San Francisco Chronicle

Hindu temple to be built on site of razed mosque

- By Jeffrey Gettleman and Hari Kumar Jeffrey Gettleman and Hari Kumar are New York Times writers.

NEW DELHI — In a moment of triumph that India’s Hindu nationalis­ts had worked toward for years, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday set the ceremonial cornerston­e for a new Hindu temple at the site of a destroyed mosque in Ayodhya.

Hindus and Muslims have clashed over the Ayodhya site for decades, setting off waves of sectarian violence that has killed thousands. As Modi sat crosslegge­d and chanted mantras in front of a Hindu priest Wednesday, part of the elaborate groundbrea­king ceremony for the temple, it was the fulfillmen­t of a promise to his Hindu political base and an unmistakab­le milestone in his efforts to shift India’s secular foundation­s toward a more overtly Hindu identity.

Millions of Indians watched the ceremony on television or on social media. But because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the gathering in Ayodhya itself was more muted than originally planned, with the crowds kept away. Hindu priests chose Wednesday, and specifical­ly at 12:44 p.m., as the most auspicious time to begin building the new temple.

With the cameras rolling, Modi took center stage. He performed Hindu rituals, such as offering holy water and putting a red mark on his forehead, alongside some of India’s most avowed Hindu nationalis­ts. They included Yogi Adityanath, the firebrand Hindu monk turned chief minister of Uttar Pradesh state, and Mohan Bhagwat, the leader of the RSS, a Hindu supremacis­t group, whose members helped tear down the mosque that used to stand in Ayodhya.

“The wait of centuries is coming to an end,” Modi proclaimed.

Late last year, Modi’s government passed a citizenshi­p law that blatantly discrimina­ted against Muslims. That law proved incredibly divisive, setting off nationwide protests that formed the biggest challenge yet to Modi’s agenda and put him on the defensive for the first time.

Modi’s participat­ion in Ayodhya is seen as another decisive step toward an India that officially favors its Hindu majority — about 80% of the country is Hindu, 14% Muslim.

In November, India’s Supreme Court greenlight­ed the constructi­on of the Hindu temple on the site where the mosque had stood before Hindu devotees destroyed it in 1992 with sledgehamm­ers and their bare hands.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States