‘Weapons Will Be Needed in Future’: BJP Leader Sangeet Som Issues Call to Arms

Som, who was an accused in a case related to the 2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, made veiled references to the minority community and alleged that “anti-national forces” are attacking the country.

New Delhi: BJP leader and former MLA Sangeet Som asked Rajputs to take up arms during an ayudha puja (worship of weapons) event organised by the Rajput Utthan Sabha on Vijaya Dashami in Kheda village in UP’s Meerut on Wednesday.

Som, who was an accused in a case related to the 2013 Muzaffarnagar riots, made veiled references to the minority community and alleged that “anti-national forces” are attacking the country.

“The way the population of a particular community is increasing, terrorism is increasing, there are talks of separatism, talks of beheading. To end all of this, along with power, weapons will also be needed in the future,” Som said in his address.

“The Rajput society will have to take up arms again,” the former BJP MLA from the Sardhana constituency said.

According to the news agency PTI, the BJP leader said to ensure the progress of a religion, “sacrifice, penance and dedication are needed”. Som claimed that anti-national forces are attacking the country and therefore the importance of weapons has increased.

He also attempted to communalise the Congress’s ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’, falsely claiming that “green flags” – associated with Islam – were visible in the march in Kerala but not the national flag.

“The day is not far off when green flags will be visible across western Uttar Pradesh, so act wisely,” he said.

Som alleged that efforts were being made to malign Rajputs, including “wrong” depiction in films. “The truth is that Lord Ram and Krishna had to take birth as Rajputs to come on earth,” he said.

Som was the BJP MLA from Sardhana from 2012 to 2022. He lost to Samajwadi Party candidate Atul Pradhan in the assembly elections held earlier this year.

He was accused of playing a role in the 2013 Muzaffarnagar riots and was also arrested for uploading an inflammatory video to social media. In March 2021, the UP special investigation team (SIT) filed a closure report in the case against Som. A local court accepted the report because no objection was filed against it. The complainant in the case was inspector Subhodh Kumar Singh, who was killed when right-wing groups attacked a police station in Bulandshahr in 2018.

(With PTI inputs)

‘Sangeet Som Sena’ Chief, Members Charged With Rioting For Vandalising Muslim Vendor’s Cart

They accused the vendor of selling non-vegetarian food during Navratri, even though there is no rule against doing so.

New Delhi: Thirty people, including several members and the chief of right-wing Hindu outfit ‘Sangeet Som Sena’, have been charged with rioting and looting after they vandalised a biryani-seller’s cart in Uttar Pradesh’s Meerut. The perpetrators were trying to stop the vendor from selling non-vegetarian food during Navratri.

The incident took place on Saturday (April 2), according to the Times of India, in the Sardhana area. Among those named in the FIR is Sangeet Som Sena chief Sachin Khatik.

The organisation is named after controversial Bharatiya Janata Party leader Sangeet Som, who used to represent the Sardhana assembly constituency for a decade before he lost to Samajwadi Party’s Atul Pradhan in the 2022 state elections.

The biryani vendor, Mohd Sajid, has said that his cart was vandalised while he was selling biryani near a market in Sardhana. According to him, he was not selling meat but vegetarian soya biryani. There are no rules against selling meat during Navratri, or any other time of the year, in the area.

“They threw away all the food, vandalised my cart and took away my money,” Sajid said in his police complaint, according to the Times of India. He named Khatik and six others in his complaint; the police added another 24 unidentified persons to the FIR after seeing videos of the incident circulate on social media.

“An FIR for loot, vandalism and disturbing peace has been lodged since the incident caused communal tension in the area,” Sardhana police station SHO Laksham Verma told the newspaper.

Despite the FIR, Khatik has shown no remorse over the vandalism. “If it is a crime to raise voice against those who sell non-veg during Navratri, I am ready to pay the price,” he said in a social media post after the incident.

Former BJP MLA Som, whose supporters Khatik and others claim to be, has made the news several times in the past for his anti-Muslim speeches and other controversial behaviour. Som was accused in 2013 of inciting riots and spreading hatred by disturbing the communal atmosphere. He was arrested and imprisoned by the SP government.

Despite BJP Win, Several Hardcore Hindutva Poster Boys Lost Their Seats in UP

Three BJP leaders who were accused of inciting the Muzaffarnagar riots lost this election.

New Delhi: Although Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi, have been projecting the party’s win in Uttar Pradesh and three other states as a moral victory, the losses of some of their Hindutva poster boys and state ministers in UP indicate otherwise.

Sangeet Som and Suresh Rana, both accused of being involved in the Muzaffarnagar riots, lost their seats. Rana is currently a cabinet minister in the Yogi Adityanath government. He was contesting on a BJP ticket from the Thana Bhawan seat in Shamli. Som, a firebrand BJP leader, was defeated by Samajwadi Party politician Atul Pradhan in Meerut’s Sardhana seat. Rajpal Singh Baliyan of the Rashritya Lok Dal defeated BJP’s Umesh Malik, another Muzaffarnagar riots accused, by 8,444 votes in the Budhana seat.

