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Sunday, December 11, 2011

Ayodhya



The ancient city of Ayodhya, according to the Ramayana, was founded by Manu, the law-giver of the Hindus. For centuries it was the capital of the descendants of the Surya dynasty, of which Lord Rama was the most celebrated king.

Ayodhya during ancient times was known as Kosaldesa. The Atharvaveda describes it as ?a city built by gods and being as prosperous as paradise itself?. The illustrious ruling dynasty of this region where the Ikshvakus of the solar clan (Suryavamsha). According to tradition, Ikshvaku was the eldest son of Vaivasvata Manu, who established himself at Ayodhya. The earth is said to have its name ?Prithivi? from Prithu, the 6th king of the line.

A few generations later came Mandhatri, in whose line the 31st king was Harischandra, known widely for his love of Truth. Raja Sagar of the same line performed the Asvamedha Yajna and his great grandson Bhagiratha is reputed to have brought Ganga on earth by virtue of his penances.

Later in the time this clan came to be called as ?Raghuvamsha?. Bhagirath?s Grandson was Raja Dasaratha, the illustrious father of Lord Rama, with whom the glory of the Kosala dynasty reached its peak. The story of this epic has been immortalized by Valmiki and immensely popularized by the great masses through centuries.

According to puranic tradition, in the 93rd generation from Ikshvaku, the 30th from Rama was Brihabdala the last famous king of the Ikshvaku dynasty of Ayodhya, who was killed during the Mahabharata war. The kingdom of Kosala again rose to prominence in the time of Buddha, i.e. 6th century B.C


MAKING OF THE MANDIR

Ayodhya: The Ram temple is being assembled in three workshops in Rajasthan and one in UP under the supervision of theVishwa Hindu Parishad(VHP). The plan is to start construction at the actual site in two years whether or not the BJP has a majority at the Centre.

DEBASISH MUKHERJI in New Delhi and 
AJAY UPRETI in Luckhnow

Two bombs have been ticking away in India for years, one in the Pokharan desert of Rajasthan and the other in Ayodhya. The BJP-led government gladly pulled the pin at Pokharan, flexing its nuclear muscle; a Shakti peeth temple that Hindu sanyasins have planned near Pokharan will symbolise this 'victory'. After the thermonuclear bang it is the turn of the Ayodhya bomb, which is also being assembled on the sands of Rajasthan not by nuclear scientists but by master-craftsmen who are chipping away on exotic pink sandstone
(pic: left) 
. There will be no victors or vanquished after this blast, though.

The BJP is worried about the political cost of detonating this bomb, but the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) is defiant. "We will start construction at the Ram Janmabhoomi site within two years," said its working president Ashok Singhal. Though one-fourth of the work is over, actual construction at the disputed site can begin only after all the suits relating to it are annulled and land is allotted to the Ram Janmabhoomi Nyas. Asked about the VHP-initiated construction work at Karsevakpuram near Ayodhya, Mahant Nritya Gopal Das, deputy chief of the Nyas, asserted that "the Nyas and the VHP are one" on the question of temple construction. "The sole objective of the Nyas is to build the Ram temple and it is committed to this goal," he said. 
This goal may be realised sooner than most people think, if Samajwadi Party chief and former defence minister Mulayam Singh 
(pic: right) 
is to be believed. "The Sangh Parivar has hatched a conspiracy to bypass the courts and erect a temple at Ayodhya and make it a fait accompli, as they did in the case of the demolition of the Babri Masjid," he told THE WEEK. "Everything is getting ready in Ayodhya, Lucknow and Rajasthan, so that the temple itself can be put together in a matter of days and hours. My information is they are planning to do it in July or August."

Mulayam, who stopped the kar sevaks who stormed the Masjid in 1990, visualised a scenario of what might happen: "The PAC (Provincial Armed Constabulary) of Uttar Pradesh will surround the site and will not let in anyone other than VHP volunteers. In addition, they will bring in Central paramilitary forces. The plan is to have an ordinance issued either by the Vajpayee government or the Kalyan Singh government permitting construction of the temple, as the land is already with the Central government. They will hoodwink the courts and the people as they did last time. They think it is easier now because they have power over the Central and state governments."

Champat Rai, a joint-secretary of the VHP who is overseeing the project, sought to allay fears. "We have no intention of violating any court order," he said. "Besides, before the temple is built we have to level the ground. There is a 50-foot depression just behind the disputed spot which will take months to fill. The soil in the area will require a 'raft foundation' which means extending the concrete platform built in July 1992 to cover twice the area it now covers. Only then can we put up the walls and pillars. None of this can be done overnight as our critics allege."

