Times Colonist

India’s PM lays temple foundation

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AYODHYA, India — Despite the coronaviru­s restrictin­g a large crowd, Hindus rejoiced Wednesday as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi broke ground on a long-awaited temple of their most revered god, Ram, at the site of a demolished 16th-century mosque.

Modi offered prayers to nine stone blocks with Ram inscribed on them and kept in a small pit amid chanting of Hindu religious hymns to symbolize the start of constructi­on of the temple, which is expected to take 31⁄2 years to complete. The blocks will serve as the monument’s foundation stones.

Modi wore a traditiona­l outfit of a gold Kurta, a long shirt and a white Dhoti — a loose cloth wrapped around his waist — along with a face mask.

“It’s an emotional and historic moment. Wait has been worthwhile,” said Lal Krishna Advani, a 92-year-old leader of the governing Bharatiya Janata Party, or BJP, who was at the forefront of the party’s temple campaign in the 1990s.

Organizers said the ceremony was set on an astrologic­ally auspicious date for Hindus, but Wednesday also marked a year since the Indian Parliament revoked the semi-autonomous status of its only Muslim-majority state, Jammu and Kashmir.

The symbolism was impossible to miss since Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party had long pledged in its manifesto to strip Kashmir’s autonomy and to build a temple to Ram where the Mughal-era mosque once stood.

Modi said in a speech that the ceremony was a “historic occasion” for which Hindus waited for centuries.

He recalled that Mohandas Gandhi, India’s independen­ce leader, fondly referred to “Ram Rajya [rule]” as an ideal state where values of justice and equality prevailed and even the weakest people could get justice.

He said the proposed temple will become a symbol of “modern India.”

The main roads of Ayodhya were barricaded and about 3,000 paramilita­ry soldiers guarded the city, where all shops and businesses were closed. Last week, a priest and 15 police officers at the temple site tested positive for the coronaviru­s, which has infected 1.9 million people in India and killed more than 39,000.

“Had this function been held on normal days, all these roads would have been chock-a-block with people. Millions of people would have come to Ayodhya to witness this historic event,” temple priest Hari Mohan said.

Only 175 religious saints, priests and Hindu and Muslim community representa­tives were invited to the ceremony.

Water from Indian rivers in 2,000 earthen pots sent by various Hindu temples and Sikh shrines was poured at the site.

The groundbrea­king follows a ruling by India’s Supreme Court last November favouring the building of a Hindu temple on the disputed site in Uttar Pradesh state. Hindus believe Ram was born at the site and claim Muslims built a mosque on top of a temple there.

The Babri Masjid mosque was destroyed by Hindu radicals in December 1992, sparking violence that left 2,000 people dead, most of them Muslims. The court also ordered that Muslims be given two hectares of land to build a new mosque at a nearby site.

The temple will be about 235 feet wide, 300 feet long and 161 feet high with five domes with a total area around 84,000 square feet.

 ??  ?? Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi takes part in the groundbrea­king ceremony on Wednesday for a planned Hindu temple in the city of Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, at the site of a demolished 16th-century mosque.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi takes part in the groundbrea­king ceremony on Wednesday for a planned Hindu temple in the city of Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, at the site of a demolished 16th-century mosque.

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