Som and Rana were accused in 2013 of inciting riots and spreading hatred by disturbing the communal atmosphere. Following that, both BJP MLAs were arrested and imprisoned by the SP government. They were both re-elected in 2017.

Also read: The Voter Dynamics in Ayodhya, a Bastion Key to Hindutva Politics

Raghvendra Singh, Adityanath’s close aide and a Hindu Yuva Vahini leader in Purvanchal (east UP), joins the list of BJP  leaders who lost this election. During his campaign, Singh delivered one of the most virulent anti-Muslim speeches in recent memory, labelling Hindus who voted for the opposition as traitors with Muslim blood running in their veins. “If you make me MLA again, Muslims will stop wearing skullcaps and start wearing tilaks,” he told a crowd of supporters in the Dumariyagan constituency on February 12, just days before the second phase of elections on February 14. “Will there be Jai Shri Ram or Walekum Salam?” he continued.

Various clips from Singh’s speech have been circulating online. In other sections of his speech, Singh is more direct with the anti-Muslim component of his rhetoric. Singh said that the “terrorism of miyans (a pejorative for Muslims)” has decreased since he took office. He also warns Muslims that he will send them to Pakistan if they look at Hindu women. “Listen Muslims, if any Hindu is insulted and if you look at any Hindu girl, then I’ll get you beaten so much and cut so much…that…” he said, the latter part of his warning getting drowned out amidst ‘Jai Shri Ram’ chants.

Another key BJP leader from Ballia Nagar constituency in UP, Anand Swaroop Shukla, minister of state for parliamentary affairs in the UP government and often in the headlines for his anti-Muslim dog whistles, also lost the election. Like Raghvendra Singh, he had sought action against azaan and had called upon Muslims to accept Ram and Shiva as their ancestors and bow to Indian [Hindu] culture. He had called Tablighi Jamaat members “human bombs”.

The most significant bigwig to lose is Keshav Prasad Maurya. After right-wing vigilante groups attempted to storm inside a mosque in Mathura, tensions prevailed in the area and police averted the escalation. Maurya had tweeted then that “Mathura ki tayyari hai.” He had linked skull caps to violence and had refused to condemn the genocide calls at Haridwar in a BBC interview, which he later walked out of.

UP: FIR Against BJP’s Sangeet Som for Slapping Election Officer

According to the police, the MLA’s supporters also took away the CCTV cameras that were installed inside the booth.

New Delhi: A first information report (FIR) was registered against Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) MLA Sangeet Som by the Uttar Pradesh police on Saturday for allegedly “thrashing” the presiding officer at a polling booth during voting for the first phase of the Assembly polls, on February 10.

According to Indian Express, the police said Som and his supporters stormed into Booth 131 at Salawa village in Meerut district around 3 pm on February 10. The MLA was “upset” over a long queue of voters outside the booth. Som got into a “heated argument” with the presiding officer about the alleged slow pace of voting and then slapped him, the newspaper reported. According to the police, the MLA’s supporters also took away the CCTV cameras that were installed inside the booth.

Meerut superintendent of police (SSP) Prabhakar Chaudhary told IE that the police waited for the presiding officer, Ashwini Sharma, to file a complaint “for nearly ten hours on Thursday”. When he did not turn up, the in charge of the Sardhana police station registered the FIR. “We are investigating the case and action will be taken after completion of our inquiry,” the SSP said.

A copy of the FIR was sent to the Election Commission on the same day, the officer said. The presiding officer has been asked to record his statement to bolster the case, he said.

Som is the BJP candidate from Sardhana and is seeking a third successive term as MLA. With the latest FIR, there are now eight cases against Som but he is yet to be convicted in any of them, IE reported.

Som was accused in the Muzaffarnagar riots case of 2013. Last year, the UP special investigation team (SIT) filed a closure report in the case against Som, who was accused of uploading an inflammatory video on social media ahead of the riots. A local court accepted the closure report because no objection was filed against it. The complainant in the case was inspector Subhodh Kumar Singh, who was killed when right-wing groups attacked a police station in Bulandshahr in 2018.

BJP Rajasthan Chief: Humayun Preached Cow Respect to Babur on Deathbed

Rajasthan BJP president Madan Lal Saini stated that Humayun, on his deathbed, had advised Babur to respect cows, Brahmins and women, if he wanted to rule India.

New Delhi: Speaking to reporters in Jaipur in the aftermath of the lynching of Rakbar Khan in Alwar, Rajasthan BJP president Madan Lal Saini fuelled further controversy by making a historically inaccurate statement about the founder of the Mughal empire Babur and his son Humayun.

According to the Indian Express, Saini stated that Humayun, on his deathbed, had advised Babur to respect cows, Brahmins and women, if he wanted to rule India.

In his statements, Saini claimed, “Kisi bhi samaj, desh, dharm ke shraddha ke bindu ka samman sabhi logo ne karna chahiye. Mujhe yaad ata hai, jab Humayun mar raha tha, us samay usne Babur ko bulaya tha. Aur unhone kaha tha ki Hindustan me tumko sashan karna hai to teen chizo ka dhyan rakhna. (People should respect the points of belief of any country, society or religion. I remember, when Humayun was dying, he summoned Babur. And he had said that if you want to rule Hindustan, you should keep three things in mind).

