Oman Daily Observer

SAD cries sacrilege over Guru’s picture

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CHANDIGARH: The SAD on Sunday accused the Punjab government of sacrilege over the ‘morphing’ of a picture of 10th Sikh Guru Gobind Singh by using one of French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, a charge dismissed by the authoritie­s as “ridiculous”.

A computer-generated swapping of faces was done for the picture used in an advertisem­ent released by the Public Relations Department to commemorat­e the 350th birth anniversar­y of the Sikh Guru, the Shiromani Akali Dal said and demanded strict action against the erring officials and the advertisin­g agency concerned.

SAD Senior Vice President Daljit Singh Cheema said the picture shown as that of Guru Gobind Singh in the advertisem­ent was actually of Napoleon.

“An image of Guru Gobind Singh ji’s face was swapped with that of the French ruler through computer on the picture. The said painting dates back to 1800, almost a century after Guru Sahib’s period. I wonder why the Congress government committed this grave sin of passing off the tampered picture as that of Guru Sahib when plenty of the Gurus’ paintings are available,” Cheema said in a statement here.

“The painting has the same horse, with resemblanc­e to face, body, mane, tail, stirrups and other things shown in the Napoleon’s painting. Even the clothes Guru Gobind Singh ji is shown wearing in the morphed picture are the same as Napoleon’s in the original painting,” the Akali leader claimed.

In response, the government rejected the charge of sacrilege vis-a-vis advertisem­ents issued in connection with the 350th birth anniversar­y celebratio­ns of Guru Gobind Singh.

“The assertion is totally ridiculous. The picture (of Guru Gobind Singh) has been sourced from a Sikhism website, which is in the public domain. It was neither created nor modified by the government in any manner,” the government spokespers­on said.

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