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Sentence deleted

I took this sentence out because it was obviously just added by someone later since the issue is discussed in the second paragraph with a more nuetral POV. "It was constructed by destroying the original Ram temple in Ayodhyaya"

I do not understand why there is all this hatred. Hindus and Mulims have lived together in peace for centuries. Why should some radicals disrupt this peace. It doesnt matter where the Babri Masjid site was for Hindus or Muslims. Just build a temple and a mosque there, and problem will be solved. Do not let communal differences bring down India.

                The destruction signifies more than hatred. It shows that after 900 years of humiliation under Muslims, Hindus are finally taking a stand. Jai Hind! The Jews should follow our example, and deal with the Al-Aqsa Mosque in the same way.


Koenraad Elst

Whoever he is - He is the darling of Hindutva Brigade and their revisionist agenda.So his views should be taken with a pinch...oh sorry !!!a handful of salt.

One does not know of him much.May be he is a paid mercenary for Hindutva cause.

lol...paid mercenary..yeah right...should I remind you that the Islamic charities pay for terrorists...a very peaceful and noble cause(I'm being sarcastic)....there are many nationalists who stick to a cause by heart and pride, not money.

I won't take his views into a neutral article without talking of his Hindutva allegiance.Ya- One thing we should make a difference between the Hinduism practiced by millions of moderate Indians and the Hindutva which is a Supremacist movement not unlike the British National Party

I can say the same thing about Marxist Leninist Romila Thapar, that she is paid by western leftists academics to denigrate Hindus as part of a communist agenda. By all means, critically analyze Elst's work, bearing in mind that he is a self-professed Christian, not a Hindu at all. Neither is Daniel Pipes, who is devoutly Jewish, and has supported the Ramjanmabhoomi cause. You have no financial records that Hindutva advocates pay him any money, whereas there is proof that Islamic orgs in India get money to & from terrorist orgs like Hezbollah and Lashkar-e-Toiba and CAIR. The fact is that muslim organizations have touted more hate speech against Hindus on the internet than Hindus have against muslims. Muslims also tout hate-speech against Jews (anti-semitism) and Zionism (anti-Zionism, basically a polite form of anti-semitism) on mainstream newspapers such as al-Arabiya and al-Jazeera. Read the report on anti-semitism in the muslim world by the Anti-Defamation League (www.adl.org).(Netaji 23:00, 6 July 2006 (UTC))
  • Oh, Sometimes ago we heard that Muslims organisations pay the terrorists ..New development they are themselves being financed by terrorists...Good..The world is round.Boss , you are a Gem Lkadvani 00:00, 7 July 2006 (UTC)
    • Money flows both ways, and my claims are backed by American guns and the American Army, the one true force of democracy left in the world. Care to tustle with that, bud? Do you know what Americans do to terrorist sympathizers? Believe me, you wouldn't want to be one then. (Netaji 00:23, 7 July 2006 (UTC))
      • Assertions , Mr. Watson and loud at that should be attached with evidence which you seem not to be showing.
      • Licking US a** - Since when Sangh Parivar get US as its friend?Check the US administrations report on religious rights in India and you will be please to know how critical they are of killings and torture of missionaries.
       why should the Indian gov't protect missionaries? For breaking the law? Religious conversion is against the law in many states..whether you agree with it or not...its the law...If the missionaries break it, do they deserve protection?
        • And check out the "national prayer day" in the US in 2001, which started with a Hindu pandit's prayer. They don't even do that in the useless Bolshie sh*thole that is the Indian Parliament. The US govt said all those things to mollycoddle the muslims, barely choking on their own words in the process. Politics is different from ideology. And yes, America is the one true democracy left in the world, and they'll kick your pinko a**es right over the moon. Comrade.(Pusyamitra Sunga 22:02, 7 July 2006 (UTC))
        • And yes, we have many friends among Americans. Neo-Conservative Jews, USINPAC, AIPAC, the India Caucus of the US Congress, to name just a few. Too Bad, Comrade. Now go to Afghanistan and whine to Osama bin-C**kf**r.(Pusyamitra Sunga 22:08, 7 July 2006 (UTC))

A short summary of my recent edits

I have not committed vandalism. I now provide reasons for my edits below: No, I put the muslim POV below the hindu one. This is so because the muslim pov starts out by criticizing the hindu POV, thus making it logically inconsistent for the muslim one to come first. Plus, the muslim POV part was strife with hate-speech against hindus and unsubstantiated, as well as unreferences stuff, which I have removed. The bit I have added is well-references from an article written by Koenraad Elst, who is neither Indian nor Hindu, but is a Belgian scholar of Indian studies. For instance:

"They say that it prove that the Hindu militants believe in "bloodshed and manslaughter" as a means to achieve their goals"
is unsubstantiated. Hindutva charter clearly states "Harm no creature, but if they attack you, fight back"
"since the killing of Sikhs after the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi"
Is irrelevant, since the Sikh riots were perpetrated by Congress sympathizers, and has nothing to do with the VHP.
"gangs of karsevaks"
Is biased, kar-sevaks don't form gangs. How'd you like it if someone said "gangs of Hamas members"? :"shouting 'Jai Shri Ram'"
Is irrelevant. So they were shouting stuff. Not unlike "Allahu-Akbar", is it?
These communities speak of how the Muslims of the town supplied the wood used to build the temples of the Hindus and grew flowers to string around the necks of the gods and goddesses (Dutas and Devis)."
Yeah, right. And I'm a 23000-year old Buddhist Vampire. Show proof.
"Secondly, this idea of relocating could be considered only in the case of grave necessity and not the whims and fancies of any community that has hegemonous mentality and claims from three to thirty thousands more mosques as being built on destroyed Hindu temples."
Is obvious POV
"fantasize on other Muslim heritage coming up with a story on birth of their dieties, places of their marriage or their death and claim those Muslim monuments as their own."
Bad grammar. I prefer grammatically correct hate-speech, don't you? There is absolutely no proof of this allegation specifically. Maybe in a general sense, but the specificity is wrong, POV, biased, and hate-speech against Hindus. Notice that there is no hate-speech against muslims in my edits.
Please view these woth an open neutral mind. After all, even a devout muslim like Abu Sina could criticize aspects of his religion and not get beheaded, right? (Netaji 16:12, 6 July 2006 (UTC))
      • Hi Boss - Even though it is a bit direct - this paragraph was under "Muslim view of the history" and not shown as a neutral observation so there is no point in deleting that.Maybe it is correct , maybe wrong but it is gives the other perspective.
      • And by the way - You have done far more hate speech towards Muslims and their religion in the Talk page here
        • I have directed hate-speech against terrorists, not muslims. I hate terrorists, true. Plus, none of that has entered the article. The article should be NPOV. The talk pages are fair game. Muslims have retaliated with virulent hate-speech also. The difference is that they have done so IN THE ARTICLE, which violates NPOV policy. Muslims are more than welcome to vent their frustrations by releasing all their hate for Hindus here in the talk page (they already have). The fact is that muslim organizations have touted more hate speech against Hindus on the internet than Hindus have against muslims. Muslims also tout hate-speech against Jews (anti-semitism) and Zionism (anti-Zionism, basically a polite form of anti-semitism) on mainstream newspapers such as al-Arabiya and al-Jazeera. Read the report on anti-semitism in the muslim world by the Anti-Defamation League (www.adl.org). By the way, I have commented favorably on the bit about archiecture of the former babri Masjid. I wouldn;t do that if I ws a muslim hater, would I?
        • Plus, I did not delete the paragraph, nor any pertinent information. I got rid of the hate-speech, andmove the paragraph below for logical consistency. Big difference(Netaji 23:03, 6 July 2006 (UTC))
        • "A bit direct?" That's all you have to say to outright mullah-speech? They might as well wield Qurans and kalashnokovs right in front of wikimedia headquarters!(Netaji 00:37, 7 July 2006 (UTC))