He continued, “Ek to gaai, Brahman aur mahila, inke izzat pe kisi bhi tarah ka inke apman nahi hona chahiye. Hindustan isko sahan nahi karta hai. (There shouldn’t be any insult to the honour of cow, Brahmin and women. Hindustan doesn’t tolerate this.)”

This statement, besides being perceived by many as a justification of Rakbar Khan’s killing, is grossly inaccurate. Humayun was the son of Babur, the founder of the Mughal empire, Babur died in 1531, 25 years before Humayun died in 1556, an ANI report pointed out.

Saini was appointed as BJP’s Rajasthan state president just a month ago. The Rajya Sabha MP from Rajasthan took over the reins after Ashok Parnami, former state party chief, resigned in April.

Rakbar Khan was killed while he was allegedly transporting cows to his village in Haryana. Even as Saini conceded Khan’s killing as “unfortunate” and a “violation of the law of the land”, at the same time he also pointed out that Khan had earlier been implicated in cow smuggling cases. “Ab, ye ghatna durbhagyapurna hai, apan democracy me jite hai, apne yahan kanoon ka raj hai…isliye kisi ne kanoon ko haath me nahi lena chahiye (Now, this incident is unfortunate, we live in a democracy, we have a rule of law…That’s why nobody should take the law in their hands),” said Saini.

Saini’s statement was treated with derision by Congress opposition leaders. The party was slammed for using “wrong facts from the past” to distract the public from the present.

“There is nothing to be surprised from Saini’s statement because even the prime minister cites wrong historical facts. They don’t check facts and cite wrong history in order to divert attention from the present and the issues which are affecting the people,” said Rajasthan Congress vice-president Archana Sharma.

This is indeed not the first time a BJP leader has made false historical claims. For instance, BJP MLA Sangeet Som in 2017 claimed that the Taj Mahal was built by a man who imprisoned his own father. Contrary to his historical distortion, Taj Mahal was constructed by emperor Shah Jahan as a tribute to his late wife. Shah Jahan was later in his life imprisoned by his son Aurangzeb. Vinay Katiyar, BJP lawmaker in the Rajya Sabha, had claimed that Shah Jahan had destroyed a Shiva temple in order to build the Taj Mahal, asking for it to be renamed “Tejo Mahal,” a theory soundly debunked by the Archaeological Survey of India.

Without Punishment, Modi’s Advice to BJP Motormouths Is Pointless

Outrageous statements by BJP’s leaders keep the party corps enthused, distract from key issues at hand and most importantly, keep the press busy.

From his point of view, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s admonishment to his motormouth party colleagues to be careful about what they say makes perfect sense. Each time a preposterous statement is made, it embarrasses the party and the prime minister himself. What’s more, as Modi pointed out, it gives ‘masala’ to the media and we all know that there is nothing the media loves more than its daily dose of masala.

He also warned his colleagues not to rush to give a statement every time they see a TV camera as if they are “some social scientists or scholars who can analyse every problem”. Such indiscretions harm the party, he told them via the Narendra Modi app.

He has a point. Here’s some of that spicy material that the BJP’s stalwart intellectuals have given us over the last three or four years:

Giriraj Singh: “If Rajiv Gandhi had married a Nigerian lady and she had not been fair skinned, would the Congress have accepted her leadership?

Tarun Vijay: “If we were racist, why would we have the entire South India, you know Tamil Nadu, you know Andhra Pradesh and Kerala, who do we live with them? We have black people all around us.”

Satyapal Singh: “Darwin’s theory is wrong because no one saw apes turning into man.”

Biplab Deb: “In the Mahabharata, Sanjay narrated to Dhristrashtra, who was blind, about what was happening in the battlefield due to the Internet and technology.”

There’s much more of course – in October, 2014, basking in the afterglow of his victory, Modi had told a gathering of doctors and scientists that India had mastered genetic science at the time of the Mahabharata and that the fact that Ganesha has an elephant head is sufficient proof there were plastic surgeons during that time.

Outrageous statements, no doubt, that gave the media a lot of spicy stuff to print in their publications and mock the speakers (though there wasn’t so much mocking at Modi, as I recall.) The party appears to be a bunch of antediluvian people who harbour not just outdated, but also racist and misogynist ideas. What is even scarier is that they apparently are convinced of it – surely neither Modi nor Satyapal Singh were being ironical or funny; these are notions that are part of their DNA. This was part of their education while growing up in their Sangh environment. Biplab Deb is not playing to the gallery when he declares that the Internet was around during the time of the Mahabharata – he fervently believes in it, because it was dinned into his head from an early age.

The greatness of India – Bharatvarsh – in distant times is an integral part of Sanghi lore. This glorious land, populated by fair-skinned Aryans, in which all parts of society – the various castes, the lower orders, women – knew their place; a golden age that was destroyed by the advent of foreign invaders, who were mainly Muslims and Christians who came to loot and spread their ‘unIndian’ ideas. India, during that glittering epoch, knew all there is to know about science and technology but that knowledge was destroyed. It should be the effort of the true believers to bring back that greatness. Every true Sanghi is taught this ‘history’, each one of them grows up believing it with all his heart.

