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SRI RAMA JANMA BHUMI
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Historical and Legal Perspective
Part IInd
By Justice Deoki Nandan
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Note: This
page is the update of the earlier page.
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CONTENTS
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| Transfer
of the Idol of SRI RAMA to the Central Dome on 23-12-1949 |
| District
Judge Faizabad ordered on 1-2-1986, directing the opening of the locks |
| On
behalf of the Deities fifth suit was filed on 1st July 1989 |
| The case
of the Plaintiff Deities |
| Core
question : Whether there was a Hindu temple at Sri Rama Janma Bhumi
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| Acquisition
of 2.77 acres of land by U.P. State Government on 10th Oct. 1991 |
| Material
evidence came out, during the course of levelling of the land |
| Call
for Kar-Sewa during July 1992 from the Shilanyas site from 6th Dec.
1992 |
| Central
Government acquired the area by Ordinance promulgated on 7. 1. 1993 |
| The
evidence led so far in the suits |
| Earliest
inscriptions on stone - report of D Buchanan on the disputed structure.
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| "The
Disputed Mosque" by Dr Susheel Srivastava, (originally a Hindu but
now a Muslim on conversion to Islam) |
| The
case on behalf of the Deities |
| Recent
archeological finds - Proof beyond any shadow of doubt |
| Question
- whether construction of a Temple - an act of contempt of court?
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| Supreme
Court - title to the disputed area does not vest in Central Govt. |
| The
possession of the Central Government of the disputed area and the
land |
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1. The premises of the inner courtyard
of the three domed structure had been attached by the City Magistrate
under section 145 of Cr. P. C. on apprehending a breach of peace,
after the transfer of the Idol of BHAGWAN
SRI RAMA LALA from the Rama Chabutra, in its outer courtyard, to
the Central Dome on 23-12-1949; and a Receiver was appointed for
continuing the worship of the Deity.
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2. The City Magistrate closed the
proceedings by order dated 30. 07. 1953, in view of the injunction
issued by the Civil Judge on Jan. 16/19, 1950, in the suit filed
by Sri Gopal Singh Visharad. However, the Receiver appointed by
the City Magistrate continued to manage the worship until his death
in 1970. Thereafter by agreement of the parties in the four civil
suits, pending in the court of The Civil Judge, Faizabad, the receivership
was taken over by that Court. The appointment as Receiver of the
person chosen by the Civil Judge was challenged by a party in the
High Court, and after an order of remand, another person was appointed
as Receiver in 1974. Even that person’s appointment as Receiver
was challenged on appeal in the High Court. Ultimately, in 1986,
the High court set aside the appointment of that Receiver by the
Civil Judge and directed that all the four suits should be transferred
to an Additional District Judge for speedy disposal and appointment
of a proper person as Receiver.
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3. The Government of UP then, made
an application before the High Court for transfer of the suits to
the High Court itself for speedy original trial in the interest
of maintaining public order and also prayed for stay of hearing
of the writ petitions filed, against the order of District
Judge Faizabad, dated 1-2-1986 directing the opening of the locks
on the doors of the grilled boundary of the inner courtyard of the
premises and removal of all obstructions in the free worship of
BHAGWAN SRI RAMA LALA VIRAJMAN under the central dome of the structure
at SRI RAMA JANMA BHUMI.
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4. While the
application was pending, a fifth suit was filed on 1st July 1989
in the Court of Civil Judge Faizabad, on behalf of the Deities for
the following relief: -
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A) Declaration that the entire premises
of Sri Rama Janma Bhumi at Ayodhya belong to the Plaintiff Deities,
BHAGWAN SRI RAMA LALA VIRAJMAN at Sri Rama Janma Bhumi and ASTHAN
SRI RAMA JANMA BHUMI, Ayodhya.
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B) A perpetual Injunction against
the defendants prohibiting them from interfering with, or raising
any objection to, or placing any obstruction in the construction
of the new Temple at Sri Rama Janma Bhumi Ayodhya.
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5. According to the
case of the Plaintiff Deities –
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A. The worship of the Plaintiff Deities
has continued since ever throughout the ages at SRI RAMA JANMA BHUMI.