=Muhammad (Sallallahu Alayhe Wassalam) and Babri Mosque

I've heard this claim about that the Prophet Muhammad (SAWS) to preach to India, and they found traces of his hair from his head. This can be from an authentic source (Bukhari, Muslim, Abu Dawud etc.. ) or it can be a forgery hadith. I'm not too sure about this, can someone research this up? Is there any authentic source?

      • Hi,The details of prophet's daily life are well recorded in history and there is no mention whatsoever of him visiting India at all.
      • Thanks the gods for that. We never needed pedophiles anyway (Netaji 11:03, 6 July 2006 (UTC)).netaji and subhash bose u better fear god
        • Ya, Netaji, We accept Polyandry in India...and sometimes our Yagnas require women copulate with horses
        • Interesting, it seems you have read THE SATANIC VERSES. The freedom-of-expression-loving Hindus should lobby to get the book un-banned. It seems that Congress was foolish enough to increase the book's popularity by banning it. Such fools socialists can be.
          • Pity for muslims there aren't more self-hating Hindus like yourself. Then we'd have an Islamic theocracy in India already, and all our throats would have been slit. (Netaji 16:14, 6 July 2006 (UTC))
      • I remember two phrases that aptly describe the above situation - "Calling a spade a spade" and "those who live in glass houses should.....you know the rest.
        • Yes, call a spade a spade. A terrorist a terrorist. Exactly what Daniel Pipes does.
        • Bukhari:V4B52N220 "Allah's Apostle said, ‘I have been made victorious with terror (cast into the heart of the infidel). The treasures of the world were brought to me and put in my hand.'"(Netaji 02:35, 7 July 2006 (UTC))
          • [The ears a Shudra who listens intentionally when the Veda is being recited are to be filled with molten lead; his tongue is to be cut out if he recite it; his body is to be split in twain if he preserve it in his memory. [Quoted in Vedãnta Sûtras, I, 3, by both Shankarãchãrya and Rãmanujãchãrya as valid]. ]

62.189.60.30 15:22, 7 July 2006 (UTC)

            • Fair enough. In a democracy like India, the state does not shoot you, hang you, or chop your hand off for saying that. Try and say the same for a critic of Islam in Pakistan, Iran, or Saudi Arabia. (Pusyamitra Sunga 19:08, 7 July 2006 (UTC))
                • Oh, and guess what bubba? I AM A SHUDRA (well, a Telu, which is close enough) and I have read the Rigveda front-to-back (in school as well as at home by my Dwivedi-Brahmin Sanskrit teacher). Hang on, lemme check my ears ... Nope. No molten lead, my hands are still here, and my tongue is still in me. Now let's look at muslims and how many sites they bombed in recent memory, shall we?(Pusyamitra Sunga 07:01, 8 July 2006 (UTC))
          • Pussymitra aka Netaji - seems to value Indian democrarcy - he should know that it is democracy because it is secular.Had it been a Hindutva branded it should not have been different to Afghanistan under Taliban - Gujarat is a case in point.
Muslims say the same thing about Israel and they're all lies. Gujarat is the Hindu Israel. It is the one place where Hindus are safe at last, and we did it just like the Israelis crushed the al-Aqsa intifida against the Paagal-stinian terrorists. Think we can be stopped? Think again, brother. We will forever remain a democracy, but we will also be a Hindu Rashtra, without the pseudosecularist vote-bank politics of the liberal left, or their pandering to terrorists who attack us with boulders and bombs, and Dalit Supremacists who steal our jobs using quotas and spread hate against their own people.(Pusyamitra Sunga 12:13, 10 July 2006 (UTC))

He should thank the secular ethos..that allowed him to read RigVeda back to back and hark of the Hindu Glory

Shivaji was not a Brahmin. He read all four Vedas. Rabindranath Tagore was not a Brahmin, yet he knew excellent Sanskrit. How does THAT gel with your lies, Shri "Advani" Jee? 'Secular ethos'. Yeah, right. LOL! What a joke! No Uniform Civil Code, special prefernce to Dalits and muslims. What secular ethos? Secuarism in India is a fraud.(Pusyamitra Sunga 12:13, 10 July 2006 (UTC))

THe ideas expressed by him is similar to the generation of Communalists who are hell bent on their revisionist agenda


why have the lower Hindus created organisations which decry Hindu society why?



Why? I'll bloody tell you why. The same reason why muslims created hundreds of anti-semitic and anti-Hindu websites on the internet. Hatred, pure and simple. Specific to the dalit supremacists and their "Chamaar Nation" horsecrap, we're talking about Self-Hatred, such as a self loathing Hindu like yourself, bhai. A login of LK Advani and still a self-hating Hindu. What a tragedy you are. YOu want to hate us? go ahead, hate us. Theoughout the centuries we have been hated by muslims. Not a day has gone by when they didn;t digest their dinner without housting a few drinks and attacking Hindus on the streets, it gave meaning to so many of them...

Enjoy yourself. At this point we are sufficiently powerful and well-connected to not care if fringe element nutjobs hate us.