Seen in this light, the Sanghi-tutored BJP leader is not committing a gaffe when he makes these statements. A Giriraj Singh or Tarun Vijay don’t think they are being racist, and Satyapal Singh may well be taken aback if told that he is patently wrong.

But these statements are foolish and frivolous at worst-they can be debunked easily and they elicit ridicule. The world moves on after having had a good laugh at Biplab Deb; of course it is a conern that he, as the chief minister of Tripura, will try and insert his weird ideas into the school books, but there are ways to resist that. Besides, he could, at some stage, be voted out.

It is the more sinister ideas coming from the parivaar that should worry us, because they reveal bigotry and. And there is no dearth of those either. Some examples:

MLA Sangeet Som: “Mohammed Aklhaq’s family should be arrested” (This, after Akhlaq was lynched by a mob for allegedly keeping beef at home.) 

Yogi Adityanath: “If they kill one Hindu we will kill 100” (and many more such examples)

MLA Vikram Saini: “Our country is called Hindustan, which means a country for Hindus. Earlier, the system was, the longer the beard the bigger the cheque.” 

Narendra Modi figures in this category too. During his days as the chief minister of Gujarat, he had labelled Muslim refugee camps as baby making factories. During the Uttar Pradesh election campaign last year, he talked about how a shamshan (crematorium) should be built every time a kabristan (burial ground) is set up.

None of the above named party worthies have been pulled up by the party bosses for their hate-mongering. If anything, they have moved on to higher things. Adityanath is now the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh and Modi is the prime minister. No doubt others too will get promoted at some stage, or get a pat on the back for their forthrightness.

Telling off partymen (and women) to cease and desist, therefore is a sham exercise, unless it is accompanied by a threat of punishment. Only when the leadership itself shows restraint, and only when there is a penalty rather than a prize for such behaviour, will these party members stop shooting their mouths off. If anything, theirs is more often than not a command performance, done on the orders of higher ups, to either muddy the waters, create a diversion or play the dog whistle loudly for their cadre. The rank and file look for cues from their leaders; they then know what to do next. And the leaders are not going to stop simply because Narendra Modi tells them to.

And often, a well-timed comment, quite obviously absurd and idiotic, draws attention away from some other serious matter. Journalists faithfully abandon the more important subject and, with their tongues wagging, chase the brightly coloured ball.

It picks up these statements, tosses them around for a while, expresses faux outrage and then moves on. There is little attempt to understand the processes or motivations involved and rarely any call for accountability. Can we forget the fawning over Yogi Adityanath when he took over as CM or how journalists rushed to take selfies with Modi when they met him?

Statements that most sensible people may find egregious serve a purpose- they keep the party corps enthused, distract from the key issues at hand, gets the ideological point of view across and most important, keep the press busy. They also serve who only stand and put their foot in their mouth. Their boss should honour, not criticise them.

BJP’s Vinay Katiyar Continues His Hate-Mongering, Says Muslims Should Leave India

The BJP MP also said that there should be a bill to punish those who do not respect Vande Matram and the national flag.

The BJP MP also said that there should be a bill to punish those who do not respect Vande Matram and the national flag.

Katiyar had also made some unsavoury comments about the violence that broke out in Kasganj on Republic Day where he blamed “pro-Pakistani” elements. Credit: File photo

New Delhi: BJP MP Vinay Katiyar has stirred the hornet’s nest once again this week just a couple of days after he said that the Taj Mahal should and will be be converted into a ‘Tej Mandir‘.

His latest salvo against Muslims harks back to the days of British divide and rule. “Muslims should not stay in India. They divided the nation on the basis of population. So, what’s the need of them staying here (in India)? They have been given lands. (They) should go to Bangladesh or Pakistan,” the MP told ANI.

Katiyar didn’t stop there. The BJP MP also said that there should be a bill to punish those who do not respect Vande Matram. “There should be a bill that punishes those who do not respect Vande Matram, those who insult the national flag… those who hoist the Pakistani flag, they should be punished,” Katiyar said.

The founder of the youth wing of the right-wing group Vishwa Hindu Parishad launched into his latest extremist comments after AIMIM chief Asaddudin Owaisi demanded that there ought to be a law to punish those who call Indian Muslims ‘Pakistani’.

Speaking to the media on February 6 outside parliament, Owaisi had urged the government to introduce a law to this effect and suggested that there should be a punishment with a three-year jail term, reported ANI.

Katiyar’s eventful week began when he became the third leader from the BJP to question the national significance of India’s iconic Taj Mahal. Talking to the news agency ANI about the ‘Taj Mahostav’ being held in Agra, the MP said, “Call it Taj Mahotsav or Tej Mahotsav both are the same things. There is not much difference between Taj and Tej. Our Tej Mandir has been turned into a cremation ground by Aurangzeb. Taj Mahal will be converted into Tej Mandir soon.”

