The Miracle

25 years since Babri Masjid demolition:

- By: Sanjay Singh Source: www.firstpost.com/

25 years since Babri Masjid demolition: BJP, Congress give Ayodhya issue new political twist before Gujarat polls It was only incidental that the day enthusiast­ic “Pandit Rahul Gandhi” posters were put up — obviously taking a cue from media department chief Randeep Singh Surjewala’s claim that Congress president in-waiting was “not just a Hindu but a ‘Janeu Dhari’ (holder of sacred thread) Hindu”, senior Congress leader Kapil Sibal appearing on behalf of the Sunni Wakq Board argued in the Supreme Court that the hearing on Ramjanabho­omiBabri Mosque dispute should be deferred to after the 2019 Lok Sabha election. His rationale was that the verdict will have strong political implicatio­ns on the upcoming polls. It has now been quarter of a century since the demolition of the Babri Mosque in Ayodhya and the coming-up of a de facto makeshift Ramlala (childhood image of Lord Ram) temple. The charioteer of the early 1990s Ram temple movement in Ayodhya, Lal Krishna Advani has slipped into the background of the party he built. Advani is once again facing a demolition conspiracy charge and isn’t even campaignin­g for his party in the constituen­cy or the state that he represents in Parliament. But it is also true that on the 25th anniversar­y of the demolition of the Babri Masjid — or ‘disputed structure’ as the BJP described it, the Ram Mandir issue after all these years has returned to the foreground. A majority BJP government at the Centre and in the state of Uttar Pradesh aren’t pushing for the temple on record, but have been making their intentions very clear by picking up issues around Ayodhya and indulging in other symbolism around Ram to keep the pot boiling. Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath is unapologet­ic when it comes to talking about Ayodhya and Ram. He has, in fact, visited Ayodhya on numerous occasions and done everything possible to keep the hopes of BJP sympathise­rs and Ram Mandir supporters alive and as the common refrain among them goes “Centre me Modi and UP me Yogi mandir ab nahi banega toh kab banega ( with Modi at the centre and Yogi in UP, if the temple built now, will it ever be built). What has changed on this landmark anniversar­y of the demolition in Ayodhya is the simple fact that until now, the Opposition used to be on the offensive every 6 December, disrupting Parliament (which used to be in Winter Session on this date) and the BJP would defend its case, matters of faith and so on. But this time around, it is the BJP that has gone on the offensive, seeking categorica­l answers from the Congress and other Opposition parties. The opportunit­y for which the BJP had been waiting to reignite this emotive issue and launch a full-scale political debate was provided by Sibal’s argument in the Supreme Court. He used all sorts of pleas to get the matter deferred indefinite­ly, but the most operative and politicall­y contentiou­s part — the bit about not have a hearing or coming to a decision until after the 2019 polls — was picked up by BJP president Amit Shah to corner Rahul and the Congress. It was a matter of chance that the Supreme Court had decided to hear this case on 5 December — a day ahead of the 6 December anniversar­y ritual that “secularist” parties and groups had been following for two-and-a-half decades. What made Sibal’s argument even more politicall­y contentiou­s was the fact that electionee­ring (between the BJP and Congress) is at its peak in Gujarat and that the Congress — after the Rahul “non-Hindu” goof-up at Somnath Temple — is portraying the president-elect as a devout Hindu Pandit to send a message across that he is not anti-Hindu and pro-Muslim. The big issue being debated in Gujarat is whether the Congress will succeed in making the state return to vote on lines of caste after three decades, or if the BJP’s Hindutava theme will continue to prevail in majoritari­an Hindu voters’ minds. Due to cyclonic conditions in parts of the state, Shah’s public rallies were cancelled on Tuesday, so he arrived at the BJP’s brand new media office — that has been put together for the elections — at GG Road in Ahmedabad and hurriedly called the media for “a bite”, demanding that Rahul make his position clear on the Ram Temple vis-à-vis Sibal’s statement on issue. Later,.

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