The Sunday Guardian

Wahhabi fanatics oppose Krishna temple plan in Islamabad

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the move is Speaker of the Provincial Assembly of Punjab (Pakistan), Chaudhry Pervaiz Elahi, who said that constructi­ng the new temple in Islamabad was “against the spirit of Islam”. In a video message, he said it was also an insult to the “state of Madinah”. He is said to have support of the Wahhabi elements in Pakistan. “Pakistan was made in the name of Islam and building another Hindu temple in the capital is against the soul of Islam. After the conquest of Mecca, Hazrat Muhammad along with Hazrat Ali broke 360 idols in Baitullah Sharif saying ‘truth has come and falsehood has vanished’,” Elahi added. An advocate in Islamabad High Court has also challenged the government’s decision to construct the temple.

Malhi could not be contracted for his comments despite repeated attempts. A text message sent to him also remained unanswered. However, in a tweet, he said: “CDA authoritie­s have informed, work of boundary wall of Krishna temple site may be restored after Monday, after getting formal approval. Hindu Panchayat Islamabad will contact CDA on Monday.”

The ground-breaking ceremony for the temple was performed recently by Malhi. The temple complex will also have a cremation site, apart from the space for separate structures for other religious rites. It will be built with an estimated cost of Rs 10 crore, generated through donations and government funding. Prime

Minister Imran Khan has promised a grant of Rs 10 crore for the purpose.

In an earlier tweet, Malhi had said: “Held a meeting with PM Imran Khan today. He directed minister religious affairs to immediatel­y release funds for Krishna temple being built at Islamabad and present a bill on forced conversion­s in Parliament within two months.”

Media reports have quoted Malhi as saying that the Hindu population in Islamabad had reached around 3,000, which include government and private sector employees, members of the business community and a large number of doctors. He is also reported to have said that while the official formalitie­s are underway, the initial groundwork, including levelling of the land and erecting the boundary wall, can continue.

It is to be noted that, last year, the Pakistan Tehreeke-insaf (PTI) government announced to reconstruc­t, renovate and reopen all temples and shrines across Pakistan to promote religious tourism.

Sources said, before Partition, people of different communitie­s used to live in religious harmony in Islamabad and Rawalpindi. But after the Partition, a large number of Hindus and Sikhs migrated to India, leaving behind temples and gurudwaras, which were later destroyed or grabbed. A survey by the All Pakistan Hindu Rights Movement says that out of the 428 Hindu temples in Pakistan, only about 20 survive today and remain neglected by the Evacuee Trust Property Board, which controls them, while the rest had been converted for other uses. It highlighte­d that 408 of the 428 temples at the time of Partition “were turned into toy stores, restaurant­s, government offices and schools after 1990”. There is a small, abandoned temple and gurudwara at the Saidpur village near Islamabad, where no religious ritual takes place.

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 ?? (PHOTO COURTESY: TWITTER ACCOUNT OF LAL CHAND MALHI, MEMBER NATIONAL ASSEMBLY OF PAKISTAN). ?? A view of the ground-breaking ceremony of the Lord Krishna temple in Islamabad
(PHOTO COURTESY: TWITTER ACCOUNT OF LAL CHAND MALHI, MEMBER NATIONAL ASSEMBLY OF PAKISTAN). A view of the ground-breaking ceremony of the Lord Krishna temple in Islamabad

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