“It is a good thing that a festival is being organised but this Taj Mahal is not the one that existed during the time of Aurangzeb. It was our temple,” he added, forgetting that Taj Mahal was built by Shah Jahan and not his son Aurangzeb.


Also read: BJP MP Charged With Demolishing Babri Masjid Now Wants Taj Mahal Converted Into ‘Tej Mandir’


His lack of understanding of basic Indian history drew the ire of Congress MP Shashi Tharoor, who called Katiyar a ‘troglodyte’, which basically, according to the dictionary, is a caveman or people who are deliberately ignorant.

Katiyar had also made some unsavoury comments about the violence that broke out in Kasganj on Republic Day where he blamed “pro-Pakistani” elements for the series of events despite the fact that a fact-finding team has found a “trail of engineered hate” in the town that has never had a history of communalism.

“These people killed our worker… They (Muslims) started it and the government is taking strict action against them. It needs to take stricter action,” Katiyar had said.

The Taj Chronicles: Tracing Attempts to Appropriate Its History

Amidst the current controversy of an ideological narrative that views the Taj Mahal as a site of contestation, Yogi Adityanath visited it on October 26. The monument’s history is full of fascinating attempts to appropriate its aura, be it in politics or popular culture.

Amidst the current controversy of an ideological narrative that views the Taj Mahal as a site of contestation, Yogi Adityanath visited it on October 26. The monument’s history is full of fascinating attempts to appropriate its aura, be it in politics or popular culture.

Taj mahal

In the last few decades, the monument has become a site of political contestation and debate. Credit: Reuters

Variously described as the ‘grandest monument of love’ and ‘a tear on the face of eternity’, the Taj Mahal is undoubtedly one of the most emblematic and iconic visual representations of India. This World Heritage Site, which is regarded as the finest specimen of Indo-Islamic architecture, is also one of the most visited tourist destinations in the country.

In the last few decades, the monument has become a site of political contestation and debate. And, particularly in the last few months, it has become a battleground for divisive politics, branded as a ‘blot’ on Indian culture by a representative of the political party that rules the state of Uttar Pradesh where the monument is located. In more than 350 years of the ups and downs of history that the Taj has been witness to, this is a first.

Until now, i.e., from the time of the construction of the Taj (built between 1631-1648), there have been attempts galore to lay claim to the aura of aesthetic and architectural heights that the monument commands. For the first time now we are witnessing efforts to repudiate that idea and brand the monument as a stigma.

Shah Jahan, Taj and the West

Chroniclers of the Mughal period, on the other hand, credit the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan with the design of the complex.

Chroniclers of the Mughal period, on the other hand, credit the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan with the design of the complex. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

From the time the Taj was unveiled before the world, there were all manner of efforts to appropriate the accomplishment it exemplified. One of the first salvoes came from the West. Foreign travelers to India suggested that such a grand architectural marvel could not have been accomplished without the involvement of a western/foreign architect. Sebastian Manrique, who visited Agra in 1640-1641, gave credit to the Italian jeweller and designer Geronimo Veroneo, while William Sleeman, who visited India in 1810,was partial towards the Frenchman, Austin de Bordeaux.

This trend continued well into the 19th century and modern times as well. Scholars like W. E. Begley and Z. A. Desai point out that the 19th century manuscript, Tarikh-i Taj Mahal, regards Isa Muhammad Effendi of Turkey as the architect of the monument. Some modern historians also ascribe to this theory of ‘European involvement’ in some form or other.

Chroniclers of the Mughal period, on the other hand, credit the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan with the design of the complex. Based on a reading of Mughal sources, most historians of that period, as well as now, suggest that Shah Jahan (regnal years 1628-1658) himself designed the concept plan, which was executed to the last detail by a collective of architects including Ahmad Lahori, Mir Abdul Karim, Ustad Hamid and Maulana Murshid of Shiraz. This happens to be the most commonly-accepted academic view today.

Some modern scholars have added a new layer of complexity to the history of the monument by arguing that Shah Jahan built the mausoleum not just as a commemoration of the memory of his wife, Mumtaz Mahal but also as a reflection of his power and glory. D. Brandenburg argues that the placement of the char bagh (four-fold garden) at the head of the mausoleum was part of a particular cosmological diagram where the Taj represented the ‘Throne of God’. In a similar vein, Begley propounds that the mausoleum was meant to exemplify the perfection and authority of Mughal leadership. He saw the ‘Garden of Paradise’ as setting the location of the ‘Throne of God’ on Judgement Day. 

British rule, Lord Curzon and the politicisation of the Taj

After Shah Jahan’s death, the Taj gradually faded from Mughal history. Scattered evidence points to some repairs under the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb and to the fact that it was raided by many, including the Sayyid Brothers in 1719, the Jats in 1761 and the British and others during the 1857 Rebellion. The Sayyid Brothers are supposed to have taken away imperial treasures, among them a pearl chadar (sheet) which originally covered the cenotaph of Mumtaz Mahal, while the Jats are believed to have taken away the doors. In various raids before and during the 1857 Rebellion, the Taj was also robbed of many precious and semi-precious stones that once adorned the surface.