The place belongs to the Deities. No valid Waqf was ever created
or could have been created of the place or any part of it, in view
of the title and possession of the Plaintiff Deities thereon. ALLAH,
as conceived by the Muslims, never got any title or possession over
the premises or any part of them. Occasional acts of trespass by
the Muslims, or attempts to get into possession, were successfully
resisted and repulsed by the Hindus from time to time. There was
no blemish or dent in the continuity of title and possession of
the Plaintiff Deities. No title could or did ever vest in ALLAH
over any part of the premises by adverse possession or otherwise.
No Muslim, nor ALLAH ever had any possession over any part of the
premises at any time whatsoever, not to speak of adverse possession.
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B. No regular prayers have ever been
offered in the three domed part of the disputed structure, which
was named by the British as JANMASTHAN MASJID, after dividing its
front courtyard into two parts and leaving the outer part of the
courtyard for the Hindus to worship the idol of BHAGWAN SRI RAMA
LALA on the RAMA CHABUTRA and other symbols of BHAGWAN SRI RAMA
like the CHARANS and the SITA RASOI, situated therein. The domes
and some parts of the disputed structure were destroyed by the Hindus
in 1934 as a retaliation to cow slaughter by some Muslims at Ayodhya.
No one came forward from among the Muslims to repair the same. The
British Government repaired and rebuilt the same. No Muslim dared
thereafter to offer Namaz therein. (The story goes that it had been
rendered NAPAK by the slaughter of a pig and burial of its carcass).
No one acted as the Mutawalli, or Muazzin or Imam or Khatib or Khadim,
usually found in every functioning Mosque. Neither of the two central
Boards of Waqfs of the Shias and Sunnis, respectively, established
in UP on the enactment of the U.P.Muslim Waqfs Act, 1936, took any
action or positive steps for establish1ng the disputed structure
as a Mosque.
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C. After Independence of India from
the British Rule, and choice of PAKISTAN as their HOMELAND by the
Muslims; by a division of BHARATVARSHA, into two unnatural parts,
the VAIRAGIS and the SADHUS of Ayodhya dug up and levelled whatever
graves had been left in the area of Sri Rama Janma Bhumi, and purified
it by AKHAND PATHA and JAPA by thousands of persons. Ultimately,
on the night between the twenty-second/twenty-third December, in
fact in the BRAHMA MUHURTA of 23rd December, 1949 the IDOL of BHAGWAN
SRI RAMA LALA was transferred from the RAMA CHABUTRA and installed
with due ceremony under the central dome of the disputed structure.
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D. There were no Muslims residing
near the place and no resistance was offered by anyone. However,
the local authorities got a First Information Report recorded by
a Policeman (who was a Hindu) and initiated an action under Section
145 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, between the Hindus
and the Muslims generally, without naming any individuals, as parties
to the alleged dispute, and attached the three-domed building structure
only, alongwith the part of the courtyard adjacent to it. The management
of the worship of BHAGWAN SRI RAMA LALA VIRAJMAN under the central
dome was handed over to a Receiver appointed simultaneously. The
rest of the courtyard with the RAMA CHABUTRA, the CHARANS, and the
SITA-RASOI was not attached. Trillions of Hindus having that faith
worshipped BHAGWAN SRI RAMA VIRAJMAN as of yore through the said
symbols of HIS PRESENCE. The place itself was visited and worshipped
as a sacred place of pilgrimage and worship by them; and had the
status of a Deity called ASTHAN SRI RAMA JANMA BHUMI; JANMASTHAN
being it’s abbreviated or short name. The Plaintiff Deities were
in no way parties to the said dispute. Their possession was in no
way affected or disturbed by the attachment, or appointment of a
Receiver to manage the worship of BHAGWAN SRI RAMA LALA VIRAJMAN
under the central dome; and their worship and possession over the
entire area of the whole of the premises of the disputed structure
continued unabated.
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6. On application made on behalf of
the Deities in the High Court this Fifth suit along with the four
suits filed earlier were withdrawn by the High Court by order dated
10-7-1989 for original trial by it; and on application made by the
Government of UP thereafter all these five suits were directed to
be originally tried by a Special Bench of three Hon’ble Judges,
one of them being a Moslem.
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7. Legal objections to the maintainability
of the suit filed on behalf of Sunni Moslems were raised before
the Special Bench by Mahant Paramhans Ramchandra Das, who is the
Plaintiff of the second suit filed in 1950. But the High Court declined
to decide them on the ground that a decision of that suit on purely
legal basis would not be satisfying. The
core question calling for a decision of the dispute on the merits
was: Whether there was a Hindu temple at Sri Rama Janma Bhumi that
was destroyed for raising the disputed structure.
