The Ram Janmabhoomi-Babri Masjid
Dispute has been fuelling polarization in the state of Uttar Pradesh along
religious lines for almost more than half-a-century and rocked the state with frequent
violent disturbances. It even spread to the whole of the country causing repeated
religious violence threatening the very fabric of modern India. This indeed became a bane of the country
since partition inflicting economic and human losses.
Owing to its sheer potential for
frequently causing communal violence and bloodshed disrupting economic and
social life, the dispute needs to be resolved once for all, that too, at the
earliest for enabling the nation to tread its chosen path of economic development
and the concomitant eradication of poverty across the country.
Of course, as a rational analysis of
the problem calls for its historical background, let us look at first things
first: The dispute is all about the ownership of a plot of 2.77 acres of land
in the city of Ayodhya in Uttar Pradesh where the Babri Masjid was constructed
by General Mir Baqi in the 16th century.
This very piece of land is considered by Hindus as sacred for they believe it
to be the birthplace of Lord Ram, the most revered deity of Hindus. They indeed
argue that the mosque was built on top of Ram temple. As against Hindus,
Muslims argue that the mosque is their sacred place of prayer and Hindus
desecrated it by placing idols of Lord Ram inside the mosque in 1949. Following
these arguments, the gates of the mosque were locked and it thus remained shut
for the next 40 years.
In 1986, during the tenure of Rajiv
Gandhi as the Prime Minister, the gates were opened, of course, at the behest
of the court. Within two days from the date of opening the locks, a group of
Muslim lawyers filed a petition in Lucknow on February 3, 1986 praying for
ordering that nothing more happens to the site. Accordingly, the court ordered
for maintaining the “status quo.”
Later in 1989, just before the elections,
Rajiv Gandhi evinced further interest in Ayodhya issue by sending his Home
Minister, Buta Singh to Ayodhya to participate in a “shilanyas”—the
symbolic temple foundation-laying ceremony. All this obviously escalated the
dispute from a local issue to a national one—indeed placed the Hindus and
Muslims on a collision course.
Finally, this collision ended up in the
demolition of the Mosque by the participants of a rally that assembled at the
premises on December 6, 1992. This stirred up communal riots across the major
cities of north India. Notably, the Hindu-Muslim riots of Mumbai, the financial
capital of India, caused 900 deaths and damaged properties running into
thousands of crores.
Immediately after the demolition of the
mosque, a makeshift temple to Ram Lalla, was built by Hindu activists. In the
meanwhile, a new law was enacted by the Government of India to acquire a large
area of land in Ayodhya that included the site where the mosque stood. It also
set aside all the suits that claimed title to the site, but allowed Hindu
worship to continue there. Simultaneously, a presidential reference was made to
the Supreme Court: Did a “Hindu temple or any Hindu religious structure” exist
where the mosque had been built in 1528?
The legality of this enactment and the
Presidential reference were challenged by Muslim representatives stating that
the government cannot acquire a holy site. The Supreme Court, by a majority
decision, upheld the law acquiring the land, but declined to answer the
question— Did a “Hindu temple or any Hindu religious structure” exist where the
mosque had been built in 1528?—in the presidential reference, saying it was
“superfluous and unnecessary”. Finally, law suits relating to property were
transferred to the High Court in Lucknow from Faizabad.
In September 2010, a three-judge bench
of Allahabad High Court, setting aside a lower court’s order, allocated
two-thirds of the disputed site to Hindu groups, with the remainder going to
Muslims. It also gave a ruling—obviously, based on a 272-page report submitted
by the ASI which summarized its findings as: “indicative of remains which are
distinctive features found associated with the temples of north India”—that the
disputed spot was Hindu God Ram’s birthplace, that the mosque had been built
after the demolition of a temple and that the mosque was not built in
accordance with the tenets of Islam. But both parties appealed against the
order in the Supreme Court.
Now, it is at the request of BJP MP
Subramanian Swamy to constitute a bench to expedite the disposal of petitions
filed challenging the judgment of Allahabad High Court order that the Supreme
Court, observing that “These are issues of religion and sentiments”, suggested
on March 21: “These are issues where all the parties can sit together and
arrive at a consensual decision to end the dispute.” The Court, volunteering to
mediate, if required, between the negotiators, directed the petitioner to
inform the court about the outcome on March 31.
And thus, we are back to square one,
for nine such attempts at arriving at an out-of-court settlement failed
earlier. Although a solution for such a dispute of religious nature has to
necessarily emerge from a perspective of generosity and a spirit of
accommodation, there appears to be no such possibility, for warring groups are
already airing their opinions in a belligerent tone.
In the light of this reality, the Court that has earlier stayed the
High Court’s decree may have to expedite its hearing and give its verdict on the findings of the
lower court and the merits of the appeal. For, it is apparent that negotiations
over such strongly held religious passions would only vitiate the atmosphere
further, and hence needs to be settled once for all by the Court alone. And
sooner the better, for the aspirational India does not want to be pulled down
by religious disputes any longer!
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