Hinduism in Poland

After the breakdown of this regime in 1989, missionaries from other Hindu religious denominations have arrived and met with very limited success.

[3] Some of the important organisations are ISKCON, Chaitanya Mission, Satya Sai Baba movement (though it is partially Hindu), Brahma kumaris, Sivananda Yoga, Radha Govind Society of Poland, and Sahaja Yoga, Swadhyay Parivar.

The Bhakti Marga Foundation led by Swami Vishwananda established its first Polish temple in Warsaw in 2009.

Among them 341 belonged to the Hindu Bhavan Religious Association, 285 to ISKCON, and the remaining to the Chaitanya mission, Radha Govind Society of Poland.

[6] According to census data in 2017 provided by Główny Urząd Statystyczny, Poland's Central Statistical Office, ISKCON had 2,388 followers, 333 clergy and 24 centres.

The "Om" symbol in Devanagari
Hindu festival in Poland.
Nowe Śantipur Temple in Czarnów
2nd International Yoga Day , Warsaw, 2016