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8. The original trial of the suits
was, however, sidelined by the Special Bench in order to hear and
decide the Writ Petitions filed against the acquisition
of 2.77 acres of land adjoining the premises of the Inner courtyard
of the disputed structure. While admitting these writ petitions
for hearing, the High Court permitted the Government of UP to take
possession of the land acquired but prohibited the raising of any
permanent structures until further orders.
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9. Possession was taken by the Government
of UP on 2-11-91 and the Supreme Court confirmed the aforesaid stay
ordered by the High Court in the aforesaid writ petitions, while
refusing the prayer for their transfer to itself from the High Court.
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10. Levelling of the land was done
and during its course some very material evidence came out, which
showed that there was a temple which was destroyed and on whose
base the disputed structure had been raised.
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11. On the call for resuming Kar-Sewa
during July 1992 for construction of the Sri Rama Temple from the
Shilanyas site (which was at a distance of about 200 feet from the
situs of the Idols), negotiations were initiated by the Prime Minister,
between Vishva Hindu Parishad on the one side and Babri Masjid Action
Committee on the other. They dragged on and collapsed by the end
of October. 6th December 1992 was fixed as the date for commencement
of the Kar-Sewa for the construction of the temple at Sri Rama Janma
Bhumi.
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12. The hearing of these writ petitions
was concluded during the early part of November 1992 but judgement
was reserved by the Special Bench of the High Court.
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13. The Advocate General of UP pleaded
before the Special Bench for early pronouncement of the judgement,
well before the date fixed for resumption of the Kar Sewa. His contention
was that irrespective of the fact whether the writ petitions were
allowed or dismissed, the stay order of the High Court, prohibiting
any construction, would automatically lapse and the Kar Sewaks would
be able to assist in starting the construction of the temple from
the Singha Dwar at the site of the Shilanyas. However, inspite of
the persuasive directions of the Supreme Court, the Special Bench
did not sit in court and pronounce its judgement on the writ petitions
on 30.11.1992, which was the date fixed in the suits, and fixed
11.12.1992 for the same.
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14. The Kar- Sewaks who had assembled
in large numbers (estimated at about 3 lakhs by the authorities)
were exasperated at the idea of performing Kar-Sewa only with sand
and water carried from the Saryu river; and the unexpected happened
when the structure was pulled down in about 5 hours on 6-12-1992.
by the Kar- Sewaks. According to an unofficial estimate by those
who know, the Sappers and Miners would have taken at least 15 days
to pull it down by machinery.
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15. What followed
is too well known to be recounted here. By a resolution dated 27.
12. 1992, the Central Government decided to issue an Ordinance acquiring
the area of the disputed structure (including the premises of its
inner and outer courtyards) and about 70 acres of the land surrounding
it, and to simultaneously refer the aforesaid core question; Whether
a Hindu temple at Sri Rama Janma Bhumi was destroyed for raising
the disputed structure; for the opinion of the Supreme Court under
Article 143(1) of the Constitution.
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16. The Ordinance being No. 8 of 1993
was promulgated on 7. 1. 1993 and the Reference was made simultaneously.
Under the Ordinance the entire area was vested in management only,
and did not confer any beneficial interest therein in the Government.
The Central Government was vested with the management of the acquired
land for the purpose of resolution of the dispute, which had defied
resolution since long and was endangering public order, with the
direction that status quo as on 7. 1. 1993 will be maintained in
the area of the disputed structure (including the premises of its
inner and outer courtyards).
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17. The suits pending original trial
before the High Court were abated in view of the Reference made
to the Supreme Court for its opinion on the said core question.
The Government undertook to resolve the dispute in accordance with
the opinion to be rendered by the Supreme Court on the said core
question.
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18. Writ petitions were filed against
the Acquisition Ordinance and preliminary objections were raised
to the maintainability of the Presidential Reference. The Supreme
Court heard these matters at length and by Judgement dated 24. 10.
1994, upheld the Acquisition Act No. 33 of 1993, which had replaced
the Ordinance, except for the provision for abating the suits, and
declined to answer the question referred to it for opinion.