But the fact is that the VHP has been prefabricating the temple since 1991 and according to Rai almost 30 per cent of the work is complete. "People appear to have woken up seven years late," said Rai. "Even in the months following December 6, 1992, when our organisation was briefly banned, the stone cutting and chiselling continued. I see nothing wrong with it: our activities were banned, carving stone pillars was not!" 

The first sandstone blocks arrived in Ayodhya from Bansipahar, near Bharatpur in Rajasthan, in late 1989, soon after the shilanyas, and were stored at a workshop near the Ramghat Chowraha, more than a kilometre from both the Ram Janmabhoomi site and the VHP headquarters at Karsevakpuram. Work on the stones began only in end 1991 with about eight workers who had come from Mirzapur, Agra, Rajasthan, and even Gujarat. 

"In late 1995 we stepped up the pace," said Rai. "We had Rs 8.29 crore in the bank, collected during our shila pujan and other programmes. We thought that instead of merely letting it accumulate interest in the bank, and then paying income tax, we might as well use it up." 

Just when the BJP was in sight of victory in the Lok Sabha elections which were a few months away, the VHP purchased a stone-cutting machine for its Ayodhya workshop. Today at Karsevakpuram, 5 km from the disputed site, nearly 150 craftsmen are chiselling sandstone into shape even as two stone cutter machines slice the huge stones; the machines and a generator had been bought from Gujarat for Rs 13 lakh. "The machines have made the work a lot faster," said Anant Ram, technical supervisor of the Karsevakpuram workshop, which is spread on 2 sq km. 

In late 1995 the VHP contracted out part of the carving work. It chose Sompura Marble Works, Bharat Shilp Kala Kendra and Mahadev Shilp Kala Kendra, all three located in the BJP-ruled Rajasthan. "Ashok Singhalji has come here a number of times," said Ramesh Chandra Sompura, proprietor of Sompura Marble Works in Pindwara town. "I went to Ayodhya, where they showed me a sample and asked if I could replicate it. I said I could, and got the contract." 
So too did Jawanji, owner of the Mahadev Shilp Kala Kendra at Ajari village, and Kastoorlal Padamji of the Bharat Shilp Kala Kendra in Kojra town. None of them had any previous connection with the BJP or VHP. "But as devout Hindus we are keen to see the Ram mandir built," said Jawanji.

The workshops vary considerably in size, from 50-square-foot enclosures to sprawling fields stretching over half an acre. A few are covered with flimsy shamianas, but most have only the sky above. 

The completed temple, which is estimated to cost Rs 120 crore, will be in two tiers, comprising 212 pillars, 106 each on the ground floor and first floor. "There will be three kinds of pillars," said Rai. The ground floor pillars will be 16.5 feet tall, the first floor ones 14.5 feet. "First there will be 72 complete pillars, with carvings on all four sides. The remaining 34 will be half pillars or quarter pillars, partially embedded in the walls." 

"We expect to complete at least 50 per cent of the pillars in the next two years," said Rai. So far 32 of the complete pillars have been prepared at Sirohi and 18 at Ayodhya. "I have already sent eight truckloads to Ayodhya," said Ramesh Sompura. In fact, finding no space left to store the pillars coming from Rajasthan the Ram Janmabhoomi Nyas recently bought three acres land.

Most of the carvings depict floral motifs or gods and goddesses. "The temple facade as such will have nothing to do with Rama or the Ramayana," said Rai. "It will resemble the Akshaydham temple in Gandhinagar which was also designed by the same architect, Chandrakant Sompura." 

Kanaram Patel, the representative of the Ram Janmabhoomi Nyas in Sirohi, is now looking forward to the detailed plans for the sheekhar or spire of the temple which are expected soon from Chandrakant Sompura. "The sheekhar will be 132 feet high," said Patel. "That will take much longer to carve, at least five years. But it will be a challenge." 
The real challenge, however, will be for the BJP to allay fears of a VHP-BJP game plan in the light of Singhal's statement that temple construction will begin in another two years. Nritya Gopal Das (pic: left), who has been chargesheeted by the CBI in the demolition case, believes that the atmosphere is conducive for the work to begin this year itself. "God does not wait for anyone to get majority," he told THE WEEK. "So Bhagavan Ram will also not wait for the BJP." While expressing "satisfaction" with the BJP, he said, "Our main cause of suspicion is persons like Jayalalitha and Chandrababu Naidu." 

Rai too took a potshot at the BJP without naming it. "Everyone is in favour of this mission but they don't have the courage to implement it," he said. Supporting this sentiment were VHP activists Nagendra Upadhaya and Hariram Gupta who supervise the workshop at Karsevakpuram.

Jayalalitha, meanwhile, sought to set the record straight about her support to the kar seva at Ayodhya in 1990. "Madam wanted a temple and a mosque to exist at the same place," AIADMK leader T.M. Selvaganapathy told THE WEEK. "She was never for the demolition of the mosque." 