Here are some links for you. Now our enemies may quiver in fear in the face of our newfound ally:

http://peace.heebz.com/india.html http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=10445

http://www.forward.com/issues/2004/04.01.16/living1.html http://www.indojudaic.com/index.htm http://www.hinduunity.org/jewsofindia.html http://www.indojudaic.com/Lecture_Topics/lecturehindujewish.html http://www.fisiusa.org/fisi_News_items/Sharon_2003/sharon_000.htm http://www.saag.org/papers2/paper131.html

I'll say one thing. Your screed against your own people, this self-hatred that you ahow, is robably related more to your ignorance of Hinduism than anything else. Your misguided perception of muslims being some sort of 'opressed underclass' gels with the dialectic materialism of Karl Marx. Understand this, my friend. Secularism IS NOT A PREREQUISITE FOR DEMOCRACY! USA and Israel have proved that. The world is shifting towards faith-based governments like neo-conservatives and Likud/Kadima . If Hindus don't do that, we will be wiped out by muslims in a massive genocide (think they'll spare you? Think again). Being a low caste hindu is way better then being a Dhimmi or Kaffir. Don;t believe me? Ask the Hindus presently being hunted to extinction in Pakistan, or Bangladesh, or a kashmiri pandit. Or the Ba'haii Jews assaulted and murdered on the streets of Tehran, or Christians in Saudi Arabia, or anyone who is not a muslim in an Islamic Country. (Pusyamitra Sunga 11:49, 10 July 2006 (UTC))

SUBHASH BOSE Edits

User Boss has added following personal POV while at the same time deleting reference to Gujarat Riots in a previous edit saying it was unrelated and a Leftist propoganda.

.....). However, most enquiry reports in India fail to satisfy all the parties.In retaliation, Muslim mafia, principally the D-Gang operated by Dawood Ibrahim Khaskar, the Konkanni Muslim and acolyte of former Mafia don Haji Mastan, staged a simultaneous, multiple bomb attacks in Bombay using RDX and whose toll is also not finally set. See 1993 Mumbai bombings.

Admin should keep an eye on his changes please.He should be made to cite mainstream media as an authentic source and not the Sangh Parivar

Rushdie 10:24, 6 July 2006 (UTC)

Admins should also watch terrorist-sympathizers spreading hate on wikipedia. The Gujarat riots are a separate event, both in space and in time, and are only related to the great repatriation of the Ramjanmabhoomi through a leftist and/or islamofascist lens. Plus, the affiliations of Ibrahim with Islamic fundamentalists and their actions is extremely relevant to the article, as the Mumbai riots and subsequent terrorist bombings by muslims were a direct consequence of the great repatriation.
That having said, I'm glad you chose not to engage in a revert war, and extend to you my thanks. A revert war would be grossly unproductive. Thus, I'm prepared to read your POV with an open and neutral mind.
Mr Rushdie (an odd login, for Salman Rushdie was more critical of Islamic fundamentalism than Ali Sina) should know that no news media is completely objective, and ALL points of view must be presented without bias (I have not let my opinions taint the article so far). If you wish to present BBC links describing the timeline of the great repatriation, then you may. You may, of course, add the All India Babri Masjid committee. I will also add (with 3rd party information as support) that the Babri Masjid Committee has received monies from Saudi Sheiks connected to the bin-Laden family, as well as from Hezbollah, a cabal of mass murderers, and Lashkar-e-Toiba. I will be monitoring the article. If you choose to delete any NPOV sections and insert fundamentalist propaganda, I will be the first to know.(Netaji 11:05, 6 July 2006 (UTC))
        • OK, Young physicist - Gujarat was unrelated while Dawood Ibrahim is related to Babri issue.Alors! BBC is just another media with bias..taken..Could you elaborate your personal POV above with any newslink please (Non Hindutva).Fundamentalists of all hues get monies from somewhere and by the way..the VHP is raking good sums from UK and US [1].If Saudis finance the BMAC it is nothing great...(though one can question the basis of your facts)BMAC has not to date incited people to violence or hatred as the Sangh Parivar has been flagrantly doing.

Oh yes, I like Rushdie [2] Rushdie 11:34, 6 July 2006 (UTC)

You're a strange sort of muslim. Didn't the Ayatollah pass a fatwa against him, demanding that all muslims (including you) kill him immediately? That's why I love Rushdie. He had balls of steel to stand up to Islam.(Netaji 00:32, 7 July 2006 (UTC))
  • Yes, Dawood Ibrahim is related, and because he is a muslim. Islamic doctrine says that all muslims are obliged to attack anyone perceived as the 'enemies of Islam'. No such crap in any Hindu scripture. Thus, the actions of two independent events perpetrated by Hindus are unrelated, whereas that of muslims of the same denomination that are even peripherally connected to each other are important and need mentioning.

The BBC, like any media source, has bias in some form. However, like I said, you may put it in if you want WITHOUT DELETING ANYTHING. You think you're tough? You ain't seen nothin' yet bubba.

Plus, it's not just Saudis who finance BMAC, it's terrorists. There are financial links to the BMAC which, if the BMAC was in the US, would have the whole lot of them thrown in Guantanamo Bay. All muslims incite violence. When they read the Quaran it incites violence, because the Quran incites violence. The BMAC members read the Quran in their sessions, don't they? That's violence, right there. Now what? Are you going to bomb me for typing that? (Netaji 11:42, 6 July 2006 (UTC))

      • I wont comment on the statements that you have marked - the reason you are on Wikipedia are all clear.However could you elaborate on the terrorism charges with a non Sangh site or article.

Rushdie 11:57, 6 July 2006 (UTC) 11:56, 6 July 2006 (UTC)

Can you please extend the same courtesy to yourself of I will write your own words "WITHOUT DELETING ANYTHING".

Rushdie 11:59, 6 July 2006 (UTC)

Here's one, for starters. http://arunshourie.voiceofdharma.com/articles/20020318.htm
    • Arun Shourie was a BJP Cabinet Minister - if I am not wrong.BJP is Sangh Parivar
    • Operative being 'was'. Romila Thapar is a self-professed Marxist. Here in free America, that get's you to Gitmo Bay (Netaji 00:28, 7 July 2006 (UTC))
And before you start whining, Arun Shourie is an academic, historian and political analyst. He is not affiliated to the Sangh Parivaar, nor is he paid by any partisan group to present his research. Plus, the site linked is not financially affiliated with any Hindu group (or any Indian group, for that matter; it's based off of Brussels).

