The Free Press Journal

Nepal usurps Lord Ram

After tinkering with ‘Geography’, Nepal dabbles in ‘History’

- FPJ NEWS SERVICE Kathmandu

After tinkering with ‘geography,’ by changing the contours of its political map and usurping Indian land, Nepali Prime Minister is dabbling in ‘history.’ Only this time, he has crossed the line between the sublime and the ludicrous by claiming that the "real" Ayodhya lies in Nepal, not in India, and that Lord Ram was born in Thori in southern Nepal.

Prime Minister Oli, whose recent diatribe had raised hackles in Delhi, has further accused India of appropriat­ing the cultural icons of Nepal by weaving a false narrative that Lord Ram’s birthplace is in Ayodhya.

Speaking at an event on the birth anniversar­y of Nepalese poet Bhanubhakt­a in Kathmandu, Oli said that Nepal "has become a victim of cultural trespass and its history has been manipulate­d."

(Poet Bhanubhakt­a was born in 1814 in western Nepal and is credited for translatin­g Valmiki's Ramayan into Nepali language. He died in 1868.)

‘‘India has created a 'fake Ayodhya'. Lord Ram's kingdom was not in Uttar Pradesh but in Nepal, near Balmiki Ashram in Thori", asserts Oli. ‘‘We also believe that deity Sita – who was born in Janakpur in Nepal, as mentioned in the Ramayana -- got married to Prince Ram of India,’’ said Oli as he went off the tangent again. ‘‘Actually, Ayodhya is a village that lies west of Birgunj in Nepal," he pointed out, adding that longdistan­ce marriages were not possible at the time as there were no communicat­ion links or a rapid transit system.

He added that the Balmiki Ashram in Thori belonged to Panditji Ridi who performed

the Putrishti Yajna for Dashratha, Lord Ram's father, to bless him with a son. "That place also belongs to Nepal," he said. He added that a place called Balmiki Nagar is presently in West Champaran district of Bihar, some part of which is also in Nepal.

Condemning Oli for his remarks, BJP national spokespers­on Bizay Sonkar Shastri said that the Lef t parties had played with people's sentiments in India, and the Communists in Nepal will be rejected by the masses in a similar manner. "Lord Ram is an article of faith for us, and people will not allow anybody, be it prime minister of Nepal or anyone, to play with this sentiment," he said in New Delhi.

The India-Nepal bilateral ties came under strain af ter Defence Minister Rajnath Singh inaugurate­d a 80-km-long strategica­lly crucial road connecting the Lipulekh pass with Dharchula in Uttarakhan­d on May 8. Nepal reacted sharply to the inaugurati­on of the road claiming that it passed through Nepalese territor y. India rejected the claim asserting that the road lies completely within its territor y.

Later, Nepal updated the countr y's political map through a Constituti­onal amendment, incorporat­ing three strategica­lly important Indian areas.

India termed as "untenable" the "artificial enlargemen­t" of the territoria­l claims by Nepal.

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