The monument regained prominence once again during the colonial period. The East Indian Company gained control of north India towards the last quarter of the 18th century. In 1803, Lord Lake took control of Agra after the Second Maratha War. With the British gaining political ascendancy, Western travellers, artists and officials started visiting theTaj. The monument sometimes functioned as a guesthouse for visitors or served to entertain ‘British ladies and gentlemen’. While important guests would occupy the Mihmankhana (guest house) on one side of the Taj, or tents pitched in the gardens, the soldiers or attendants would stay in the Jilaukhana (forecourt). Gradually, the Taj started featuring in  ’Company drawings’ or ‘Company paintings’ and in Orientalist depictions of India.


Also read: The Uneasiness of Self-Appointed Messiahs With Historical Facts


With the British also came the idea of repair, restoration and conservation – efforts which became more systematic after the formation of the Archeological Survey of India (ASI) in 1860-1861. However, the formal monumentalisation of the Taj, as Hilal Ahmed, a scholar who has worked on the politics of monuments, points out, began in the early 20th century, particularly under Lord Curzon. Unlike his predecessors, who were obsessed with the mausoleum, Curzon focused on the entire complex including the gardens and the outer courts.

A massive restoration project was undertaken, which Ahmed underscores, tried to:

Accommodate Indian feelings and perceptions – permissions were granted to the local community to use the mosque and tomb space for religious/ceremonial purposes; a particular kind of ‘Mughal’ dress [white suitswith a green scarf and a badge] was given to the attendants of the ASI at the Taj; and a decorated lamp [Saracenic style Mamluk lamp procured from Egypt] was installed inside the main chamber of the tomb in order to show the intrinsic link between [the] Mughal past and the British present.

Curzon’s correspondence and speeches, Ahmed argues, seem to suggest that the Taj was symbolically employed to show a historical continuityunder British rule. The monument was also invoked “to demonstrate the achievements of his administration in India.”

Taj Mahal

From the time of the construction of the Taj (built between 1631-1648), there have been attempts galore to lay claim to the aura of aesthetic and architectural heights that the monument commands. Credit: Flickr Commons

Nation-building, business and popular culture

This colonial politicisation of the Taj, Ahmed says, was opposed by  nationalist leaders, particularly Jawaharlal Nehru, independent India’s first prime minister. For him, Indo-Islamic sites, especially the Taj Mahal, were “a symbol of India’s composite culture” and he “worked hard to translate this interpretation of India’s past into a serious policy discourse.” Accordingly, the Taj Mahal was “declared a monument of national importance” and “publicised as an official symbol of India’s contribution to world heritage.” Ahmed argues that this  “official portrayal of the Taj purely as a ‘heritage site’ and/or a symbol of ‘eternal love’ got established as the most reliable and uncontested meaning of this building in later years.”

The influence of the Taj Mahal went beyond the official discourse. As art historian Ebba Koch points out, it has been used as a metaphor for excellence and deployed in advertisements to sell  products least connected to its reality of being a tomb – from jewellery, teabags, Scotch whisky and liqueur to beer. Whether it is the Tata Group of hotels in Delhi and Mumbai or Trump’s Taj Mahal (his casino resort in Atlantic City, New Jersey which closed in 2016), in taking the name of the monument they were basking in the glory of the monument as a symbol of grandeur.  Numerous restaurants across the world append Taj to their names to showcase their association with India. Besides, models of the Taj Mahal comprise among the most popular souvenirs of India alongside marble plates, boxes and table tops carrying the monument’s characteristic peitradura design (inlaying of marble with precious and semi-precious stones).

Koch also draws attention to instances of the world of music being influenced by the Taj – the rock-blues singer from Massachusetts, Henry Saint Clair Fredericks, adopted ‘Taj Mahal’ as his stage name. ‘Inside the Taj Mahal’, Paul Horn’s flute session recorded in 1968, became very popular as a work of new age music and sold more than a million copies. In 1997, Greek singer Yanni staged a concert within the Taj premises despite strong opposition from the heritage enthusiasts. It received worldwide attention.

In 1997, Greek singer Yanni staged a concert within the Taj premises

In 1997, Greek singer Yanni staged a concert within the Taj premises. Credit: Youtube

The monument is a staple presence in Bollywood films and songs, popular histories and tour guides’ narratives. Almost every tourist guide narrates with relish the story of how the architects and workers who built the Taj were killed (other versions say Shah Jahan chopped off their thumbs  or had their eyes pulled out or had them thrown into the dungeons of Agra Fort) so that they could not replicate the Taj. Some say he signed a contract with them that they would not build another structure of its kind. Another very popular story, first floated by  Jean Baptiste Tavernier during his visit to Agra in 1665, deals with Shah Jahan’s project of a ‘Black Taj’to be built on the other side of the Yamuna in Mahtab Bagh, but his sons opposed the plan and Aurangzeb finally abandoned it. None of these tales are backed by credible historical evidence but, over a period of time, they have become an integral part of the popular history and atmospherics of the site.