Here's more: http://www.rediff.com/news/2000/dec/19arvind.htm

      • Arvind is a commentator and not a news reporter - nowhere is it mentioned that BMAC got terrorist funds??

http://www.experiencefestival.com/a/Babri_Mosque_-_The_Ayodhya_Debate/id/1295615

      • Circular reference - Check the last line of Experience festival site:

Adapted from the Wikipedia article "The Ayodhya Debate", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki


It is clear that the BMAC holds a hardline position on this issue, so much so that even OTHER MUSLIMS, like Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi and Asghar Ali Engineer disagree with them (now that's a doozy, they must be really crazy if even muslims get scared by them). Also, bear in mind that elemens in the Sangh Parivaar have suggested that the masjid be re-built side-by-side with the Ramjanmabhoomi mandir, but did the muslims agree? Nooooooooo. It's 'haraam' to coexist with infidels in any way, shape or form. Either convert them or kill them ,right Janaab? (Netaji 12:13, 6 July 2006 (UTC))

      • Naqvi is a minority Shia if he is a Muslim and as per his sect it is possible for them to do "Taqiyyah" - to collaborate.Seocndly - Asghar Ali Engineer has never endorsed giving away the mosque.He is a harsh critic of Sangh Parivar.[3][4][5][6][7][8]

and you can obviously write to him through http://www.csss-isla.com/

        • Taqiyyah doesn't mean "collaborate" Janaab. It means "duplicity", and is a well-known ethnocentric canard against Shia muslims (like in the nice tea party presently going on in Iraq). So, let's see. You hate Hindus, Shia muslims, (preubmably) Jews also. wow, and I thought Wahabis were loonies! You have more chips on your shoulder than the Mahdi, mate.(Netaji 02:14, 7 July 2006 (UTC))
Call me stupid (must be a godless infidel Hindu thing I guess) but I didn't understand the last sentence of your post. (Netaji 12:06, 6 July 2006 (UTC))

Ya - Last line - Read your comments again - "However, like I said, you may put it in if you want WITHOUT DELETING ANYTHING. You think you're tough? You ain't seen nothin' yet bubba"

DID YOU FOLLOW YOURSELF WHAT YOU ARE ASKING OTHERS TO DO? HAVE YOU NOT REMOVED A LARGE PART OF THE ARTICLE AND EVEN WRITTEN YOUR OWN POV on the part "History According to the Muslims" Rushdie 15:38, 6 July 2006 (UTC)

No, I put the muslim POV below the hindu one. This is so because the muslim pov starts out by criticizing the hindu POV, thus making it logically inconsistent for the muslim one to come first. Plus, the muslim POV part was strife with hate-speech against hindus and unsubstantiated, as well as unreferences stuff, which I have removed. The bit I have added is well-references from an article written by Koenraad Elst, who is neither Indian nor Hindu, but is a Belgian scholar of Indian studies. Sorry, my friend. Now go join Hezbollah. They'll like you there.(Netaji 15:42, 6 July 2006 (UTC))
For instance:
"They say that it prove that the Hindu militants believe in "bloodshed and manslaughter" as a means to achieve their goals"
Is unsubstantiated. Hindutva charter clearly states "Harm no creature, but if they attack you, fight back"
"since the killing of Sikhs after the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi"
Is irrelevant, since the Sikh riots were perpetrated by Congress sympathizers, and has nothing to do with :the VHP.
"gangs of karsevaks"
Is biased, kar-sevaks don't form gangs. How'd you like it if someone said "gangs of Hamas members"?
shouting 'Jai Shri Ram'
Is irrelevant. So they were shouting stuff. Not unlike "Allahu-Akbar", is it?
"These communities speak of how the Muslims of the town supplied the wood used to build the temples of the :Hindus and grew flowers to string around the necks of the gods and goddesses (Dutas and Devis)."
Yeah, right. And I'm a 23000-year old Buddhist Vampire. Show proof.
"Secondly, this idea of relocating could be considered only in the case of grave necessity and not the whims and fancies of any community that has hegemonous mentality and claims from three to thirty thousands more mosques as being built on destroyed Hindu temples."
Is obvious POV
"fantasize on other Muslim heritage coming up with a story on birth of their dieties, places of their marriage or their death and claim those Muslim monuments as their own."
Bad grammar. I prefer grammatically correct hate-speech, don't you? There is absolutely no proof of this allegation specifically. Maybe in a general sense, but the specificity is wrong, POV, biased, and hate-speech against Hindus. Notice that there is no hate-speech against muslims in my edits.(Netaji 15:53, 6 July 2006 (UTC))

Regarding the version that 64.* and 128.* keep reverting to, here are my issues with it

  1. As far as I know, the clear identification of the structure beneath the Babri ruins has not been confirmed as a Hindu temple, and certainly not as a Rama Janmabhoomi temple. While I believe, and you might believe, that this structure was in fact a Rama Janmabhoomi temple destroyed by Babar, while definititive evidence is lacking it remains an allegation, and we must state it as such. Of course, you might know more than I about the matter - could you provide sources demonstrating that the structure is, in fact, a Rama janmabhoomi temple?
  2. Regarding the appearance of idols, they did not "mysteriously appear", they were placed there by activists. I don't know why we should avoid saying this. Also, it certainly wasn't disused - there were Muslim prayer services being conducted there at the time, and quibbling by Koenraad Elst et al. about what qualifies it as a fully-functional mosque does not mitigate this fact.
  3. I'd like to equivocate more on the actual destruction... I don't think there's definitive proof that it was pre-planned. However, the version presented, where you ascribe motives to the crowd (i.e., "anger at ... pandering to the Muslim vote bank") are wholly indefensible.
  4. In general your presentation is highly partisan. If you wish to make the article -less- partisan, please do so - your changes are egregiously pro-Sangh and not appropriate. E.g., the last statement "These findings were promptly rejected by the Communists and other political parties which depend on the Muslim vote bank." is certainly clearly partisan.

Please let me know what you think of these points... I hope we can work together to make this a better article. Graft 18:58, 21 Oct 2003 (UTC)

On the points made by Graft

First of all, my view is not pro-Sangh or anti-Sangh or pro-Muslim or anything of that sort. I am interested in posting things in a scientific manner. On the points you made and some more new points:

1) The structure beneath the Babri ruins HAS been confirmed as a Hindu temple. Like it or not, it has happened. The excavations were overseen by all parties involved and once the confirmation happened, the same political parties which were eagerly supporting the excavations suddenly condemned the excavations.

2) "mysteriously appear" includes being placed there by activist/activists. Obviously, it had to be placed there. "mysteriously appear" means it was placed there. By whom we do not know. "mysteriously appear" also captures the fact that the discovery of placement came as a surprise.

Notice your biases here - going by your argument, we should add the word 'allegedly' before "placed by activists." Your points against Hindus are all assertions while the points which are grievances by Hindus are made as 'allegations.'

3) The mosque was disused. In fact, there was no one on the Muslim side who could claim ownership in a court of law. The only arguments made in court that it was not disused was a claim by a politician that he once saw one person praying there many years ago while going on a walk. Clearly, you do not understand the politics in India.

4) "However, the version presented, where you ascribe motives to the crowd (i.e., "anger at ... pandering to the Muslim vote bank") are wholly indefensible."

