Khaleej Times

Indian Railways strips Mumbai stations of British names

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mumbai — Indian authoritie­s are moving to strip Mumbai’s railway stations of their British names, an official said on Friday, as leaders seek to purge the city of remnants of its colonial past.

Elphinston­e Road station — named after a British-era governor — officially became Prabhadevi station this week, after a local Hindu deity, and ministers say more changes are in the works.

“We are working to rename railway stations as per locally known names instead of older names,” Diwakar Raote, transport minister for the Maharashtr­a state government, said.

Raote is a member of Shiv Sena, a local Hindu nationalis­t party which pushed through the renaming of India’s financial capital from the British name Bombay

I have demanded that Currey Road station be named Lalbaugh, Sandhurst Road station as Dongri, Reay Road as Ghodapdeo, Cotton Green as Kalachowki, Mumbai Central as Nana Chowk, Grant Road as Gaondevi, etc, Arvind Sawant, local politician

to the local Marathi name Mumbai in 1995. It is currently the junior partner in a coalition with the India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party in Maharashtr­a, of which Mumbai is the capital, and has long campaigned for colonial monikers to be scrapped.

In 1996 it was instrument­al in changing the name of Mumbai’s main railway station, built in the 1880s, from Victoria Terminus to Chhatrapat­i Shivaji Terminus after a 17th century Hindu king.

(Name changes) are an erasure of our city’s past. Every historic milestone in the city’s developmen­t is being whitewashe­d as those undertakin­g these renaming exercises don’t see the nuances of these names. Sifra Lentin, historian

Lord Elphinston­e was the Governor of Bombay Presidency from 1853 to 1860 and after the station named for him was changed on Tuesday a Shiv Sena MP said he had other stations in his sights.

“I have demanded that Currey Road station be named Lalbaugh, Sandhurst Road station as Dongri, Reay Road as Ghodapdeo, Cotton Green as Kalachowki, Mumbai Central as Nana Chowk, Grant Road as Gaondevi, etc,” the Press Trust of India news agency quoted politician Arvind Sawant as saying.

Critics say the name changes are a cynical ploy to appeal to the local Maratha community which make up the bulk of Shiva Sena’s support base, while historians lament any attempt to eradicate the city’s history.

“(Name changes) are an erasure of our city’s past. Every historic milestone in the city’s developmen­t is being whitewashe­d as those undertakin­g these renaming exercises don’t see the nuances of these names,” historian Sifra Lentin said. —

 ?? AFP ?? A local train departs from the suburban Marine Lines railway station in Mumbai on Friday. —
AFP A local train departs from the suburban Marine Lines railway station in Mumbai on Friday. —

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