Modi on 11-day fast ahead of Ram Mandir opening

Temple is built on grounds where a centuries-old mosque, Babri Masjid, once stood before it was torn down by zealots


AFP January 12, 2024
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (C) offers prayers at the Kalaram Temple in Nashik. PHOTO: AFP

NEW DELHI:

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said Friday he was beginning an 11-day religious fast ahead of a ceremony he will lead to inaugurate a controversial new Hindu temple.

Modi is presiding over the January 22 opening of the shrine, built on grounds where a centuries-old mosque once stood before it was torn down by zealots.

The ceremony is set to burnish the Hindu-nationalist leader's credentials as a defender of India's majority faith just months before national elections.

"I am fortunate that I will also be a witness to this auspicious occasion. The Lord has made me an instrument to represent all the people of India," Modi said in an audio message posted to social media.

"Keeping this in mind, I am starting a special ritual of 11 days from today. I seek blessings from all of you."

The purification rite Modi said he was embarking upon involves a series of prayer rituals and an almost complete abstinence from food for its duration.

Also read: Ram temple built on site of razed Babri mosque in India to open in January

Modi has incorporated his Hindu faith into the politics of his officially secular country in an unprecedented manner since coming to power a decade ago.

In 2019, he went to meditate in a Himalayan cave – home to one of the religion's holiest shrines – during India's last national election.

The temple Modi will help unveil later this month is dedicated to Ram, one of the most revered deities in the Hindu pantheon, and has been built at an estimated cost of 20 billion rupees ($240 million).

Devout Hindus believe Ram was born in the northern town of Ayodhya around 7,000 years ago but that the Babri Masjid was built over his birthplace in the 16th century.

Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had campaigned for decades for a temple to be built on the site, culminating in the frenzied demolition of the mosque in 1992 by a Hindu mob.

Shockwaves from the incidents were felt around the country and triggered riots that killed 2,000 people, with most of the victims Muslim.

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