‘Hand over the Gyanvapi structure to Hindus’: VHP says citing ASI report

The Vishwa Hindu Parishad on 27 January claimed the Archeological Survey of India’s report has ‘reconfirmed’ that the Gyanvapi mosque in Varanasi was constructed after demolishing a ‘magnificent temple’ at the site, reported news agency PTI.

The VHP also sought the structure be declared ‘a Hindu temple and handed over to the community. It demanded Hindus be permitted to offer ‘sewa puja’ to the ‘Shivlinga’ found in the ‘so-called Wazukhana area’ at the disputed site.

“The evidence collected and the conclusions provided by the ASI do prove that the religious character of this place of worship existed on the 15th day of August, 1947, and as at present is of a Hindu Temple,” VHP working president Alok Kumar said in a statement.

“Thus, even as per Section 4 of the Places of Worship Act, 1991, the structure should be declared as a Hindu temple,” he also demanded.

ALSO READ: What ASI report on Gyanvapi mosque survey revealed: ‘Broken Shivalinga, figures of Hanuman’

The VHP called upon the Intezamia Committee – manages the mosque – to agree to “respectfully shift” the Gyanvapi mosque to another appropriate place and to hand over the original site of Kashi Vishvanatha to the Hindu society.

“The VHP believes that this righteous action shall be an important step towards creating amicable relations between the two prominent communities of Bharat,” Kumar said.

The hindu body’s demands arrived two days after the ASI survey report on the Gyanvapi mosque complex was made public. The lawyer representing the Hindu litigants had claimed the mosque was built after demolishing a pre-existing temple.

“Hand over the Gyanvapi structure to Hindus,” Kumar said, adding, the evidence collected by ASI “reconfirms that the mosque had been constructed after demolishing a magnificent temple”.

A part of the temple structure, particularly the western wall, is the remaining part of the Hindu temple, he further claimed.

Apart from this, the ASI report also proves that parts of the pre-existing temple including pillars and pilasters were reused with modifications to extend the span of the mosque and in the construction of the ‘sahan’, he added.

“The Shivalinga in what was called the ‘wazukhana’ leaves no doubt that the structure does not have the character of a mosque. The discovery of the names including the Janardana, Rudra and Umeswara in the inscriptions found in the structure are the tell-tale evidence of this being a temple,” Kumar claimed.

With agency inputs.

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Published: 27 Jan 2024, 10:43 PM IST