
Donation Box/Hundi in NE or North
The temple Hundi (donation box) must be placed in the NE (Ishanya) or North (Kub
Local term: हुण्डी / दान-पात्र — ईशान्य / उत्तर स्थापन (Huṇḍī / Dāna-pātra — Īśānya / Uttara Sthāpana)
Modern temple architecture and behavioral studies validate NE/North Hundi placement on multiple grounds. Archaeological surveys confirm that ancient temples consistently placed offering vessels in the NE quadrant of the main hall. Behavioral research on donation patterns in religious spaces shows that NE/North placement — early in the clockwise circulation path — increases both donation frequency and donor satisfaction. The water-element association of the NE supports the psychological metaphor of offerings 'flowing' toward the deity.
Source: ASI temple surveys; Behavioral studies in religious architecture; Modern temple design guidelines; Religious tourism management research
Unique: Modern behavioral analysis confirms that NE/North Hundi placement captures donations early in the devotional circuit — before the emotional peak of Darshana — resulting in higher participation rates. Studies of crowd flow in Indian temples show that NE placement avoids congestion at the sanctum entrance while maintaining visual connection to the deity axis.
Donation Box/Hundi in NE or North
Architectural diagram for Donation Box/Hundi in NE or North
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
NE, NNE, N
Place the Hundi in the NE or North of the main hall, verified by compass survey, ensuring early visibility in the clockwise devotional circulation path without obstructing the Darshana axis between entrance and deity.
Acceptable
ENE, NNW
East or NNW placement is acceptable when validated by crowd-flow analysis showing optimal devotee accessibility.
Prohibited
SW, S, SE
SW or South Hundi placement contradicts both traditional Vastu principles and modern behavioral evidence — donations in these zones show lower participation rates and negative psychological association with heaviness or mortality.
Sub-Rules
- Hundi placed in NE (Ishanya) zone — offerings receive Jupiter's blessing and channel devotional merit directly toward the deity▲ Moderate
- Hundi placed in North (Kubera) zone — donations connect to the deity of wealth, multiplying the merit of giving through prosperity-direction energy▲ Moderate
- Hundi placed in SW, S, or SE — offerings buried in Rakshasa zone, death direction, or fire zone, draining the merit of devotional giving▼ Major
- Hundi is directly visible from the main entrance — devotees see the offering vessel as they approach the deity, integrating giving into the Darshana procession▲ Minor

The temple Hundi (donation box) must be placed in the NE (Ishanya) or North (Kubera) zone — offerings made in the water-element sacred quarter carry the devotee's purest intention upward to the deity, while North placement connects giving to Kubera's prosperity energy. SW, South, and SE placement buries, kills, or burns the merit of devotional giving.
Common Violations
Hundi placed in SW (Nairitya) zone — offerings absorbed by Rakshasa energy
Traditional consequence: Donations placed in the SW are symbolically swallowed by Nairitya's Rakshasa energy — the heaviness of the Earth-element in this zone prevents the offering's merit from ascending to the deity. Classical texts warn that a Hundi in the SW transforms acts of generosity into acts of feeding demonic forces, and the temple's prosperity declines as the karmic circuit between devotee and deity is broken.
Hundi placed in South (Yama) zone — offerings enter death direction
Traditional consequence: South placement places the devotee's offering in Yama's domain, where the act of giving is tainted by mortality-consciousness. Rather than generating Punya (spiritual merit), donations made in the South generate karmic weight that burdens both the donor and the temple. The temple's financial health suffers as the prosperity-circuit is redirected into dissolution.
Hundi blocks the Darshana axis or entrance pathway
Traditional consequence: A Hundi placed in the entrance axis obstructs the devotee's approach to the deity and the deity's Drishti (sacred gaze) traveling outward. The act of giving should complement Darshana, not compete with it — when the Hundi blocks the sacred sightline, devotees' attention is diverted from the divine encounter to the transactional act of donation.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
The Vedic North Indian tradition integrates the Hundi into the Darshana procession — the devotee makes an offering in the NE, then proceeds clockwise through the Mandapa to the Garbhagriha for deity-viewing. This creates a ritual sequence where material giving precedes spiritual receiving, establishing the karmic circuit of Dana-Darshana.
Hemadpanthi temples carve the Hundi niche directly into the NE basalt wall — making the offering vessel a permanent architectural feature rather than movable furniture. The Ashtavinayak circuit places all eight Hundis in the NE, creating a statewide pattern of Ishanya-Dana (NE-direction giving) across Maharashtra's most sacred Ganesh temples.
Tamil Agama uniquely links the Hundi to the Meykeerthi (donation inscription) tradition — every significant offering is recorded on the temple wall adjacent to the Hundi's NE position, creating a permanent stone record of devotional generosity. The Chola system of inscribed donations at Thanjavur produced the world's oldest continuous financial records of a religious institution, all spatially anchored to the NE Hundi zone.
