Pious Indians bank on holy deposits

NEW DELHI, (Reuters Life!) – In a bank with no  security gates, guards or locks, deposits from thousands of  customers from across India are stacked on shelves, protected  from theft by the grace of god.

In a cramped room in a small house in the north Indian state  of Uttar Pradesh, Ram Ram Bank offers no interest or loans, but  has around 5,000 customers who flock to deposit documents  bearing God’s name.

“There is no need for security as there is no fear of any  theft,” said Lovelesh Tewari, who founded the bank 25 years ago.

“People feel better by writing God’s name as it becomes a  medium to release their pent up frustrations and eventually the  faith makes them work towards their goals.”

The bank’s customers scribble “Ram”, the protagonist in the  Indian mythological epic Ramayana, on pieces of paper as many as  100,000 times and deposit them in the bank. Ram is also known as  Rama.

Ram Ram used to accept scribbles on cigarette packs or on  pieces of old newspaper. But now Tewari provides proper  notebooks for the purpose, courtesy of one of his customers.
“My daughter got admission in the engineering college after  I deposited Ram’s name in the bank,” says Shahikala, one of many  happy depositors.

The bank’s list of depositors includes bureaucrats, politics  and members of the judiciary. Even the father of superstar  cricketer Gautam Gambhir is a customer.
Religion is no barrier. Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims write the  name of Ram in their native languages.

Every six months the stacks of “deposits” are sent to be  displayed in a temple in Ayodhya, the birth place of Ram.

Ram Ram’s growing popularity has seen two new branches open  in other cities, while Ram Ramapati Bank, a similar bank in the  tourist city Varanasi, boasts customers from across the world.