Astrologer, numerologist, and healer Ashutosh Clairvoyant, in association with organiser Puneet Tanna, has announced a two day spiritual pilgrimage to the revered Kamakhya Temple in Guwahati, Assam, for eight selected devotees. The initiative will cover the participants’ flights, accommodation, and local travel, enabling them to undertake the pilgrimage free of cost. The journey is scheduled to depart on 5 July 2026.
Speaking about the initiative, Ashutosh Clairvoyant said the idea was rooted in devotion rather than promotion. “This initiative was not born out of business or tourism. It emerged from a deep inner calling and the collective faith that Maa Kamakhya chooses Her devotees and guides them to Her when the time is right. We see ourselves not as organisers, but as instruments through whom this opportunity is being offered.”
He explained that many followers had shared their long standing desire to visit one of India’s most revered Shakti Peethas but were unable to do so because of financial or personal constraints. “Every year, countless devotees dream of visiting Maa Kamakhya, yet many are unable to undertake the journey because of financial, personal, or practical limitations. This pilgrimage is our humble offering, a way of serving the Divine by helping sincere seekers answer Maa’s call.”
Ashutosh also shared the deeply personal story behind his lifelong connection with the temple. “I was born in Dimapur, Nagaland, but my story truly begins at Maa Kamakhya Temple in Guwahati. After six years of marriage without having a child, my mother prayed to Maa Kamakhya with complete faith. A year later, I was born. Ever since I learnt this story, I have never looked at Maa Kamakhya as simply another temple. For me, She is part of the reason I exist.”
He said the pilgrimage naturally evolved from that gratitude. “If Maa could answer my mother’s prayer before I was even born, why can’t I become a small instrument in helping someone else reach Her doorstep? That question became this pilgrimage.”
Explaining the selection process, Ashutosh said the organisers deliberately avoided subjective criteria. “We didn’t ask anyone to write essays. We didn’t ask for proof of hardship. We didn’t choose based on popularity. We invited anyone who genuinely wished to come, and the response was overwhelming. Instead of deciding whose faith mattered more, the names were selected randomly. No favouritism. No judgement. Because grace doesn’t follow human calculations.”
Sharing what Maa Kamakhya means to him personally, he said: “Among the fifty one Shakti Peethas, Maa Kamakhya holds a place unlike any other. For me, this isn’t merely a famous temple. It is the place where my own life’s story began.”
Ashutosh also acknowledged the contribution of organiser Puneet Tanna, crediting him for turning the vision into reality. “Behind every spiritual journey is someone quietly making everything possible. For this pilgrimage, that person is Puneet Tanna. Puneet has been associated with me since 2016, when I was working at Dell. Long before Team Clairvoyant existed, he stood beside me with unwavering trust. Today, he manages operations and ensures every detail behind the scenes runs smoothly. This pilgrimage would remain only an idea without someone willing to transform faith into action.”
While acknowledging that the initiative may bring visibility to his work, Ashutosh maintained that gratitude remains its primary motivation. “I’m not going to pretend this has no visibility for our work. People will see it and people will talk about it. But that was never the reason this began. Years ago, a mother stood before Maa Kamakhya and prayed for a child. That child was me. Today, if Maa has blessed me with the ability to help even a handful of people reach Her doorstep, then this is simply my way of expressing gratitude. I don’t see myself as someone doing charity. I see myself as someone returning a fraction of what the Goddess has already given me.”