You point is well taken. I will delete it. I should not have added that part, but the crowd did go out of control and was angry at the police for barricading them. It was a motley crowd and you cannot say they were VHP activists.

5) "These findings were promptly rejected by the Communists and other political parties which depend on the Muslim vote bank." is certainly clearly partisan.

Come on, this is a fact. RSS itself originated as a reaction to pandering of Muslims (check out separate electorates for Muslims during British times.)

I am not sure how familiar you are with the politics of India, but BJP rode to power on these issues - scrapping of special status for the only Muslim majority state in India and treating all states as equal, scrapping of Shariat laws for Muslims (in particular, Muslim women are persecuted by Mullahs ruling in disputes, Shah Bano case was the flashpoint), Muslim educational institutions receiving subsidies while Hindus in India are banned from running educational institutions, all revenues from Hindu temples being appropriated by the Government which then subsidise Madrasas and of course the issue at Ayodhya.

6) Of the above, everyone of them is a legitimate issue except Ayodhya. I explain Ayodhya below in point number 7. Anyone with common sense will see that political parties indulge in unequal treatment only for getting votes. Anyone familiar with India will know that Muslims voting en-masse on the orders of the Mullah in the mosque is a reality and that is why Muslims were appeased.

7) Ayodhya was not a legitimate issue because it should not be legislated by politicians. It should be treated purely as a legal dispute and evidence should be seen in a scientific manner. Politicians should have kept off completely. However, no political party in India thought on these lines. I don't blame them for it. They are not highly educated people to figure out that it was a legal issue to begin with.

8) The part about LK Advani pleading in city after city that Hindus and Muslims should jointly shift the structure brick by brick and he will get the Hindus to fund for it is a fact.

You should stop stringing together allegations and writing up an article. That is the hallmark of a poor journalist. That is an indirect way of sneaking in POVs. Please don't be biased. It is bad enough that India has been devastated repeatedly by all the known forms of unlibertarian groups - Christianity, Islam, Marxism, Socialists, Colonialists and indirectly by Pax Americana advocates who supported Osama bin Laden and Mujahideen.

OTOH, it has been unique in not seeing any anti-semitism and has welcomed people of all religions into its fold. When Parsis were persecuted, they came to India. When Jews were persecuted, they came to India and settled down. Syrian Christians found a home in India and when Tibetans were beaten out by Communists, they came to India too.

Choosing Communist sources and giving them prominence is unacceptable. Please desist from it.

9) I suggest you do proper research and you will see that the first recorded flareup was in the 19th century, and so was the first case filed in court. The British judge actually ruled that a temple had been destroyed but he felt helpless and could not restore it as it would upset the public order.

10) Your point on posting references is well taken. I'll do that too in addition to deleting the reference to the reason for anger by the crowd as pandering to Muslim votes. I read your comment after posting it. That is why you don't find it already in place.

Forgot to add in my previous comment

I forgot to add one point. Notice the way you describe Rama as a mythical figure. That was an assertion. Would you make the same assertion regarding Jesus, Mohammed flying on a horse etc? I don't see you making such corrections there in an assertive tone. Clearly that shows your prejudices.

Observing Hindus around the world, I see that they do not strap themselves with explosives and blast themselves in public places, do not hijack planes and slam them into buildings and do not wage religious wars. I can only conclude that the allegations against Hindus being the most evil people on earth is fiction.


Okay, I thank you for engaging me, and having done so I'm far more willing to tolerate your alterations. Some points:
I have two main sources of information on Ayodhya: one is the books and literature of the Sangh and Hindutva crowd, and the other is the Internet and Indian newspapers. Both of these have their biases, and not residing in India I must admit I have a hard time distilling out the truth. So please forgive me if I attribute something that you feel is clearly untrue, because it's probably simply a mistake or ignorance on my part.
As to actual points: "mysteriously appeared" I dislike because it plays into the stories that this was a God-ordained event or some sort of miracle. I've read that there was a police report confirming the identity of the man who placed the idols, and Anand Patwardhan in one of his (admittedly biased) documentaries interviews a man who claims to be the placer (i forget if he had the same name)... at any rate, I'd at least like to include "probably placed by Hindu activists" or, as you say, "allegedly placed".
I found an article on the latest excavations in Organiser, which I find fairly compelling, but I'd be interested in reading objections to it just to know what they were.
Regarding use of the mosque, I've read arguments saying that it was disused, but I think these arguments mostly hinge on what "disused" means. I've only really read one side of this argument, but on the other side, there's testimony that namaaz was conducted until 1949 and an imam responsible for the site until the placing of the statue. Not sure about how reliable either is.
Regarding the Communist/pandering - I really don't know whether Muslims vote on the word of mullahs or if that's just a myth, not really having any way to verify that, but in any event I think the juxtaposition is there just to discredit the communists, et al, which I think should be avoided.
Regarding Advani - I'd like to be careful about describing him. He's a politician and a slippery one, and he certainly says a lot of things in public, but there are just as many reports of things he did and said not-so-publicly that belie his noble intentions, and I can certainly believe it. I don't think we should be drawing him as some guy who was just trying to do the right thing by everyone... his motives were most definitely cynical.
As to non-article-related stuff... I don't agree that Ayodhya is a legal issue - first of all, who are the parties? And secondly, it's about a historical site, and a major, significant one (obviously) - the government has to take a hand.
Also, I describe Rama as a mythical figure because he's a mythical figure, like Oddysseus or Moses. His importance is more in his symbolic meaning and actions than in his historical context, which is dubious at best.
Anyway, thanks again for responding to my points. Graft 06:58, 22 Oct 2003 (UTC)

Agree about mythical figure but...

I agree about the mythical figure part. My theory about all of these figures is that there must have been someone somewhere with some small following and the followers built up fiction about these figures. My point is the unequal treatment of various religions - Christianity and Judaism is usually treated as history while assertions about the "mythical" nature of other religions is made. I have heard the term "Hindu mythology" but never "Christian mythology."

BTW, Organiser is a mouthpiece of RSS and Anand Patwardhan is a known Communist sympathiser. However, the piece about the evidence at Ayodhya must have been a good one because the facts are on their side.

Unfortunately, India's media as well as academics were controlled by the Communists until the 1990s when the stranglehold on the academia was broken. That is why everything is very contentious in India - Aryan Invasion Theory was made up by Max Mueller, a missionary who fitted it into the claim that Biblical creation occured around 3987 BCE, treatment of all events as class struggles (Hindu vs Muslim fits into this), hiding of Muslim atrocities - travel across North India and not a single temple which is undamaged is older than 150 years though the civilization is 1000s of years old while South India which escaped Islamic rule has very old temples in all their splendour, branding Hindus as evil - evidence shows the contrary, indians are peaceful people who welcomed people of other religions over the ages while they themselves never fought back when they were evicted by Idi Amin, by the dictators in Burma and even puny Fiji.

