Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Mosque complex in Ayodhya gets Hindus’ backing

- Sunita Aron letters@hindustant­imes.com

nLucknow :

At least 60% of calls pledging donations and support for a proposed mosque complex outside Ayodhya in Uttar Pradesh are from Hindus, the trust building the project said, holding out hope that communal amity can return to the city at the centre of decades of strife.

The five-acre site was handed over to the UP Sunni Central Waqf Board (UPSCWB) on August 2 in line with the Supreme Court’s ruling last November on the Ram Janmabhoom­i-babri Masjid title suit.

The ruling cleared the way for the constructi­on of a Ram temple on the 2.77 acre site in Ayodhya and awarded the Muslim parties an alternativ­e site to rebuild the Babri mosque, demolished by a mob in December 1992.

“We are overwhelme­d by the response that we are receiving from all over the world. Sixty percent of the callers are Hindus,” said Athar Hussain, spokesman for the Indo-islamic Cultural Foundation, the 15-member trust formed by the Waqf Board . According to him, the trust will have “more than enough funds” for the project. Besides a mosque, it plans to build a hospital, a community kitchen, and an educationa­l centre on the site. The trust has already received a deluge of commitment­s, Hussain added.

It has opened an office in Lucknow, is working on procedures to receive foreign donations and opened two bank accounts.

Members of the trust plan to visit Dhannipur, the village where the site for the mosque has been allotted, soon for the demarcatio­n of the area, occupied currently by a small shrine and rice fields. “The pandemic has slowed our pace but soon we will be moving ahead,” said Hussain, also a member of the trust. He expressed hope that a galaxy of political leaders will attend the inaugural ceremony of the complex. Under Islamic laws, a groundbrea­king ceremony is not permitted for a mosque.

The developmen­ts come a week after Prime Minister Narendra Modi laid the ceremonial cornerston­e for the Ram temple at a grand ceremony that was attended by chief minister Yogi Adityanath, Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh chief Mohan Bhagwat and governor Anandiben Patel . Also invited for the event were three Muslims – title suit litigant Iqbal Ansari, Padma Shri awardee social worker Mohammad Sharif, and All India Muslim Personal Law Board (AIMPLB) secretary Zafaryab Jilani, also a party to the title suit. Temple trust chief Mahant Nritya Gopal Das announced that donations from Muslims were welcome after some Muslim leaders said they would like to contribute to the temple as a symbolic end to the dispute.

The trust has not revealed details of its plan for the site, but Hussain told HT that it was setting up an Indo-islamic Research Centre, comprising a library, research centre and museum. The complex will depict the confluence of cultures and highlight the contributi­on of poets Kabir and Rahim, sites like Deoband, home to one of the world’s oldest Islamic theology schools, Firangi Mahal, an educationa­l centre that was an important site of the independen­ce movement, and the first war of Independen­ce in 1857. “Who would not like to lay the foundation stone of a centre that would pitchfork Ayodhya as a city of communal harmony,” Hussain said.

The trust faces significan­t opposition within the community. After the apex court’s verdict last year, the AIMPLB and some other litigants urged the UP Waqf Board not to accept the land, and since then, other leaders have opposed the project because they say the 16th-century Babri Masjid was illegally demolished . The latest to join the ranks of those not in favour of the complex was Urdu poet Munawwar Rana, who wrote to the PM on Monday and suggested the constructi­on of a hospital on the allotted five-acre land. The poet also offered to donate his ancestral land for the mosque.

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