Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

In Meerut, Modi’s ‘shamshan’ remark meets grave silence

- Gulam Jeelani gulam.jeelani@hindustant­imes.com

DEATHLY POLITICS Prime Minister’s statement may have blown up into a political row but on the ground, caretakers of graveyards and crematoria say the comparison is misplaced

MEERUT: Kabristan Hazrat Bale Mian is as silent as any graveyard can be. Spread over 33,000 square metres in Nauchandi of Meerut, the most-preferred final resting place for Muslims in the town in Uttar Pradesh betrays no signs of disquiet over Prime Minister Narandra Modi’s controvers­ial “kabristan-shamshan” statement.

As the country debates Modi’s remark at a rally in Fatehpur on February 19, accusing the ruling Samajwadi Party of religious discrimina­tion — spending crores on constructi­ng boundary walls around cemeteries while neglecting Hindu crematoriu­ms — those managing burial grounds and crematoriu­ms in Meerut are mostly unperturbe­d.

The oldest and the biggest, Kabristan Hazrat Bale Mian, received a ₹20-lakh grant for constructi­ng a 500-metre-long boundary wall. The 5-feet-high wall has been built and the graveyard has been secured from encroacher­s.

But those managing Meerut’s Soorajkund cremation ground — the city’s biggest about two kilometres away from the Nauchandi graveyard — are not complainin­g. “We never felt short of money. We have enough philanthro­pists who are always ready to lend a helping hand,” said Dinesh Chand Ram, secretary of Ganga Motor Committee that manages the crematoriu­m. “We never applied for government assistance,” he said. The municipal corporatio­n, though, is working on laying tiles along the path leading to the premises.

Since 2013, when the Akhilesh Yadav government launched the boundary wall scheme, ₹35.5 crore has been spent on 374 big and small graveyards of Meerut district. In state capital Lucknow, 250 graveyards have got ₹21 crore.

No cremation ground of the city has, however, applied for government grant though money has been earmarked for it.

The state government’s 2012 announceme­nt to allocate ₹200 crore for constructi­ng graveyard walls triggered a wave of criticism. Two years later, the chief minister sanctioned ₹100 crore to construct 775 new cremation grounds. Last year, the state also

 ?? HT FILE ?? Police put barricades near Shambhu village on the Punjab and Haryana border.
HT FILE Police put barricades near Shambhu village on the Punjab and Haryana border.
 ?? HT ?? Since 2013, when the government launched the boundary wall scheme, ₹35.5 crore has been spent on 374 big and small graveyards of Meerut district.
HT Since 2013, when the government launched the boundary wall scheme, ₹35.5 crore has been spent on 374 big and small graveyards of Meerut district.

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