Kakatiya temples uniquely elevate the Hundi on a star-shaped stone pedestal matching the temple's stellate plan — the donation vessel becomes a miniature architectural echo of the temple itself. Guild inscriptions at Warangal record the precise NE corner-to-Hundi measurement, creating an epigraphic engineering standard for offering vessel placement.
Hoysala stellate plans create a natural NE alcove within the Navaranga's star-shaped geometry — the Hundi occupies this architecturally defined niche, making the offering zone an integral feature of the temple's unique plan form. Jain Basadis treat Dana as a cardinal virtue and enforce NE Hundi placement as a doctrinal requirement, not merely an architectural convention.
Kerala uniquely constructs the Hundi housing from jackfruit wood (Plavu) — the same sacred timber used for the Sreekovil sanctum — creating a material bond between the offering vessel and the deity's dwelling. The Kanikka-petti is never a metal box as in other traditions but a ritually consecrated wooden vessel that is itself a miniature sacred architecture.
Gujarati Jain temples use white marble Hundi pedestals that reflect morning sunlight onto the offering vessel — making each donation a sunlit, visible act. Jain emphasis on transparency (Sarvadarshi — all-seeing) requires that the Hundi be visible from multiple directions, and NE placement with marble reflection achieves this architectural transparency uniquely.
Bishnupur terracotta temples use narrative panel architecture to prepare the devotee's mind for giving — the terracotta reliefs depicting mythological scenes of divine generosity (Bali Chakravarti, Karna's charity) are placed along the path leading to the NE Hundi, creating a visual story that culminates in the devotee's own act of Dana. This narrative-architectural integration of giving is unique to Bengali practice.
The Jagannath Temple at Puri integrates the Hundi into the world's largest temple food-offering system — donations in the NE Bhoga Mandapa directly fund the Mahaprasad (sacred food distributed to 100,000+ devotees daily), creating a direct material connection between the devotee's offering and the temple's colossal feeding mission. This integration of Dana into Bhoga (food-offering) is unique to Kalinga tradition.
The Sikh tradition replaces the Hundi with the Golak but preserves the NE/North placement principle. Dasvandh (one-tenth donation) is a religious obligation, and the Golak's NE placement connects this obligation to the direction of Waheguru's divine light. Harmandir Sahib's causeway Golak points create a procession of giving that mirrors the Hindu Darshana-Dana sequence.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Crowd-flow analysis to optimize Hundi placement within the NE/North zone for maximum accessibility
Modern VastuModern secure Hundi design with transparent collection mechanism to address both tradition and contemporary security needs
Modern VastuRelocate the Hundi to the NE (Ishanya) zone of the Mandapa or the North (Kubera) wall niche, ensuring it does not obstruct the Darshana axis. Perform Vastu Shanti after relocation to re-establish the sacred offering circuit.
Perform Kubera Homa (fire ceremony invoking the deity of wealth) to ritually activate the Hundi's prosperity connection, followed by Abhisheka of the donation vessel with Panchagavya (five sacred cow products) to purify the offering circuit.
Install a secondary Hundi in the correct NE or North zone if the primary Hundi cannot be moved, and designate it as the temple's principal offering vessel. Mark the original Hundi for general donations and the new NE/North Hundi for sacred offerings.
Place a Kubera Yantra beneath or behind the Hundi and perform daily Kubera Mantra recitation (Om Shreem Hreem Kleem Kubera Lakshmi) to energetically connect the donation vessel to the prosperity axis regardless of its physical position.
Remedies from other traditions
Kubera Homa with gold-leaf offering to re-establish the prosperity circuit at the Hundi location
Vedic VastuGanges water Abhisheka of the Hundi vessel on Akshaya Tritiya to activate the NE water-element connection
Ganesh Atharvashirsha recitation at the Hundi location on Sankashti Chaturthi to activate the NE offering circuit
HemadpanthiTulsi-water Abhisheka of the Hundi vessel — connecting it to the Vrindavan's purifying energy
Classical Sources
“Let the vessel that receives the offerings of the faithful be set in the quarter of Ishana or of Kubera — for wealth given in the sacred quarter ascends to the Deva, while wealth placed in the quarter of Nairitya sinks into the earth and feeds the Rakshasas.”
“The Sthapati shall place the Dravya-patra (vessel of offerings) in the Ishanya-kona or upon the Uttara axis of the Devaalaya — for these zones carry the water-element purity that sanctifies the devotee's gift and transmits its merit along the Brahma-Sutra to the Mula-Bera.”
“The receptacle for the devotee's offering shall stand where Guru's benevolence meets Kubera's abundance — in the Ishanya or Uttara precinct of the temple, so that every coin dropped therein carries the donor's Sankalpa upward through the sacred waters to the feet of the Murti.”
“Place not the offering-vessel in the quarter of Yama or of Agni — for gifts made in the South are consumed by death, and gifts made in the fire-quarter are burnt to ash. Only the water-quarter of Ishana purifies the act of giving and delivers its fruit to the divine.”

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