasibugga be the last tragedy that reminds us of this truth.

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