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These are Buddhist caves or monasteries where monks
practiced their austerities around the first century
AD. And unlike the artistic extravagance of Elephanta,
they are spartan and bare. Situated in the heart of
Mumbai's National Park, the complex contains more than
a hundred tiny cells cut into the flank of a hill, each
fitted with a stone plinth that evidently served as
a bed. There is also a congregation hall supported by
huge stone pillars that contains the dagoba, a kind
of Buddhist shrine. And if you pick your way up the
hill you will find channels and cisterns that are remnants
of an ancient water system that channeled rainwater
into huge urns. In fact, Kanheri is probably the only
clue to the rise and fall of Buddhism in Western India.
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