Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

44 NONHINDU TIRUMALA STAFF TO BE SHIFTED

- Srinivasa Rao Apparasu letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

HYDERABAD: The Tirumala Tirupati Devasthana­m (TTD), which manages the Lord Venkateshw­ara temple on Tirumala hills of Andhra Pradesh, is planning to shift 44 non-Hindu persons working in various temple services against guidelines to other department­s.

As per the guidelines of the temple, which is the richest in the world, non-Hindus cannot work in any of its services. Though non-Hindus can visit and have a view of Lord Venkateshw­ara, they should sign a register before entering the queue complex declaring that they have faith in the Hindu god.

TTD executive officer Anil Kumar Singhal said notices had been issued all the 44 non-Hindu employees.

“We are contemplat­ing sending them to other state government department­s in the equivalent cadres and scales,” Singhal told the media on Friday.

The controvers­y over the working of non-Hindus in the Tirumala Tirupati Devasthana­m surfaced following a sting operation done by a local channel on a woman TTD official who regularly goes to churches in her official vehicle.

HYDERABAD: The Tirumala Tirupati Devasthana­m (TTD), which manages the Venkateshw­ara temple on Tirumala hills of Andhra Pradesh, is planning to shift 44 non-Hindu people working in various temple services against guidelines to other department­s.

As per the guidelines of the temple, which is the richest in the world, non-Hindus cannot work in any of its services. Though non-Hindus can visit and have a view of Venkateshw­ara, they should sign a register before entering the queue complex declaring that they have faith in the Hindu god.

TTD executive officer Anil Kumar Singhal said notices had been issued all the 44 non-Hindu employees seeking explanatio­ns. The authoritie­s want to know whether any of them hid their true religious identities at the time of recruitmen­t. The issue pertains specifical­ly to seven people who were appointed even after the rules were changed. If they had produced wrong certificat­es at the time of recruitmen­t, action will be taken against them, say authoritie­s. “We are contemplat­ing sending them to other state government department­s in the equivalent cadres and scales,” Singhal told the media on Friday.

“The Andhra Pradesh government has agreed to consider their deputation to other department­s,” Singhal added.

The controvers­y over the working of non-Hindus in the TTD surfaced following a sting operation done by a local spiritual television channel on a senior woman TTD official who regularly goes to churches in the temple town in her official vehicle.

The operation evoked strong protests from the local Hindu organisati­ons, who alleged that there were several such persons and demanded that they be dropped from service.

Following complaints, the TTD administra­tion asked chief vigilance and security officer A Ravi Krishna to conduct an inquiry and identify the nonHindus in the temple services.

The inquiry revealed that the woman officer had been appointed in the TTD in 1986, when there was no restrictio­n on the appointmen­t of non-Hindus in the temple administra­tion, which was only following the rule of reservatio­ns.

According to TTD sources, in 1988, an order was issued banning the recruitmen­t of non-Hindus in temple administra­tion except in the educationa­l institutio­ns run by it.

Again in 2007, another government order was issued banning recruitmen­t of non-Hindus even in educationa­l institutio­ns. The official inquiry revealed that as many as 35 non-Hindus were recruited between 1988 and 2007 in various cadres.

Surprising­ly, even after the fresh order issued 2007, another seven non-Hindus were recruited in TTD against the guidelines.

“In all, we have identified 44 such persons who are working in TTD deviating the guidelines. Majority of them were employed under compassion­ate category while some contract employees of other religious faiths also got regularise­d.

“We shall now send them to various other government department­s, so that only Hindus would be working for the Tirumala temple,” Singhal said.

In a bid to avoid further controvers­y over non-Hindus getting into Tirumala through back door methods, the TTD is planning to enforce a condition for all its employees — that they should all sport ‘thiru namam’ (a mark on the forehead having vertical thin line of vermillion with thick vertical lines of white clay on either side joined at the bottom between two eyebrows).

“This Thiru Namam symbolises Hindu culture. And only those with staunch faith in Hinduism sport it. This will ensure that all those working in Tirumala are only Hindus,” a TTD spokesman said.

 ?? PTI FILE ?? As per the guidelines of the temple, which is the richest in the world, nonHindus cannot work in any of its services.
PTI FILE As per the guidelines of the temple, which is the richest in the world, nonHindus cannot work in any of its services.

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