Khaleej Times

Bible, Quran removed from Kalam’s memorial

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chennai — Indian authoritie­s have removed a copy of the Bible and the Holy Quran from a new statue of a former president after a complaint by a Hindu nationalis­t party, officials said on Tuesday.

The removal of the books has fuelled a religious row over a carving depicting a Hindu holy book placed next to the statue of A.P.J. Abdul Kalam at Rameswaram in the southern state of Tamil Nadu.

Kalam, who as a scientist played a leading role in India’s landmark 1998 nuclear weapons tests, was president from 2002-2007 and a strongly secular figure.

The sculpted Hindu Bhagvad Gita book was placed next to the statue before it was inaugurate­d by Prime Minister Narendra Modi last week on the second anniversar­y of Kalam’s death.

Relatives placed the Bible and the Holy Quran next to the Gita in protest. That infuriated the Hindu Makka Katchi nationalis­t party, which said it made the complaint to police.

“The authoritie­s removed the Bible and the Holy Quran at the site. We are also looking at the complaint filed with us,” police superinten­dent Om Prakash Meena said.

K. Prabhakara­n, a member of the Hindu Makkal Katchi, told The Indian Express newspaper “I respect all these books. But keeping them (at the memorial) without permission is wrong. Steps should be taken to see such things are not done again.”

Authoritie­s have since prevented photograph­ers from taking images of the statue.

Memorial officials did not respond to queries.

The religious controvers­y “does a great disservice to the legacy of the ‘people’s president’,” The Indian Express newspaper said in an editorial.

Kalam was born into poverty and sold newspapers as a child to support his family while studying. His work on India’s own nuclear weapon earned him the nickname of “India’s missile man”. —

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