Communities, parties and governments

In straight contrast to the ubiquitous presence of the Taj as an enduring popular icon, is the manner in which the monument has been sought to be projected in the public domain through the tomb-temple conflict. This conflict derives much of its intellectual substance from P. N. Oak’s thesis. Founder of the Institute for Rewriting Indian History in 1964, he floated the theory that the Taj Mahal was originally a Shiva temple. His book Taj Mahal: The True Story claimed that the monument’s current name was a corrupt form of the Sanskrit term Tejo Mahalaya.

This idea caught on with some right-wing politicians who claimed it was a Hindu temple; some asserted that Shah Jahan purchased a part of temple’s land from Raja Jai Singh. The controversy gained a lot of ground in Uttar Pradesh (UP) where the Taj is located. In June 2005, the Uttar Pradesh Sunni Waqf Board declared that the monument was a waqf (endowment) property and demanded that it should be given back to the board for protection, conservation and management.

Such contestations have become chronic in recent times. In June 2014, the then minister for Urban Development and Minority Affairs in UP, which had a  Samajwadi Party government, demanded that the monument should be handed over to the Sunni Waqf Board since it was a mausoleum of two Muslims – Mughal emperor Shah Jahan and his wife. In April 2015, a law suit was filed by six lawyers in the Agra Civil Court claiming Taj was a Shiva temple called Tejo Mahalaya. This claim was contested both by the Union culture ministry and the ASI. The former clarified in the Lok Sabha (in November 2015) that there was no evidence to suggest that Taj Mahal was a Hindu temple of Shiva, while the latter, in a written reply to the court in August 2017, categorically stated that the monument was a tomb and not a temple.

Recent months have witnessed a slew of pronouncements and claims that are disturbing for the manner in which they seek to repudiate the very idea of the Taj. In June 2017, the chief minister of the newly-elected Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government in UP created a controversy by stating, “Earlier when foreign dignitaries visited the country they were gifted replicas of Agra’s Taj Mahal or some minar with which Indian culture has nothing in common.”

UP chief minister Yogi Adityanath at the Taj Mahal. Credit: Twitter/Yogi Adityanath

Earlier this month, the Taj was taken off the state government’s booklet promoting tourist destinations in UP. Further, BJP legislator from UP, Sangeet Som, claimed that the Taj was built by ‘traitors’ and was a ‘blot on Indian culture’, while Haryana Minister Anil Vij described the monument as a ‘beautiful graveyard’.

The uproar over these comments forced both the UP and Central government to get into damage control mode. The UP chief minister hailed the Taj Mahal as the ‘pride of India’ saying that the “sweat and blood of Indian labourers” had gone into its making. The prime minister of India also made a statement that the Taj was a part of India’s cultural heritage and Indians were proud of it.

Meanwhile, in Kerala, which is ruled by the Left front, Kerala Tourism’s official handle recently tweeted: ‘God’s own country salutes the Taj Mahal for inspiring millions to discover India’. It does not seem likely that the arguments and counter-arguments will end anytime soon.

However, the Taj has a historical resilience which has enabled it to transcend individuals, dynasties, communities and perhaps even the nation. While India debates the place of the Taj Mahal in the country’s cultural heritage and history, it is being embraced wholeheartedly by the global community. Replicas of the monument have been made in places such as China, Bangladesh, Malayasia, United Arab Emirates and even New Jersey. Moreover, the Taj has already made its way into the official list of the ‘New Seven Wonders of the World’, on the strength of more than 100 million votes, as an exemplar of global heritage throughout history. In a world going through intense churn, what better way to deal with prejudice and rancour than with a monumental ode to love.

Shashank Shekhar Sinha has taught history in undergraduate colleges at the University of Delhi. He does independent research on tribes, gender, violence, culture and heritage.

Taj Mahal Built by ‘Traitors’ Who ‘Wanted to Wipe out Hindus,’ Says BJP MLA Sangeet Som

The BJP MLA’s remarks came after the monument was excluded from a Uttar Pradesh tourism booklet earlier this month.

The BJP MLA’s remarks came after the monument was excluded from a Uttar Pradesh tourism booklet earlier this month.

The BJP MLA said that the monument was a "blot on Indian culture." Credit: PTI

The BJP MLA said that the monument was a “blot on Indian culture.” Credit: PTI

New Delhi: Adding fuel to the raging controversy surrounding the Taj Mahal, BJP MLA Sangeet Som said on Sunday, October 15, that the monument was built by “traitors” who “wanted to wipe out Hindus from Hindustan” and is a “blot on Indian culture.”

According to Hindustan Times, the comments by Som, a MLA from Sardhana in western Uttar Pradesh, who was addressing a gathering in Meerut, came after the monument was excluded from a Uttar Pradesh tourism booklet earlier this month and did not receive funding in the state budget.

The booklet was released to mark six months of the Adityanath government.

“Many people were disappointed when Taj Mahal was removed from Indian history. What history are you talking about? The creator of the Taj Mahal imprisoned his own father. He wanted to wipe out Hindus from Hindustan,” Som said.

Adding that it was “unfortunate” that the country’s history has “such people,” the MLA said that the Adityanath-led UP government was attempting to bring history back on the right track.

“UP government is trying to bring back the history of Lord Ram, Shivaji,” he said.