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19. On the setting aside of the provision
abating the suits, their hearing recommenced before the Special
Bench of the High Court, and it is now more than 6 years since then
that the trial has been going on before it. The recording of oral
evidence in the suit filed by the Sunni Muslims commenced more than
four years ago. Only 17 witnesses have been examined so far out
of a list of more than 100. The recording of oral evidence in the
other suits, except that of Mahant Paramhans Ramchandra Das, taken
out of turn on commission as an exceptional case, has not yet started.
The list of witnesses in these suits is also pretty long, and exceeds
the figure of 100.
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20. According to the
evidence led so far in the suits, the place where the disputed structure,
claimed to be the BABRI MASJID, stood before its destruction on
December 6, 1992, was described in the revenue records of village
RAMKOT or KOT-RAMCHANDER, i.e., the FORT of RAMCHANDER, prepared
during the first settlement after the annexation of AVADH by the
British, as JANMASTHAN, i.e., the BIRTH-PLACE. The village RAMKOT
or KOT RAMCHANDER is now mohalla RAMKOT of the town of Ayodhya.
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21. The question arises: Whose JANMASTHAN?
The only answer is The JANMASTHAN of LORD RAMA in the precincts
of whose fort: RAMKOT: it is situated. There is only ONE RAMA, who
was born as the son of Maharaja Dashratha of the solar dynasty at
Ayodhya and was the incarnation of Lord Vishnu according to the
faith of the Hindus; and the JANAMSTHAN is his BIRTHPLACE. i.e.
the place where He manifested Himself in human form for the destruction
of demons and the establishment of the rule of righteousness, termed
as Ramrajya. Lord Rama has come to be worshipped as such throughout
the ages. Even His Janmasthan is worshipped as a sacred place, as
the place of manifestation of Lord Vishnu in human form, by the
pilgrims who throng the place round the year, and more particularly
in very large numbers on the date of His birth: the ninth day of
the bright phase of the moon of the month of Chaitra. The first
nine days of the bright phase of the moon of the month of Chaitra
are called Navratra and regarded as days of fasting and prayer by
the devout Hindus, culminating in the celebration of Ramnavami on
the ninth day as the birthday of Lord Rama. Precisely six months
later the first nine days of the bright phase of the Moon of the
month of Ashwin are again called Navratra and regarded as days of
fasting and prayer by the devout Hindus and culminate in the celebration
of Vijayadashmi on the tenth day as the day of Victory of Good over
Evil after the killing of Ravana by Lord Rama. Both these celebrations
are part of the lore of Lord Rama, and millions throng the Janamsthan
at Ayodhya to worship Him, during the two Navratris and on the Ramnavami
day.
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22. During the First War of Independence
of India from the British yoke, called the Sepoy Mutiny by the British,
Hindus and Muslims fought shoulder to shoulder against the British.
At Ayodhya the Muslims were led by Ameer Ali and the Hindus by Baba
Ramcharan Das. They agreed that the Muslims would stop all interference
with the rights of worship and possession over the disputed structure
at the JANMASTHAN and would allow them to peacefully enjoy their
exclusive possession thereon. On regaining control in 1858, the
British hanged to death both Ameer Ali and Baba Ramchandra Das by
a Tamarind tree on the Kuberteela, i.e. the mound of Kuber (the
heavenly treasurer) near the disputed structure. And thereafter,
in 1859, the British Government divided the premises of the disputed
structure into two parts: one consisting of the three-domed structure
with a part of the front courtyard for the Muslims and the other
comprising of the Rama Chabutra, i.e. Rama’s Platform, the Charans,
i.e. the Footprints and the Sita Rasoi - Sita’s Kitchen, and the
rest of the courtyard containing them, for the Hindus.
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23. During the First Revenue Settlement
during the British rule in Avadh, which followed in the Eighteen
Sixties, the British picked up a loyal Zamindar belonging to the
Shia sect of the Muslims, and recognised him as the lawful heir
of Meer Baqi Isfahani, who was a Shia Muslim and was believed to
have erected the three domed structure at the JANMASTHAN in 935
AH i.e. 1528 AD during the reign of Babur, and was said to have
been in receipt of a Nankar i.e. a grant for personal maintenance,
of Rs 302/3/6 per annum; and in lieu of it the British Government
made a revenue free grant of superior proprietary rights, i.e. zamindari,
of villages Sholepur and Bahoranpur, to him, "to be continued as
long as the object for which the grant was made, is kept up", on
the added conditions of rendering Police and Military service and
remaining loyal to the British. The object for which the grant was
made does not seem to have been fulfilled. There was more than one
complaint of breach of trust against the descendants of the grantee.
