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Hindus protest demolition of ‘temple’

mehru

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RAWALPINDI, July 19: Hundreds of people from the Hindu community here on Monday took to the streets against the lessee of an ancient temple for pulling down half of its structure for commercial purposes.

The Muslim residents of the locality also joined the protesters to express solidarity with them and blocked the road for an hour. However, on the assurance of the police that the demolition work would be stopped, the protesters dispersed peacefully.

Located on Tipu Road opposite Rawalpindi Medical College, shamshan ghat (cremation place) was built in 1923 in memory of Tunsukh Rai by his sons and wife.

Talking to Dawn, Channa Lal, the Hindu priest for the twin cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad, claimed that it was the Hindu temple adjacent to shamshan ghat where religious rites were offered before cremating the body.

Hindu Sabha President Jag Mohan said they noticed some labourers demolishing the building and also digging its foundations on Monday morning. He said he along with some other people reached there and asked the labourers to stop work and produce orders.

He said the staff of Auqaf department also said the workers were not allowed to demolish the building.

Mr Mohan said before partition shamshan ghat spread over 277 kanals but when majority of Hindus migrated from the city the families left behind handed over the extra land to the government for educational purposes during Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s tenure.

He said at present the total area of the shamshan ghat including the temple building was over two kanals. The Auqaf department rented out the building to a welfare society despite protest by the Hindu community, he added.

He said in 2000 the welfare society failed to pay rent to the department after which the latter got the building vacated.

He said the Auqaf department later leased the building to one Raja Abdul Wahid who further leased it to a private media group in 2005. On the protest of the Hindu community, the department constituted a committee which declared that the building was not a temple.

“It is unfair that we have been offering religious rituals in the building for the last many years but the Auqaf department gave it to a private company for commercial purposes.”

He said over 100 Hindu families were living in the city and many foreigners including some diplomats also used the shamshan ghat for their religious rituals. When contacted, Ibadur Rehman Lodhi, a lawyer, said the Auqaf department cannot lease out worship places where religious rituals are performed. However, he said it can lease the property adjacent to worship places.

He also said the department can also rent out or lease those places which were abandoned for many years.

This reporter tried but could not contact Administrator Auqaf department Rawalpindi Noor Aslam Khan. However, Commissioner Zahid Saeed said the auqaf department was of the view that the building was not a temple so it leased it out. He said the Hindu members of the department had also verified that the building was not meant for a temple. The commissioner said he had directed the district coordination officer (DCO) to verify whether the building was a temple or not.

DAWN.COM | Islamabad | Hindus protest demolition of ?temple?
 
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Historic Hindu Mandir being demolished

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

By Faisal Kamal Pasha


RAWALPINDI: A pre-partition 87-year-old Hindu Mandir adjacent to ‘Shamshan Ghat’ in Rawalpindi is facing demolition despite strong protest by the Hindu-Sikh community of the city.

According to an official of the Auqaf Department, Rawalpindi, the building was not a Mandir and it was sealed back in 2005 and was later auctioned to a person for Rs25,000 per month. The said person could not deposit one-year advance amount of rent to Auqaf upon which the department had cancelled his agreement, he added. He said the said person then went to the court and the court decided in his favour and later he gave the building to another party (a media group) on rent, which is now demolishing the historical building. The head of the Hindu and Sikh community Jagmohan Kumar while rejecting theversion of the Auqaf Department told The News that the building is a Mandir and the Hindu community used it to perform last rituals before cremating their dead. He said that there was a Pundit of the Mandir who used to perform the rituals before cremation.

“The two kanals land for ‘Shamshan Ghat’ was allocated to the Hindu community during the first tenure of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto when Kishan Chand Parwani was the federal minister for minorities in her cabinet. The Mandir itself is built over two kanals, which is now being demolished while the open area is being maintained for the community, he said.

According to him the original area of the ‘Shamshan Ghat’ land was 277 kanals and there were several Mandirs along the Tipu Road and Nullah Leh. Some of these Mandirs were demolished before the partition while many were razed to ground after the Babri Masjid was demolished in 1992 in India.

Most of these Mandirs are under the administrative control of Auqaf Department that has rented them out to different people. There were several Mandirs in the adjacent localities of Raja Bazaar where one could now see residential apartments.

Aneel Parshad, a member of the Hindu community, asked how the Muslims would feel if there were people living inside a mosque using it for residential purpose. According to the plaque fixed on the building, Lala Tansukh Rai, the Raees-e-Azam Rawalpindi, had constructed the Mandir in memory of his wife.

Jagmohan Kumar told The News that the building was not in use due to its dilapidated condition. “When the federal minister of the Benazir Bhutto cabinet gave the ‘Shamshan Ghat’ to the community, the Auqaf Department at that time had assured us that the Mandir would be handed over to us after renovation, which never happened.

