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Museum celebratin­g Mughals gets Hindu overhaul

Adityanath says he won’t allow Muslim rulers to be lionised

- BY SAMEER YASIR AND HARI KUMAR

The museum was meant to showcase the arms, art and fashion of the Mughals, Muslim rulers who reigned over the Indian subcontine­nt from the 16th to the 18th centuries.

But officials this week in Agra, home to the Taj Mahal — the world’s most famous example of Mughal-era architectu­re and India’s best-known building — had another idea: a complete overhaul of the museum so that it would instead celebrate India’s Hindu majority, leaders and history.

The changes to the planned museum are the latest example of a Hindu nationalis­t revival sweeping the country, spurred by the country’s popular prime minister, Narendra Modi. Critics of the government say that Modi and his supporters are fanning the flames of religious division, damaging India’s secular foundation and rewriting the country’s history to remove Muslim achievemen­ts from the narrative.

Renamed after Shivaji

Ground was broken for the museum in 2016 after financing was approved under the previous government, but little progress has been made on its constructi­on.

Yogi Adityanath, chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, the state in which Agra is located, said on Monday that he would not allow India’s Muslim rulers to be lionised with such a museum and that the building would instead be named for Chhatrapat­i Shivaji Maharaj, a 17thcentur­y Hindu warrior-king.

“How can Mughals be our heroes?” Adityanath asked, according to a government transcript of his remarks. As if to drive home the point that in today’s India, Hinduism and patriotism are increasing­ly entwined, he added, “the very name of Shivaji will invoke a feeling of nationalis­m and selfesteem.”

Adityanath, a member of Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, is so hostile to recognisin­g the country’s Muslim history that when he took office in 2017 he considered excluding images of the Taj Mahal from the state’s tourism brochures.

The efforts in Uttar Pradesh, including an initiative to change the names of historic cities and places with Muslim names, reflects a larger national trend. India’s Supreme Court last year ruled in favour of Hindus, effectivel­y greenlight­ing the constructi­on of a Hindu temple on a site where a mosque had stood before Hindu extremists destroyed it in 1992.

Soon after, India’s Parliament passed a law that enshrined discrimina­tion against Muslim immigrants seeking citizenshi­p. Muslims make up 14 per cent of India’s population but say they are increasing­ly under attack, both physically — there has been a sharp increase in violence against Muslims — and politicall­y.

Shahid Siddique, a Muslim and former member of Parliament, said the museum controvers­y is the latest example of Hindu nationalis­ts attempting to eradicate Muslim history.

“Agra is not a city of Shivaji,” he said of the Indian king whose name the museum will now bear. “But in the city of Taj, the city of Mughals, you cannot have a Mughal Museum,” he said, with a note of incredulit­y.

Vinod Bansal, a Hindu nationalis­t leader, described the Mughals as foreign invaders.

“When the country got independen­ce, the Union Jack was taken down. Statues of George V and Queen Victoria were broken. But no Christian raised the issue that you are attacking Christiani­ty,” he said.

 ?? The New York Times ?? ■ A rendering provided by David Chipperfie­ld Architects shows the planned museum on Mughals in Agra.
The New York Times ■ A rendering provided by David Chipperfie­ld Architects shows the planned museum on Mughals in Agra.

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