Another BJP ally, Mamata Banerjee of the Trinamool Congress, was noncommittal about the Sang Parivar's 'hidden' agenda. "I really don't know what the VHP is doing, whether it is trying to build any temple at Ayodhya or not," she said while campaigning for the panchayat elections in West Bengal. 

While the allies try to soft-pedal the issue, the Muslims and the opposition parties have voiced fears of the Sangh Parivar's belligerence. "Today there is a BJP government at the Centre and in UP and Rajasthan, where the stone carving work is being done. Anything is possible," said CPI leader A.B. Bardhan. "If we don't want to get the kind of shock we did on December 6, 1992, secular parties, individuals, cultural and even religious organisations must come together."

His demand that they undertake a "secular jagran" found acceptance with the Samajwadi Party's Amar Singh, who said that mobilising people was the only way to thwart the "BJP's nefarious strategy".Salman Khurshid of the Congress went a step further and accused Home Minister L.K. Advani of "overseeing the entire affair, and he is himself an accused in the demolition case".

The convener of the Babri Masjid Action Committee in Ayodhya, Haji Mahaboob Ahamad, also believes that the temple project has the blessings of Advani and Murli Manohar Joshi. Most of the Muslims of Ayodhya are for a judicial solution of the matter. "We will respect the verdict of the court at all cost," said M.A. Latif, a former teacher. Muslim politician Syed Shahabuddin has no objection to the pillars being built. "But the suspicion is that they might start building (the temple) upon the concrete platform which was erected during the kar seva in July 1992 defying the Supreme Court orders. Once they start constructing, they will build up public pressure in such a way that it will be impossible to stop them." He demanded that the government immediately ban transportation of the pillars to Ayodhya from Sirohi.
Said Shahi Imam Abdullah Bukhari: "The VHP must be pressured to make its plans public so that we know where exactly they intend to put up the temple." 

The pillars on which the 'Ayodhya bomb' sits have taken shape after the agitation for it began 14 years ago, the same number of years Ram was in exile in the forest. "The temple is inevitable for Ram's rajyabhishek," said Nritya Gopal Das. But would He have wanted it on the debris of a mosque?
Master builder

The architect of the temple attaches little importance to the site
Chandrakant Sompura, architect of the Ram Janmabhoomi Temple, is hardly finicky about the site in Ayodhya. Left to himself, he would build the temple anywhere including Ahmedabad, his home town. Sompura (pic: right) said Prime Minister Rao had found a practical way to build the temple. Rao wanted construction to start a few feet away from the disputed site, so that the temple and the mosque could be good neighbours, the pilgrims proceeding from the temple to the birthplace at the mosque. "Had it been accepted the temple would have been complete by now," said Sompura. But the VHP was adamant that it could be built only at the spot where Rama was born."

Sompura, 55, is from a family that is a premier exponent of the Nagri style of temple architecture prevalent in the north and the west of the country. The year 1960 was a watershed in his life; the lad of 17 dropped out of college and joined the family profession when his father Balwantrai Sompura drowned in the Ganga while renovating the Badrinath Temple. Grandfather Prabhashanker Sompura, the author of 14 books on temple architecture, came out of retirement to keep the tradition alive. The grandpa became Chandrakant's guru.

Sompura has not looked back since then. His finest achievement is the Swaminarayan temple he built at Neasden in London in a record 28 months.

It was VHP chief Ashok Singhal who asked him to design the Ram Janmabhoomi temple and later entrusted him with building it. "About 150 artisans are working at Pindwara near Sirohi in Rajasthan," said Sompura, though he was mourning his mother who died in May. 

Sompura said artisans were following computerised directions as in the case of the Swaminarayan temple for which the best Bulgarian limestone from Vrtsa and marble from Sardinia were shipped to Kandla in a container. Before loading, the stones were cut to the required size and every stone was numbered. Over 2,500 artisans from Gujarat and Rajasthan cut, polished and sculpted 26,300 stones, which were then shipped to London and assembled using their code numbers. It was as if the temple were a jigsaw puzzle. 

Why just 150 workers for the Ayodhya project which is four times bigger than the London temple? "We do not know when the permission to build the temple would come," said Sompura. "The local Muslims are all for the temple. They know that a major pilgrimage centre can bring them economic opportunities. But Muslim politicians are opposed to the temple and the court process will be time consuming. The two shortcuts for the construction are an unlikely compromise, and the BJP getting a clear majority at the Centre. Even if I use 2,500 workers, it will take about four years to complete the temple." 

