Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Jama Masjid

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The Delhi Wakf Board (DWB), the original custodian of the mosque, had expressed its inability to carry out the repair work because of lack of funds and expertise.

As HT had reported in December, portions of the eaves of all four chhattris (dome-shaped pavilions) of the mosque had started chipping. Several marble finials on the smaller domes on the northern and southern gates had fallen, and the large pinnacle on the central dome had tilted. The Shahi Imam of the Masjid, Syed Ahmed Bukhari, said he had written to the Prime Minister’s office and the ASI in 2016, seeking help for repair.

A day after the HT report, teams from the ASI, the DWB, the divisional commission­er’s office, and the District Disaster Management Authority (DDMA) had inspected the damage.

A senior official involved in the restoratio­n said the work at Jama Masjid would speed up after Republic Day. “More raw materials will be sent to the site after January 26. Constructi­on workers will first put scaffoldin­g around the central dome, which has major fracture signs. Hopefully, the masonry work will commence within a month,” said the official, who asked not to be named because he is not authorised to speak to the media.

To maintain the original look while strengthen­ing the building, the mortar ingredient­s will include surkhi (ground red brick), bel giri (wood apple), gud (jaggery), gaund (gum), urad dal (white lentil), and batasha (sugar candy), another official said.

According to Tariq Bukhari, general secretary of the Jama Masjid Advisory Council (JMAC), which manages the mosque’s daily affairs, the central dome of the principal prayer hall is the worst affected, with white seepage marks clearly visible on it. Rampant water leakage has developed cracks in the main bulbous domes that are further eroding the monument’s structural integrity. The seepage has peeled layers of sandstone and plaster from some of the walls and loosened some of the intricate parapet carvings.

The ASI had been maintainin­g and restoring the structure under a special arrangemen­t since 1956. It last worked on the mosque in 2007, when the missing inlay work and the internal water system were restored.

The constructi­on of the Jama Masjid, originally named ‘Masjid-i Jahan Numa’, started in 1648 as the centerpiec­e of Shahjahana­bad. It took six years to build and cost R10 lakh at the time. The masjid is visited by an average of 5,000 tourists and 1,000 worshipper­s every day. ernment, and which go to the polls towards the end of this year. There has been some talk of the BJP bringing forward the polls to these states marginally, and clubbing them with the Lok Sabha elections due for mid-2019. Shah laughed this question away, though. “Even if we were planning to do this, I’m not going to tell you,” he said.

In recent months, there has been discussion about simultaneo­us elections for the Lok Sabha and at least key states, so as to reduce the time politician­s spend campaignin­g and increase the time they spend governing. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has spoken of the need for this on at least a few occasions.

So, what worries Shah? “The media,” he said promptly.

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