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| Perth Shiva Temple | |
|---|---|
பெர்த் சிவன் கோவில் | |
Perth Shiva Temple gopuram | |
| Religion | |
| Affiliation | Hinduism |
| Deity | Shiva and Meenakshi |
| Festivals | Maha Shivaratri, Pradosham |
| Status | Active |
| Location | |
| Location | 271 Warton Road, Canning Vale WA 6155 |
| State | Western Australia |
| Country | Australia |
| Geographic coordinates | 32°05′00.1″S 115°56′58.6″E / 32.083361°S 115.949611°E |
| Architecture | |
| Type | Dravidian architecture |
| Groundbreaking | 1990 |
| Completed | 1991 |
| Direction of façade | East |
| Website | |
| hindu | |
The Perth Shiva Temple (Tamil: பெர்த் சிவன் கோவில்), officially Perth Hindu Temple, is a Hindu temple in Canning Vale, in Perth, Western Australia, dedicated to the god Shiva and his consort goddess Meenakshi. The temple is run by the Shri Shiva Devasthanam, a non-profit religious organisation, and was completed in early 1990. It is the oldest Hindu temple in Western Australia.

Plans for a Hindu temple in Perth were first began in 1985. The land was consecrated in 1987 by Swami Shantanand Saraswati and construction was completed and the murtis installed in February 1990.[1] It is the oldest Hindu temple in Western Australia;[2] another temple was built in Perth by Tamil Hindus.[3] The temple's construction, including a final Royal Tower (for which Perth council contributed over US$600,000)[4] took over 20 years and was completed in June 2008.[5][6]
In May 2022, in the lead up to Australia's national elections, both major parties promised donations of A$1 million towards development of the temple.[7][8][9]
The temple priests perform pujas to specific gods and goddesses.[10] In addition, festivals celebrated at the temple include the following:
Maha Shivaratri: the temple is open for an entire day and night of fasting and meditation in honor of the god Shiva.
Purattasi, a Hindu month celebrating Perumal (an avatar of Vishnu), with prayers and a vegetarian feast each Saturday.
Pradosham, bimonthly prayers to Shiva during the three hours surrounding sunset on the thirteenth day of every fortnight in the Hindu calendar, with an hour-long mantra sung in the temple.