Crucial Varanasi Court Order Today On Carbon Dating Of 'Shivling' Claimed To Have Been Found Inside Gyanvapi Mosque Complex

Crucial Court Order Today On Carbon Dating Of 'Shivling' In Gyanvapi Case

y Gyanvapi mosque is one of the several that Hindu hardliners believe were built on ruins of temples

Lucknow:

The court of Varanasi’s senior-most judge is expected to pass a crucial order today on a plea by Hindu women petitioners for a scientific investigation, including carbon dating, of a purported ‘Shivling’ found inside the Gyanvapi mosque complex earlier this year during a video survey carried out on the orders of a lower court in the temple town.

Four of the five Hindu women petitioners — whose original plea to pray yearlong at a shrine inside the Gyanvapi mosque — are being heard in the district judge’s court, had filed the “scientific investigation” plea last month, saying it was necessary to determine the age of the ‘Shivling’.

In their plea, the women said such an investigation could involve the carbon dating process and be carried out by the Archaeological Survey of India, a government body.

One of the five Hindu women, though, had taken a divergent view, objecting to the scientific investigation plea by the four other women, saying that any testing, including carbon dating, may harm the ‘Shivling’.

The mosque committee had also objected to the scientific investigation plea, saying that the case by the Hindu women was about worshipping at a shrine inside the mosque and had nothing to do with its structure. The mosque committee said the object being called a ‘Shivling’ was actually a “fountain”.

On September 12, the Varanasi district judge dismissed a challenge by the mosque committee that said the case by the Hindu women for year-long worship inside the mosque complex had no legal standing. Their challenge was rejected on all three counts that they had cited. The most important of these is the 1991 law that freezes the status of a place of worship as it existed on August 15, 1947. The petitioners didn’t want ownership, just the right to worship, the court ruled.

Earlier this year, a lower court in Varanasi had ordered the filming of the centuries-old mosque based on the petition of the women. The videography report, controversially leaked by the Hindu petitioners, claimed a ‘Shivling’ or relic of Lord Shiva had been found in a pond within the mosque complex used for Wazoo or purification rituals before Muslim prayers.

The Gyanvapi mosque, located in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s constituency, Varanasi, is one of the several mosques that Hindu hardliners believe were built on the ruins of temples. It was one of the three temple-mosque rows, besides Ayodhya and Mathura, which the BJP raised in the 1980s and 1990s, gaining national prominence.