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020 _a9789354478796 (Paperback)
082 _a954.2
100 _aMukhopadhyay, Nilanjan
245 _aThe Demolition, the Verdict and the Temple :
_bThe definitive book on the ram mandir project /
_cby Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay
260 _aNew Delhi
_bSpeaking Tiger Books LLP
_c2024
300 _axvii, 334 pages
_c20 cm.
365 _bRs. 699.00
505 _aIntroduction - 1. Ram :From Mythical hero to God to political Icon – 2. Ayodhya : From Antiquity to the present – 3. The Desecration – 4. Getting Started – 5.The Gaint Leap – 6. Demolition Day – 7. Through the legal maze – 8. The silent march Ahead – 9.Epilogue: Will the past ever be past? Acknowledgements – Notes – Index.
520 _a‘If the campaign to build a Ram Temple after the demolition of the Babri Masjid is the single most important factor influencing Indian politics, then Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay is undoubtedly the best analyst to understand and explain it. His detailed knowledge of the Bharatiya Janata Party is unparalleled and his insight into the Prime Minister’s character is unsurpassed…his research is meticulous and the facts he relies upon unquestionable.’—Karan Thapar, author and TV anchor The issue that has been at the epicenter of Indian politics since the mid-1980s achieved apparent resolution on 9 November 2019 when a 5-member bench of the Supreme Court in a unanimous verdict gave the ownership of the 2.77 acres of disputed land to the Ram Janmabhoomi Trust, allowing it to build a temple on the site. Acting on the apex court’s ruling, the Trust lost no time in starting construction of the temple on a war footing. The magnitude of every project Modi has undertaken since 2014 has been aimed at inspiring awe in the minds of people, be it the Statue of Unity, the Central Vista or the new Parliament building. But the Ram temple goes beyond all of them in ambition: it is to be a temple that must stand for the next 1,000 years; pictures of the temple model show a sprawling building whose multiple storeys culminate in an intricately carved pinnacle. Paving the way to its inauguration, an impressive infrastructure has been put in place: the Maryada Purushottam Shriram International Airport is scheduled to begin domestic operations in January and plans are underfoot to set up a 500-acre modern sub-city called ‘Navya Ayodhya’. In an earlier edition of this book, Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay looked at the key moments in the Ram Janmabhoomi agitation, from 1885 onward, through the events of 1949, Rajiv Gandhi’s ‘unlocking of the gates’ in 1986, L.K. Advani’s Rath Yatra in 1990 and the demolition of the masjid in 1992. In The Demolition, the Verdict and the Temple, Mukhopadhyay deliberates whether the opening of the Ram Mandir will really be the ‘Epilogue’—or a new chapter in the Ayodhya saga. It is not mere coincidence that the temple will be ‘unveiled’ on 22 January, three days before India’s 75th Republic Day, and just a few months prior to the eighteenth Lok Sabha elections. As Mukhopadhyay succinctly puts it, the BJP has always used Hindutva as a ‘fallback plan’. The question remains: after the Ram temple fulfils the religious aspirations of hundreds of millions, how many in the country, especially those who wield political power, will remain mindful of the sensitivities of those who do not belong to dominant communities?
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