To let you know where I'm coming from, I am an agnost and a libertarian. I've created a new id - LibertarianAnarchist for convenience. I am still learning the format to make an entry. So pardon me if you find anything incomplete. I'll post the references you suggested.

That is a whole heap of hippy gibberish. Indians most certainly did stike back, and first at times. I'm not ecven going to get into this. You appear to have been tainted by BJP VHP propaganda.
And you by muslim mullahs and terrorists like bin-Laden, as well as white Christian supremacists like David Duke and Pat Robertson. RSS is here to stay. Get used to it, or go live in Iran and see what they do to you there.(Pusyamitra Sunga 06:57, 8 July 2006 (UTC))

Temple evidence

OneGuy, are you being deliberately obtuse? The previous paragraph contains text that clearly states that the Archaeological Survey of India found evidence of a temple structure. It's inappropriate for you to insert a paragraph that says "no evidence has been found", in direct contradiction of the previous paragraph. Edit it so it is in line with the above text, fine, but the way it's written is absurd. Graft 19:18, 23 Dec 2004 (UTC)

No, you are being obtuse. You implied in the article that only Muslims dispute the finding of this Archaeological Survey. That's not the case. The ASI report was published in 2003. This quote from a non-Muslim historian is dated at May 2004, so clearly "Muslim groups" are not the only ones who dispute the claim. And here is another review of ASI report by Dr Sushil Shrivastava, a Professor at Allahabad University, the author of the book The Disputed Mosque: A Historical Inquiry[9]. Clearly some experts think ASI report doesn't show evidence of Temple structure OneGuy 00:50, 24 Dec 2004 (UTC)

I have no objection to you altering that sentence about "only Muslims"; I have no attachment to it, it's obviously inaccurate. But do so in a manner that isn't wholly at odds with the flow of the article. Having flatly contradictory sentences in subsequent paragraphs is just silly. Graft 07:44, 24 Dec 2004 (UTC)


The edits done on 15 and 16 January deleted prior information and added POV material. We are all trying to be NPOV on wikipedia, so let's have a fair representation of both sides. This demands some effort and good will from both sides.

Furthermore, there are some severe inaccuracies. For example, there is the following instance: "Richard M Eaton, an American historian of medieval India, in his Essays on Islam and Indian History documents desecration of all Hindu temples between 1192 and 1760. The total adds up to 80."

This is ridiculous. First of all, Eaton in his controversial book does not claim that this list is exhaustive. And, if we look at the list of eighty cases, there is for example this instance: “1094: Benares, Ghurid army”. This doesn't mean the Ghurid Army destroyed just one temple, because if we take the time to look at the sources he used, we read the Ghurid royal army “destroyed nearly one thousand temples, and raised mosques on their foundations”. So this "eigthty" neeeds some zeros added.

Here are some links, for reference:


--Kdlb 21:13, 16 Jan 2005 (UTC)


If you are Disputing this article then for Gods Sake tell us what you are disputing

None of the edits by Lalit Shastri quotes Richard M Eaton, so I don't know why you bring him into this discussion. Regarding a Personal Point of View, why do you bring that up here - Instead of using hackneyed cliques kindly give specific examples where we have violated our strict neutrality or shut up.

The edits made, represent a brief and factual account of the events at Ayhodya when the Mosque was destroyed the sources quoted are Time magazine journalists Jefferson Penberthy and Anita Pratap - These journalists are quoted by name as they are considered credible witnesses by the High Court of Allahabad where they gave evidence against LK Advani who faces crimnal charges.

Many other witnesses were present and amongst the journalists there. The BBC crew filmed the destruction and part of the narrative is from the BBC news team. We are grateful to Syed Naqi Editor of India's leading newspaper the Tribune for also describing the events. A personal friend of Lilit Shastri, Rahul Bajpai of Reuters was also assigned to cover Ahyodya and the mosque since 1990. The narrative is taken from these sources and you can contact them to confirm.

Also quoted on the myth of a Hindu temple being there are Professor Gopal head of Social Sciences & history at the Jawharlal Nehru University and son of Dr Radhakrisnan President of India, & Romilla Thapar Historian of Ancient India also from the JUNU. Romilla Thapar is advisor to the Govt of India on Ancient Indian history and is amongst a panel which overseas the content of textbooks in Indian Schools.

We have also taken the point of view of the VHP, RSS and the BJP all complicit destroying the Temple and have described the behavior of their leaders Uma Bharati and LK Advani who encouraged the mob from a podium constructed by the VHP so that their leadershp could witness the destruction.

However if there are those who disagree it goes without saying you can bring your points to this discussion but remember there are highly intelligent academics who lurk watching these pages - So please do not bring rubbish - But pearls of wisdom and knowledge are always welcome by almost everybody

Also It must be remembered this is not a Hindu - Muslim thing - We at Wikipedia are more enlightened than that - Racism, Bigotry, Obscurantism, ignorance and superstition are to be shunned by all men of wisdom

We do not care if it was a mosque or Temple although the historians who have any credibility Internationally say that there was no Temple.

We do care about the people slaughtered by the actions of those in India who try and spread communal strife, It is worth remembering during the rule of the RSS and its political wing the BJP twice more people died of communal violence in India then those that died in the Twin Towers.