Sompura is accustomed to delay. It took him seven years to get the permission of London town planners. "They refused to believe that a structure without reinforced concrete would be durable. The temple was designed to be made of stone to last forever." Patience had its reward. Sompura won the 1995 Natural Stones special award from the Stone Federation for the best architect designer. Apart from the Ayodhya temple, he is building the Ramnath temple near Gondal in Saurashtra.

Going by the family lore, the Sompuras were Brahmin priests who descended from the moon. They had come down to the earth to assist the Moon god perform a yagna to escape a curse and could not return to the moon because they had entered the world of birth and death cycle. 

Fables are fanciful but there is something that does not die in the Sompura family. It is the living tradition, and it has drawn into its fold Chandrakanta's sons Nikhil and Aashish, who assist their father in his work on the Ayodhya temple. 

ARVIND J. BOSMIA in Ahmedabad

Warning: No idle worship allowed

A visit to the most guarded temple in the country is a daunting experience.

Devotees who flock to Ayodhya are greeted by hawk-eyed securitymen, about 4,000 of them, deployed in every nook and corner of the disputed site. The idol of Ram, placed under a soiled canopy, is open to devotees every morning between seven and ten, and between three and six in the afternoon. Visitors have to pass through several security checkpoints before they can have a darshan of Ram lalla.

The checks begin nearly half a km from the temple site. After negotiating a steel barricade, visitors are made to walk through a metal detector. The security tightens as they proceed. There are 400 men and 200 women of the CRPF, 2,700 men of the Provincial Armed Constabulary and 200 of the Rapid Action Force keeping vigil for potential troublemakers. A new batch of policemen arrives in Ayodhya every three months: the idea is to prevent the cops from developing a 'bond' with the place and its residents.

Unknown to most devotees the cops are keeping a watch on them from towers to ensure that no one breaks the security ring. They are assisted by closed-circuit television with cameras installed at vantage points. When the devotees arrive at a second metal detector they are told to deposit all their belongings. Cameras, combs, pens and even matchboxes are a no-no beyond this point: visitors may keep only their wallets. As the visitors near the idol, the automatic gun-toting cops of the Central forces come into view. This is the sensitive zone: police sniffer dogs, in fact, scour the area each morning for explosives. 

The devotees are frequently told to refrain from standing in front of the canopy for long. A quick darshan, and they are asked to move on, after accepting prasad from a pundit.The government is spending more than Rs 5 crore a month on the security arrangements. Most of the devotees find it stifling, though. "Frequent searches and excessive security rob us of a peaceful darshan," complained Diwakar Gupta, a businessman from Gorakhpur.

Added Nitin Dubey from Sitapur, "The expenditure on the security forces should be diverted for providing clean drinking water, repairing the roads and improving the power supply in Ayodhya." After the darshan, the devotees take a circuitous route to a heavily-guarded exit, and walk past a fire tender and Home Guard contingents on the ready. For most of them it is an occasion to remember, for many reasons.

AJAY UPRETY in Lucknow
Legal labyrinth
For the last 50 years, and especially from the mid eighties, the Babri Masjid issue has generated a welter of litigation without getting any closer to a solution. Four of the five title suits relating to the disputed spot, all grouped together and being heard by a special Lucknow bench of the Allahabad High Court, still stand. The fifth, filed by Ramchandra Paramhans, a priest, was withdrawn in early 1990.

On January 16, 1950, three weeks after the "miraculous appearance" of Ram Lalla within the Babri Masjid, Gopal Singh Visharad filed a suit in the Faizabad civil court for an order against removal of the idols. Simultaneously Paramhans demanded that his right to worship the idols within the Babri Masjid be upheld.Though injunctions were passed upholding these rights, the suits were not disposed of. 

In 1959 sadhus of the Nirmohi Akhada, which had owned much of the land around the disputed spot, filed a third suit seeking a direction that no one interferes with worship at the Ram temple. Finally in December 1961, the UP Sunni Central Board of Waqfs filed a suit claiming rights to the Babri Masjid and the land around it, which it described as a Sunni graveyard. On July 1, 1989 VHP vice-president Deoki Nandan Agarwal filed a suit on behalf of the deity: it sought a declaration that the area belonged to the deities, and restraint on all those seeking to prevent the construction of a Ram mandir at the site.

Unless these suits are resolved, the Ayodhya dispute can never be solved legally. The Centre tried to sidestep them by passing the Ayodhya Acquisition Bill and acquiring the entire area in March 1993. This was, however, challenged in the Supreme Court. The court upheld the acquisition but ruled that the Centre had no right to do with the land whatever it liked; it could only administer the area and hand it over to whoever the High Court rules is the real owner. 

Since the chances of a court decision are remote only fresh legislation, passed by a two-thirds majority in Parliament, can enable the VHP and the Ram Janmabhoomi Nyas to own the land

SORCE : The Week , June 7, 1998

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