
In the early hours of Saturday, heavy rain poured over Jammu. Roads were wet. Skies were grey. But inside the Bhagwati Nagar base camp, thousands of Amarnath pilgrims were getting ready. Their bags were packed. Prayers were whispered. Nothing, not even rain or danger, could stop them.
At 3:30 am, the fourth batch of 6,979 pilgrims began their journey to the holy Amarnath cave in Kashmir. Their faces were calm, filled with hope.

Who Are the Pilgrims?
This group had everyone—5,196 men, 1,427 women, 24 children, 331 sadhus and sadhvis, and even one transgender pilgrim. Faith knows no gender. No age. No fear.
Two Routes, One Goal
The pilgrims took two main routes:
- 4,226 people went to Nunwan base camp in Anantnag, taking the longer 48-kilometre Pahalgam route.
- 2,753 others chose the 14-kilometre Baltal route through Ganderbal, which is shorter but steep.
Together, they travelled in 312 vehicles under high security.
A Journey of Risk and Devotion
This year’s Amarnath Yatra is not just spiritual—it’s emotional. Just two months ago, a terror attack in Pahalgam killed 26 people. It shook the nation.
But today, the message is clear: India will not kneel.
More than 30,000 pilgrims have already offered prayers at the 3,880-metre-high shrine. With Saturday’s group, over 24,500 pilgrims have left the Jammu base camp since July 3.
Security Like Never Before
After the April attack, security has been doubled. Pilgrims are given RFID tags to track them in real time.
- The Bhagwati Nagar camp is under multi-layered security.
- 34 stay centres have been made ready across Jammu.
- 12 on-the-spot registration counters are running to handle the rush.
So far, 3.5 lakh people have registered for the Yatra.
A Nation Walks With Them
The yatra was flagged off by Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha. Since then, the entire state machinery is working day and night. The aim: no delays, no danger, only darshan.
This isn’t just a religious trip. It’s a national moment. It shows unity, belief, and courage.
Rain falls. Threats loom. Yet the Amarnath pilgrims walk forward—not because it’s easy, but because it means something.
In a time of fear, these pilgrims are walking proof of India’s fearless spirit. The road may be tough, but the heart is tougher. The Amarnath Yatra isn’t just about reaching a cave—it’s about finding strength.
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