User:81.1.123.238

This article you have written is clearly written to advance a specific point of view; that is, that the BJP, VHP, etc., are violent thugs, historical evidence is not on their side, and so on. The article avoids mentioning facts that contradict this thesis - for example, it neglects to mention the use of police violence by the UK government in defending the site. It neglects to mention (even dismissively) evidence contradicting the idea that there was no temple beneath the mosque (e.g. the Archaeological Survey of India findings). It uses phrases like "murderous gangs" to describe kar sevaks, which is highly POV. Etc., etc.
Gentlemen, you MUST acknowledge your own point of view. It is obvious you are writing this because you wish to present a certain picture of events, and that is NOT the purpose of Wikipedia. If you would like to create a neutral, balanced article, then we have a starting point from which to work. Your version of the article is not that. No matter how sympathetic I or other editors may be to the substance of what you wish to say, the manner in which you have constructed this article is terribly inappropriate for Wikipedia. Graft 20:52, 17 Jan 2005 (UTC)
As this is the Talk page, let me express my opinion about the destruction of the mosque and the associated politics. I remember watching the BBC and other sources on the day of the demolition. I think it is extremely regrettable that major places of worship in India can be demolished by mob action, with a complacent, even complicit government. I was happily surprised that matters did not deteriorate to full anarchy when the BJP took power, the first non-secular government since independance. Without secular government in India, I fear the nation is doomed to a bloodbath of communal violence. I believe the BJP and it's allies instigated and exploited the entire disgraceful affair, but then backed off a radical Hindu agenda after achieving political ascendancy, because it knew that result of not backing off would be civil war. Now, regarding the history of the site: Although not proven beyond all doubt, I think it is possible that Babur demolished a Temple and then built the Mosque on top of it. It was in fact unusual for Muslim conquerers to leave untouched any non-Abrahamic temple or related institution, which they considered idolatrous and blasphemous, especially in the early years of the Mogul conquest. This, if true, in no way justifies the destruction, which was a cultural catastrophe for all Indians regardless of their background, as many prominent secular Hindus have pointed out. Furthermore, this is an article about the Mosque itself. I don't think we should get too bogged down with the politics and the controversy surrounding the origins of the site. That is why I added pictures and started the section dealing with architecture and style, and was very pleased to see it expanded. A brief description of opposing points of view, along with a narrative of relevant Indian judicial proceedings and the current status quo, ought to be a sufficient and neutral companion to the more central content that actually deals with the building itself. --A. S. A. 11:15, Jan 18, 2005 (UTC)
Thank you for your scintillating post. If you read the many works of renown scholar Daniel Pipes, he will demonstrate quite logically that democracy and secularism do not necessarily go hand in hand. Israel and the US are more succesful democracies than India. Israel is a Jewish State and US is a Christian one. Thus, a democratic Hindu Rashtra is implementable without the removal of muslims from India (which would be ridiculous anyway, there are 130 million of them, too many to be forcibly removed). That does not mean that the RamJanmabhoomi was not a legitimate act of repatriation. It was, just like the temple Mount in Israel.(Netaji 23:32, 6 July 2006 (UTC))
Netaji, who's in RamJanmabhoomi's name told you that the US is a christian state
The Ten Commandments outside courts, the state sponsored churches, the right wing voted into power.Christian State. Simple.Plus, BJP/NDA was WAAAAY more democratic and progressive than Congress/UPA. BJP passed the "Prasaar Bharati" law, requiring media to be independent of government. Shiv Sena built more flyovers in Mumbai in 10 years than Congress did in 50. Who cares if we are a 'socialist and secular' state when we are a stinking pile of feces compared to most countries in the world? I'd rather have a non-secular and PROSPEROUS country than a secular and hopeless one. Congress/UPA bans websites, books and movies, practices caste based politics and allows muslims to beat their women half to death as per Sharia Law. Some democracy, what a sick joke!Netaji 05:11, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
Please note that I was drawn to this page by curiosity or by accident (Wiki is featuring an article about mosques and that's how I got here), now back to our topic, I will expand further. The US state (and please note the word STATE not personal agendas or religious driven politics) is SECULAR accroding to its constitution and STRICTLY enforces the separation between the church and state, the US STATE (I'm not talking here about GWB neither the religious right) doesn't endorse a religion nor favors a certain religion over the other http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_church#States_without_any_state_religion. Regarding the ten commandments monuments, please note the supreme court ruling has rendered them constitutional on the basis that they convey historical message rather than religious (if they were ruled religious, they would have been removed, make no doubt about that). Also, if you followed the ID/evolution debate, you can see that courts have ruled that ID cannot be taught at schools because it introduces religion (precisely it advances a certain religious point of view) into class and hence it violates the constitution. Bottom line, the US IS NOT a christian state because it's not defined as such by the its consitituion, nor its courts.
Hindu scriptures also convey historical messages along the same lines, yet I don't see shlokas from the Rigveda (the foundation of our civilization) or from the Upanishads displayed anywhere in the Indian Supreme Court. The fact remains that the media and the courts can cook up whatever pseudo-justification all they want. US law is based on biblical law, US government is christian government, non-christians have no political representation of significance, yet christians do. The ten-commandments is part of Judeo-Christian RELIGION. To incorporate those laws into the system means USA is run by CHRISTIAN LAW. Christian churches ARE built on state peoperty, and Americans in the overwhelming majority want more christian laws incorporated into their legal system. The pledge says "One Nation under GOD" quite clearly (though it did not originally). The founders of the US wanted it to be a secular state, but Americans today do not. Today, America is no more secular than Zimbabwe. It is a great illusion to claim that secularism is synonymous with democracy, and that is the lie that JNU brainwashing-machines^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Htextbooks won't tell you. ID/evolution has nothing to do with this.Netaji
It's very true about Judeo-christian hertiage and its influence on american public, but to say that the US is a christian state is technically incorrect. I'm not arguing whether secularism is compatible with democracy or not. Have a nice day.
Technically USA is not Christian state but it is a de-facto Christian state.Thanks for your points.Netaji 18:49, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
you're fast, I just made some adjustments, thank you again.
PLus, India today is a de-facto Islamic state, with an apartheid system against Hindus. Get ready to be bombed by America soon. Have a nice day.Netaji 19:45, 30 July 2006 (UTC)

Hello AladdinSE, Thanks for your good edits. Personally, until recently I didn't know very much about this debate, and I am still rather an outsider to this topic, that's why I won't contribute much to the article itself.

I think, the whole topic could have been solved more peacefully, if both parties had talked together, but unfortunately the whole thing was exploited by politicians on both sides.

As a sidenote, not all Muslims seem to adher to the views of the two "rivaling Masjid Committees", for example: Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi said: "It is the duty of every nationalist Indian to protect the birthplace of Lord Rama to save India's honour, prestige and cultural heritage.... Anti-national and communal activities of Muslim fundamentalists are a blot on the entire community... It is the duty of all nationalist Muslims to expose such designs and accept the truth." Ahmed Zakaria is quoted by Farzana Versey as saying : "There is absolutely no question of our identity being submerged. The Babri Masjid committee does not represent all Muslims. How can two or three people decide ?"

Some of the problems in the article are: 1) Political debate. Still biased. Should also show the efforts that were made to solve the whole thing peacefully, and how this was undone by politicians. 2) Archaeological evidence. This is still biased and incomplete. 3) Literary evidence. The literary evidence should be discussed and/or criticised 4) The article has a lenghty discussion with pictures of the destruction of the mosque, but doesn't discuss the destruction of this and other temples by Babar and others. According to some sources, there were two destructions of this temple, one in the 12-13 century (the temple was after rebuilt) and one by Babar.

