Tulsi Peeth

The Tulsi Peeth premises house the residence of Rambhadracharya, a temple known as Kanch Mandir with an attached hall called Raghav Satsang Bhavan, a small cow-pen, a school for visually disabled students, a temple known as the Manas Mandir which has the entire Ramcharitmanas engraved on its inside walls, and an exhibition of moving models from 16 scenes of Ramcharitmanas.

The activities of the Tulsi Peeth include study and propagation of Hindu religious texts in Sanskrit and Hindi, service of cows and Sadhus, publication of a monthly .

[4][5] In 1983, Rambhadracharya (then known as Rambhadradas) undertook his second six-month Payovrata, taking a diet of only milk and fruits and speaking only Sanskrit, at the Sphatik Shila in Chitrakoot.

In 1988, Umacharan Gupta, a businessman from Manikpur offered to build a bigger Ashram and a temple on the condition that Rambhadradas stay there permanently.

[6] Rambhadracharya believes that this Peeth is situated at the place where, according to the epic Ramayana, the Hindu god Rama gave his sandals to his brother Bharata.

Kanch Mandir at Tulsi Peeth
Kanch Mandir at Tulsi Peeth
Entrance of Manas Mandir at Tulsi Peeth
Painted reliefs near the entrance of Manas Mandir in Tulsi Peeth
Moving statues inside Manas Bhavan at Tulsi Peeth
Moving statues of Kaushalya , Kaikeyi and Sumitra with the infant Rama inside the Manas Bhavan in Tulsi Peeth
Sculpture and Rambhadracharya's residence at Tulsi Peeth
The three-swan sculpture and the Darshan . The first floor is the office of the Tulsi Peeth, and the second floor is the residence of Jagadguru Rambhadracharya.