The ‘Shamshan Ghat’ is not only used by the locals, but by the foreign missions of China and other Budhist community as well, Jagmohan Kumar said. Sardar Heera Lal, another member of the community, said that they are among the oldest residents of the city. He said that their generations contributed a lot to the development of the city and this part of the land.

The community has demanded of the president, the prime minister and the chief justice of Pakistan to protect their Mandir and ‘Shamshan Ghat’.

“We not only demand the 277 kanals of land that was allotted to the Hindu community before partition, but the two-kanal piece of land where we could cremate our dead according to our religious belief,” they urged.

Historic Hindu Mandir being demolished
 
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It is very important for Hindus of the city and plus Pakistan as well it is a part of our countries history its wrong it is a place of worship the money hungry builders need to show some respect to it let people live & pray in peace for GOD's sake .Iam against this i sure hope the gov steps in to stop the damage that the site faces GOD bless.
 
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This is wrong. Pakistan has many Hindus and they are part of society, the Pakistan Govt. should stop the demolishing.
 
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I have seen many of the old temples some of them are so old that they will collapse or fall , if the gov is constructing or improving facility, I would understand but wishes of local worshipers have to be respected
 
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Out of 277 kanals only 2 kanals was kept for Shamshan ghat and Temple rest handed over to Govt for educational purposes that was I suppose such a positive thing but even then Auqaf department rented out the Temple building and now they are claiming it is not a Temple at all. Sorry but I am feeling bad for Local Hindus as they should be the one to decide if its a Temple or not nobody else afterall building was not built overnight it was in place for ages.

Highly condemnable Act!!! Wish corrective actions are taken by authorities...
 
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Places for worship should NOT be demolished for commercial purposes ...
 
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The Muslim residents of the locality also joined the protesters to express solidarity with them and blocked the road for an hour. However, on the assurance of the police that the demolition work would be stopped, the protesters dispersed peacefully.

Difference between Pakistan and India.

At least there are some good Pakistani muslims condemning this action.

These are not few but nearly all of Pakistanis . It just depends which one you would like to prioritize.
 
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"The Muslim residents of the locality also joined the protesters to express solidarity with them and blocked the road for an hour."

This part is really worthy of commendation. But for the other matters, there seems to be some 'legal issues'. Please let us not forget that any 'House of Worship' is after all a 'physical structure' standing on a 'piece of land'. Both of these things easily become causes of dispute. Pakistan has a legal system, let the rule of law prevail.
IMHO, we can keep our emotions on a different plane, we may mean well but only send things on some 'tangential trajectory'.
Cheers.
 
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"The Muslim residents of the locality also joined the protesters to express solidarity with them and blocked the road for an hour."

This part is really worthy of commendation. But for the other matters, there seems to be some 'legal issues'. Please let us not forget that any 'House of Worship' is after all a 'physical structure' standing on a 'piece of land'. Both of these things easily become causes of dispute. Pakistan has a legal system, let the rule of law prevail.
IMHO, we can keep our emotions on a different plane, we may mean well but only send things on some 'tangential trajectory'.
Cheers.
Anything that is standing from 1923 has earned its respect as a landmark - which itself should not be demolished but preserved.
 
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"Anything that is standing from 1923 has earned its respect as a landmark - which itself should not be demolished but preserved. "

@ Asim Aquil
Indeed. Probably i owe you some clarification. i did not advocate any 'hands off' attitude. i would be unfair if i assumed that the legal system in Pakistan is insensitive to such matters. You also clarified that there is a law/regulation governing structures of historical (or heritage) importance. That is likely to be invoked and restitution done. i only intended to make a case that this episode should not become a reason to inflame opinions (at least on this forum).
One point in the report really impresses me- the reaction of local residents irrespective of their faith. i'm pretty sure that (mostly) they are average citizens (of an average mohalla). They have displayed an awareness and sensitivity that is exemplary.
Thanks.
 
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This Hindu Temple in Rawalpindi should renovated and turned over to Hindu community. The land mafia and corrupt officials are involved that occupy, demolish and resell properties. The land mafia has no religion and they target any property that can be occupied. Babari Masjid come to mind where Hindu lunatics demolished part of the mosque. After archaeological digs no temple complex foundation has been found. A Muslim graveyard was found dating back to pre-Mughal era. This area was a probably Muslim mohalla (locality). There have been widespread reports across the Indian media that the excavation of a disputed holy site in India has produced no evidence of a Hindu temple, according to archaeologists' progress reports. Advani spearheaded the campaign to demolish mosque in Ayodhya then he comes to Pakistan and visits temples and argues to protect them. What a lunatic hypocrite ! I wonder why Pakistan even let this genocidal maniac visit.

BBC NEWS | South Asia | 'No sign' of Ayodhya temple
 
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President has also taken note of the incident.

BTW how old is the site??
 
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