Desk Correspondent , Patna - They had come, as they do every Tuesday, to seek the blessings of Maa Sheetla, the goddess of health, cooling, and healing. But this Tuesday was not like every other. It was the last Tuesday of Chaitra, one of the most auspicious dates in the Hindu calendar for worshipping Sheetla Mata, and the crowd that converged on the Maghra Sheetla Mandir was of a scale the temple's narrow approach could not contain. At least eight devotees died and several others were injured in a stampede that broke out on Tuesday morning during prayers at the renowned Maa Sheetla Temple in Maghra area of Bihar Sharif in Nalanda district. A community that had come in devotion was left shattered by grief, fury, and an unanswered question: why was there no one here to manage this crowd?
On March 31, 2026, morning, a stampede at Maghra Sheetla Mata Mandir in Bihar Sharif, Nalanda District, during the sacred last Tuesday of Chaitra Sheetla Puja killed 8 women including Rita Devi (50, Sakunt Bihar) and Rekha Devi (45, Mathurapur Noorsarai) with 12+ injured (several critical) amid massive overcrowding, emergency services and villagers launched rescues as hundreds gathered post disaster. Bihar's Chief Secretary ordered an investigation, Patna Commissioner was dispatched, and Dipnagar Police/SDM/DSP initiated probes amid outrage over negligence exacerbated by President Murmu's same-day visit diverting admin focus despite known risks on this peak day, highlighting India's recurring temple stampede crisis (e.g., 9 deaths last year in Andhra Pradesh) and calls for crowd caps, registration, trained personnel, and accountability.
Rita Devi and Rekha Devi left their homes on the morning of March 31 to offer prayers to a goddess they had worshipped all their lives. They did not return. Six others shared the same fate killed not by an act of god, but by a failure of governance: a predictable crowd, on a predictable date, at a predictable location, met with no meaningful preparation. The Bihar government has ordered an inquiry. But the families of Nalanda's eight dead women do not need another report. They need a government that will act on what every previous inquiry has already recommended and make the only promise that matters after a tragedy like this: that it will not happen again.
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