- A turning point in the Gnanavapi case
- Hindus are allowed to worship in the basement of Gnanavapi Masjid
- The court order to complete the arrangements for the puja within a week
- Statues of Hindu deities in the mosque courtyard
- Kashi Vishwanath Trust to start worship in week days
- Kashi Vishwanath Trust is the biggest win for Hindus
A turning point has taken place in the controversial Gnanavapi case in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh. Hindus were allowed to worship in the mosque. To this extent, the court on Wednesday issued permission to Varanasi to arrange for pujas within a week. As a result, there is joy in the Hindu ranks.
Kashi Vishwanath Trust describes the court order as a huge victory for Hindus. The trust has announced that it will start worshiping the idols of Hindu deities in the sealed basement area of the mosque within a week.
‘The court gave permission to the Hindu side to worship in the cellar of Gnanavapi Masjid. The district administration has to make arrangements within seven days. Now everyone has a right. This judgment is historic. In 1983, Justice Krishna Mohan Pond ordered to open the locks of Ayodhya Ram Temple. At present the court has ordered that the locks of the basement should be opened in Gnanavapi.’ Vishnu Shankar Jain, a lawyer on behalf of the Hindus, said.
The basement of the mosque was sealed on the basis of the Supreme Court’s orders.. ASI survey. But with the latest court orders, those barricades will be removed. Moreover, the court made it clear that the priests of Vishwanath temple can perform these pujas.
Last year, the Varanasi court had ordered an ASI survey to be conducted there to determine whether the Gnanavapi Masjid was built on the same structure as the earlier Hindu temple. In this order, the Archeology Department of India (ASI) has recently given a report that there was a huge Hindu temple construction in place of the Gnanavapi mosque complex in Varanasi. The survey showed that the current structure is built on top of the previous structure. It is noteworthy that the Varanasi court allowed the Hindu side to worship.
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