They even denied that the grant was a Waqf, and would seem to have
pocketed the compensation for the proprietary rights on the abolition
of zamindari in UP in the Nineteen Fifties, instead of taking an
annuity in lieu thereof as a Waqf for the maintenance of its object.
The three-domed structure was also partly demolished in 1934 by
the Vairagis. The descendants of the grantees did not repair it.
Instead the British Government repaired it. The object for which
the grant was made was not kept up. The Government did not enforce
it. Thus the grant and its object both vanished. If any semblance
of the object remained in the form of the disputed structure, even
after the vanishing of the grant, that too completely vanished with
its complete occupation in 1949 and demolition in 1992.
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24. It is thus indisputable that the
place where the disputed structure stood is the JANMASTHAN or the
birth-place of Lord Rama, which has been by tradition and faith
of trillions of Hindus a sacred place of pilgrimage and worship
of Bhagwan Sri Rama Virajman thereat, and that they have been doing
so despite some passing interference during the time of Babur and
again during the British rule.
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25. The earliest copy
of the inscriptions on stone, which tell the tale of construction
of the disputed structure is that maintained in the British Library
in England. D Buchanan had been deputed by the East India Company
to survey certain places including the disputed structure. According
to the report submitted by him to his masters in England, sometimes
at the end of the Eighteenth century of the Christian era, the tale
of the construction of the disputed structure is to the following
effect:
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"That a Prince named Tugli Khan had
a wazir, who had a daughter. She was married to Moosa Ashiqan (quaintly
translated as ‘the Comforter of Lovers’ by Buchanan). The Wazir
died (again quaintly described as his having departed from his place
of dwelling of mortality to the abode of eternity") The King having
ordered the seizure of the Wazir’s property, Moosa Ashiqan was struck
with the reflection that "This world is Nothing"; he ordered that
people should carry off whatever money and effects were in his house,
which they did. But some grain was left. On that he directed them
to carry off that also. After that only a piece of sackcloth was
left on which the horses ate gram. Moosa Ashiqan said: "That will
be of use to me" and having torn a hole in its middle, he threw
it over his shoulder and became a dervish. On hearing Moosa Ashiqan’s
tale of becoming a dervish, Babur appeared before him privately.
Seeing the wretched condition of Babur, Moosa Ashiqan gave him some
sweets to eat and said, "Thou shalt be King". As Babur was departing,
Moosa Ashiqan told him " I am annoyed by the Hindus who are constantly
ringing their bells – when thou becomest King, thou shalt build
a Masjid at this place." Babur forgot Moosa Ashiqan’s direction
on becoming King, whereupon Moosa Ashiqan reminded him of it, and
Meer Baqaoolla Khan erected this Masjid on receiving Babur’s command.
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26. This tale of construction of the
disputed structure on the instigation of Moosa Ashiqan finds corroboration
in the book: "The Disputed Mosque"
by Dr Susheel Srivastava, (originally a Hindu but now a Muslim on
conversion to Islam) a teacher in the History department of the
University of Allahabad, who was produced as a witness by the plaintiffs
of the suit filed by the Sunni Muslims. Dr Srivastava has recorded
the following in the last paragraph at page 71 of the Book:
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" Both the local Hindus and Muslims
describe the same circumstances, with slight variations, of the
construction of Babur’s Mosque. They say Babur ordered the destruction
of the Ramjanmabhoomi temple on the recommendation of a Muslim fakir
or Ascetic. When Babur came to Ayodhya, goes the story; the Ramjanmabhoomi
area was under the control of Mahatma Shyamananda. He was also the
caretaker of the Ramjanmabhoomi temple. Shyamanada was a very famous
saint and he did not believe in any distinction of sect or creed.
It is said that the fakir Fazl Abbas Aashikan and Jalalshah, took
shelter with him. Impressed by the huge crowds of people who came
for the darshan of the Ramjanmabhoomi temple, they thought that
if there was a mosque at the same spot, they would be able to control
and be as popular…"
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Further on, at page 72, second paragraph:
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" The myth further says that, when
the fakirs were with Shyamananda, Babur arrived in Ayodhya. They
approached him with their proposal and forced him to agree… some
hold the opinion that Musa Ashiqan was impressed by the spiritual
atmosphere of the Ramjanmabhoomi. He often sat inside the temple.