He also said that now the construction of Ram Temple in Ayodhya and Krishna Mandir in Mathura cannot be stopped by anyone.

While a senior BJP leader Nalin Kohli dismissed Som’s comments saying that “Taj Mahal is an important part of our history,” there is a plethora of support for the MLA’s controversial views within the party – including from state CM Adityanath, who in June said that the marble mausoleum didn’t represent “Indian culture”.

“Foreign dignitaries visiting the country used to be gifted replicas of the Taj Mahal and other minarets which do not reflect Indian culture,” the UP chief minister had said at a public meeting in Bihar. The Narendra Modi-led central government, according to Adityanath, thus began giving copies of the Bhagvad Gita and the Ramayan instead, HuffPost reported.

According to a Scroll.in report, Laxmi Narayan Chaudhary, the state minister in charge of religious affairs and culture had said, “The Taj Mahal was not a symbol of any religion and is nobody’s,” and had thus been “rightly kept out [of the tourism booklet].”

Omar Abdullah, former chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir, was among the several who took to Twitter to slam Som’s remarks.

While the state tourism minister Reeta Bahuguna Joshi, in an attempt to do damage control, said that the monument was “part of our cultural heritage” and a “major tourist spot,” BJP leader GVL Narasimha Rao defended of Som and said that Taj Mahal “is a symbol of barbarism.”:

“There have been attempts to distort Indian history. It is a symbol of barbarism and it is a monument. I will say what I have to say. As far as Som is concerned, he has the freedom of speech. That is his personal view and there need not be a party line on every statement.”

(With PTI inputs)

Fake News: Hatemongers Passed Off Bangladesh Video as Anti-Hindu Violence in Bihar

The aim was to instigate hatred and violence against Muslims in India.

Selection_14_04_2017_013 - Edited

As the United States and even Europe battle fake news on social media, India is dealing with a much more severe crisis of its own. Unlike the West, where bogus articles are primarily shared via Facebook and Twitter, rumour mongers in India prefer to use a more intimate medium – WhatsApp.

It is free and easy to download. All you need is a smartphone. Unlike other social media platforms, WhatsApp users aren’t even required to register or ‘log in’ and its end-to-end encryption makes it impossible to track what flows through it. It’s biggest asset for the rumour-monger is that once the fake news is seeded, it becomes virtually impossible to trace the point of origin. When it comes to Facebook, it is easy to track instigators who help circulate a false and inflammatory rumour but not always the point of origin – a point that investigators in Uttar Pradesh have just used to let off Bharatiya Janata Party MLA Sangeet Som, who was charged with using Facebook to instigate the 2013 anti-Muslim violence in Muzaffarnagar.

Worryingly, fake news and rumours continue to be used to fuel communal hatred and even violence. Over the past week, a video presented as  ‘a Hindu man’ being hacked to death by ‘Muslim men’ in Nawada, Bihar is being circulated on WhatsApp with similar intent. What makes this fake news especially dangerous is that there were indeed minor communal clashes in the Bihar town on April 5 in which three persons were injured.

The gruesome video, which is actually from Bangladesh, has has now gone viral on Facebook too, where it is being shared as an example of Muslim violence on Hindus in India. This is yet another example of the propaganda machinery in play to misinform people, create a feeling of insecurity amongst Hindus, and lay the ground for greater communal polarisation and even violence. The beneficiaries of this propaganda campaign would obviously be those organisations that seek to mobilise support by appealing to majority religious sentiment.

Credit: altnews.in

Screenshot of a Facebook post in which the video is described as the “cruel killing of a Hindu brother by Muslims” in Nawada, Bihar, on April 6. Credit: altnews.in

The video, as Pratika Sinha notes on altnews.in, was originally shot in Comilla, Bangladesh and uploaded on YouTube on April 2. Earlier this month, unknown assailants attacked two men accused of murdering Awami League leader Sheikh Monir.

The incident was reported by the city’s local Bangla newspaper on April 2, 2017.

Screen Shot 2017-04-15 at 8.29.09 AM

Monir was hacked to death near his house in October 2016.

Despite being victim to many similar hoaxes, Indian stakeholders have stayed silent during the debate on how to deal with fake news.


Also read: The Science Behind Why People Believe Fake News


In 2015, the police said WhatsApp messages had led to a man being lynched in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, and four beatings in nearby Gandhinagar, reported Financial Times. The mob killing of Mohammad Akhlaq in Dadri, Uttar Pradesh, in September 2015, was prompted in part by the spread of messages via WhatsApp claiming that he and his family had killed and eaten a calf.

Soon after Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced his demonetisation scheme, fake news about the presence of  GPS chips in the new, ‘secure’ Rs 2,000 note did the rounds. Spread by WhatsApp messages and then picked up by the national media such as Zee News (whose editor in chief, Sudhir Choudhary himself ‘broke’ the ‘story’), the claim led to wide-scale confusion among recipients of the new note. The fake news was later debunked by the Reserve Bank of India.

In November 2016, a woman lost her life after hundreds queued up to buy salt in multiple cities across India after a shortage rumour spread through WhatsApp.