One day he was thrown out and swore to destroy it. Yet another story
in circulation relates that, when Babur came to Ayodhya, he was
exhausted, having been at war with the Rajputs and having come to
fight the Pathans at Ayodhya. He had been unable to suppress the
latter and was feeling dispirited. He approached a large number
of religious men, both Hindu and Muslim to bless him with victory
in war against the Pathans. In Ayodhya he heard about the miracles
of the fakir Musa Ashiqan and Jalalshah. He went to seek their blessings
and it was then that Musa Ashiqan asked him to destroy the Ramjanmabhoomi
temple and construct the Babri Masjid in its place. Musa Ashiqan
told Babur that once he completed this pious task, his mission would
be accomplished."
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27. The last one of these versions
of the facts leading to the circumstances that led to the construction
of the disputed structure, as recorded by Dr Srivastava on the basis
of the traditions current at Ayodhya among the Hindus and Muslims
both, corresponds most nearly to the tale reported by Buchanan in
his report on the basis of the stone inscriptions in Persian on
the disputed structure.
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28. Again at page 78 of his book "The
Disputed Mosque" Dr Srivastava goes on to record the following facts:
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" The Muslims of Ayodhya / Faizabad,
like their Hindu counterparts, have several myths about their places
of worship… They also believe that the Emperor Babur came to Ayodhya
in 1528 and destroyed the Rama Janma Bhoomi Temple, to propitiate
Pir Fazal Abbas Musa Ashiqan. The Muslim saint lived in the area
southwest of the Ramjanmabhoomi temple, where there is today, a
graveyard, said to contain the grave of the saint. His tomb is marked
by two inverted black-stone pillars half-buried in the earth. The
local Muslims are convinced that the use of the stone pillars in
the mosque indicates that the material of the Ramjanmabhoomi temple
was used in the construction of the mosque. They further claim that
similar pillars were put at the head of the grave as a mark of respect."
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29. This narration of the facts found by Dr Srivastava
at Ayodhya puts a seal of authenticity on the tale that the disputed
structure was constructed after the destruction of the Hindu temple
at the Janmasthan in its place and with its materials, on the instigation
of the Fazl Abbas Musa Ashiqan.
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30. According to the
case on behalf of the Deities of Bhagwan Sri Rama Virajman, and
the Asthan Sri Rama Janma Bhumi, Ayodhya, by their next friend:
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"Such a structure raised by the force of arms on
the land belonging to the Plaintiff Deities, after destroying the
ancient temple situated thereat, with materials including the Kasauti
pillars with figures of Hindu gods carved thereon, could not be
a mosque and did not become one inspite of the attempts to treat
it as a mosque during the British rule after the annexation of Avadh."
And further on: "ALLAH never accepts a dedication of property which
does not belong to the Waqif, that is the person who purports to
dedicate property to ALLAH for purposes recognised as pious or charitable,
as Waqf under the Muslim law. By his acts of trespass and violence
for raising a mosque on the site of the Temple after destroying
it by force, Mir Baqi committed a highly un-Islamic act. His attempt
to convert the temple into a mosque did not, therefore, create a
valid dedication of property to ALLAH, whether in fact or in law,
and it never became a mosque."
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31. The facts further pleaded on behalf of the said
Deities are:
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"That in spite of all that Mir Baqi tried to do
with the temple, the land always continued to vest in the Plaintiff
Deities, and they never surrendered their possession over it. Their
possession continued in fact and in law. The ASTHAN never went out
of the possession of the Deity and His worshippers. They continued
to worship Him through such symbols as the CHARAN and SITA RASOI,
and the idol of Bhagwan Sri Rama Lala Virajman on the Chabutra,
called the Rama Chabutra, within the enclosed courtyard of the building
directly in front of the arched opening of the Southern dome. No
one could enter the building except after passing through these
places of Hindu worship." According to Muslim religion and law there
can be no idol worship within the courtyard of a mosque, and the
passage to a mosque must be free and unobstructed and open at all
times to the ‘Faithful’. It can never be through a Hindu place of
worship. There can be no co-sharing of title or possession with
ALLAH in the case of a mosque. His possession must be exclusive.
A mosque must be built in a place of peace and quiet, but near to
a place where there is a sizable Muslim population, according to
the tenets of Islam, and as insisted upon by it, a mosque cannot
be built in a place which is surrounded on all sides by Temples,
where the sound of music or conch shells or Ghanta Ghariyals must
always disturb the peace and quiet of the place." And then: A mosque
must have a minaret for calling the Azan. According to Baillie:
When an assembly of worshippers pray in a masjid with permission,
(that is after abandonment of the land by its full owner and construction
of the building for prayer by the Faithful) that is delivery. But
it is a condition that the prayers be with Azan, or the regular
call, and be public not private, for though there should be an assembly
yet if it is without Azan, and if the prayers are private instead
of public, the place is not a masjid, according to the two disciples."
(Pt I, Bk. IX, Chap VII, Sec 1 p.605) Indeed there has been no mosque
without a minaret after the first century from the Flight. (P R
Ganapathi Iyer: Law relating to Hindu and Muslim Endowments, 2nd
Edition, 1918, Chap XVII, P 388). Admittedly, there was no minaret
in the disputed structure for calling the Azan; and there was in
fact no storage tank for water in the courtyard, and there were
the Kasauti pillars with the figures of Hindu Gods and Goddesses
inscribed thereon inside it. And lastly according to the claim of
the plaintiffs of the suit on behalf of the Muslims, the disputed
structure was surrounded on all sides by a graveyard. known as the
GANJ-E-SHAHIDAN. Therefore, it could not be a MASJID, for the offering
of regu1ar prayers ordained for the Muslims is prohibited inside
a graveyard. Only the NAMAZ-E-JANAZA or the funeral prayer on the
death of a person buried therein is offered in a graveyard.
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32. This, however, is not the end of the story.
Recent archeological finds have proved beyond
any shadow of doubt that the temple built by the GAHADAWAL kings
in the twelfth century AD at the JANMASTHAN, was of VISHNUHARI,
and that was destroyed by Mir Baqi at the JANMASTHAN for raising
the disputed structure, with its materials. And that being so the
Muslims must give up their claim to the site of the disputed structure,
since demolished, at SRI RAMA JANMA BHUMI, Ayodhya, in accordance
with the public declaration of their leaders.
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33. In view of
the sentiments of the trillions of Hindus, represented by the Saints
and Mahatmas assembled in the Maha Kumbha of the 1st Century of
the New Millenium, desiring for the immediate commencement of the
construction of a magnificent Temple at Sri Rama Janma Bhumi, of
which the model is on display, from a date to be fixed here and
now, a question has been
asked whether the doing so would be an act of contempt of court:
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34. My answer is a positive ‘NO’,
for the simple reason that neither the site of the disputed structure,
where the worship of Bhagwan Sri Rama Lala is continuing, nor the
land surrounding it, including the Shilanyas site, from where the
construction is proposed to be started, are in the possession or
receivership of any court. The dispute before the High Court in
the suits, which are pending before it, is only about the title
to the site of the demolished disputed structure (including its
inner and outer courtyards).
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35. The status quo is required to
be maintained only on the site of the demolished structure and the
Central Government is functioning as a Statutory Receiver only in
respect thereof. It has not been appointed as the Receiver of the
said disputed area by any order of the Court in the said suits.
Indeed, the Central Government refused to be impleaded as a party
in these suits and the High Court upheld its refusal. The acquired
area vests in the Central Government only for managing it. The beneficial
interest therein does not vest in it.
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36. According to the
interpretation of the Acquisition Act No. 33 of 1993 by the Supreme
Court the title to the disputed area, i.e., the site of the demolished
disputed structure, does not vest in the Central Government.
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37. The title to the rest of the area
acquired under the Act vests in the Central Government, only nominally,
as a trustee and it is under a duty to return it to the original
owners, unless it is required for a satisfactory resolution of the
dispute.
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38. According to the law of our land,
there is no bar against a party taking possession of the land owned
by it, even if its title is disputed in a court. The doing so does
not amount to any contempt of Court.
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39. The
possession of the Central Government of the disputed area and the
adjacent acquired land under the said Act No. 33 of 1993 can be
demonstrated against and the Central Government can be forced by
public opinion not to act too harshly against those demonstrating
or violating its possession.
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18/01/2001
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Deoki Nandan
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