I think the article still needs some editing before it can be called npov, and believe someone will remove it from the npov disputes after this is done. A look at the viewpoints from both sides will confirm that the article still isn't npov. Regards, --Kdlb 09:50, 20 Jan 2005 (UTC)


Kdlb, I think your Eaton book edit was necessary and well placed. As far as the further discussion of alleged destruction of temples by Babur and others, that you want included, naturally there is going to be no where near as much material, much less pictures, as is available for the Babri destruction. We're talking 1992 versus the 16th century. Also, that the archeological evidence is incomplete and disputed is clearly noted in the article. Further discussion of literary evidence would be fine, if more contributors would site such work. When I did that last exhaustive edit, I deliberately left the Disputed Neutrality tag, because I believed that there was still bias and emotionalism evident, and was hoping new contributors with a fresh outlook would help remedy that. Perhaps I will revisit the article later. I have become too involved with all these extensive rewrites, and I need to regain an outside perspective.--A. S. A. 12:06, Jan 20, 2005 (UTC)

I think we need to put a hold on more pictures, the article cannot hold any more, al least not gracefully. I removed the recent addition of the mobs at the gate, since kar sevaks are shown in abundance already. I have reverted a number of Levy's edits because they added an emotional POV taint to the article, and belabored existing points. Others I agreed with, and simply reorganized them to better incorporate the new information with the flow of the article.--A. S. A. 18:30, Feb 4, 2005 (UTC)

I see that anonymous user 81.1.118.31 had profound objections to my last revision, but has since withdrawn his/her Talk comments, I was only able to read them via History tracking. I'll tell you what I told Levy. I am not here to champion a cause, I am here to help create a proper encyclopedic article, free from emotional POV baggage. I have already clearly stated for the record that I believe the demolition was a disgrace. That does not mean I will allow the article to be a monotonous breast-beating Muslim-dominated propaganda bulletin. And I'll have you know I was the first contributor to introduce a picture of the Mosque, and the first to introduce a section on architecture and style [see history], so I am not only an editor of other people's submissions. Furthermore, you harm your cause by being so blatantly repetitious and one-sided. The general public reading the heavily POV versions of this article will more likely than not give small credence to Muslim viewpoints when they are so relentlessly thrust in their faces without proper recourse to other viewpoints. Balance and brevity should be our guiding principles.--A. S. A. 21:23, Feb 4, 2005 (UTC)

Picture sizes

Pictures of this mosque should not be resized a large part of the article is on the architecture of the mosque The present pictures support and complement the article. I have recverted them back to their original size. I also wish to point out 5that Kaal feels uncomfortable with these pictures as I can see no other reason why he should try to make them so tiny.

  • It is really unfair on your part to talk about what i feel like, bcos you will never be able to tell unless you know me in person, and i am fairly sure you dont. About the pictures i only resized them as the article looks really ugly and is difficult to read. If anyone wants to look at the picture indetail they can always click on it to see the full image. I have been doing image resizing for a number of articles just to make them easy to read and for no other reason. Its always good to have images on one side of the article as this makes it look good and easy to follow. kaal 04:49, 7 Mar 2005 (UTC)
Picture resolutions can be reduced and made into thumbnails in the main articles for the purpose of organizational optimization. Those pictures really were too big. Don't forget that readers can easily click on the thumbnails to see the full size. What's more, please assume good faith regarding fellow editors. The attack against Kaal was unecessary. Also, please sign your posts in the talk page, so other editors can properly track and respond to posts, thanks. --A. S. A. 07:18, Mar 7, 2005 (UTC)

Please see Wikipedia's Picture Tutorial for guidelines on picture layout and format.--A. S. A. 03:05, Mar 9, 2005 (UTC)

Organisation of the article

I made some expansions to the article and some reorganisations. I moved all matter relevant to the archaeology of the temple to the Ram Janmabhoomi article, because it discusses the existence or non-existence of the temple. Most of the history of the mosque after 1528 (or after 1194) is now in the Babri Mosque article. The Ayodhya article itself should of course only discuss the city, not the debate. I also expanded the archaeology and literature and other sections. In fact, a lot of important information was missing in the article and may still be missing. Hopefully other editors (like User:AladdinSE who has been one of the best editors to this article, as far as I can see) take a look at it and write something from their perspective. --Kyuss 14:09, 22 July 2005 (UTC)


Beware the Original Article was sabotaged by user Kyuss

As a original contributor to this article along with J Levy and Richard Charlesworth of Cambridge University and the mosque photographs by R Bajpai of Reuters, I feel entitled to point out. User Kyuss seems to be a rabid member of the RSS, I wish to point out that his self proclaimed well meaning edits are simply a hidden agenda, the destruction of an article put together many months ago, and then constantly editeds to render it almost meaningless. It is clear user Kyuss fancies himself an historian and editor – However his facts are wrong and his edits clumsy. But this is wikipedia and he is most welcome to contribute even though we waste a lot of time having to point out the errors of his ways and cleaning up his mess. However his work on the article may not be the innocence of the ignorant and uninformed. He might be a paid up member of a communal organization called the RSS as he has expressed a similar type of bigotry and follows the RSS party line and version of Indian history. This version has been proved a fiction by all leading Indian and International historians. We know he has very little knowledge of history from his work – but sometimes a little knowledge can be a dangerous thing. His edits do not enlighten, spread darkness hate and misinformation. User Kyuss’s dirty hand is everywhere trying to distort history. If he wishes to write about a temple let him set up his own Ram temple article. The Babri was one of India's leading mosques and an important archeological and historic monument. The mosque was part of India's heritage and history. After all the Muslims did rule India for 800 years. The article is about a mosque which existed as the photographs will testify. If there was a temple at the site then all means start an article elsewhere giving details of the temple and say it existed before the mosque But please do not distort history. And also abuse the intelligence of wiki readers. You are teaching newcomers, the evil sectarian and hate spreading ideology of the RSS This way of thinking has caused the deaths of thousands of Indians via riots

SO folks BEWARE USER KYUSS an ignorant man can also be a dangerous man.

Lalit Shastri

Recent vandalism by User:81.1.126.243 (User:Lalitshastri)

In reply to Lalit Shastri's vandalism and to his love-letter from above:

  • Vandalizing pages and making large-scale deletions to information you don't like is NOT the way wikipedia works. This kind of behaviour will get you NOWHERE on wikipedia.
  • It is you that were and are trying to push a highly POV version of your version of the article and are deleting every information you don't like. I (unlike you) didnt' delete any information in the article, although a lot of your contributions was and is unsourced and pov if not factually false. (I moved however some information to the temple article.) I had nothing at all to do with your deleted pictures (I think they were deleted by admins because they were lacking copyrights).
  • If however, you find a way to improve the article please do so in a civilized manner. And if you think that there is text that is pov, not wikified, lacking sources or disputable, then please improve it in a civilized manner.
  • Claiming that I'm a "rabid member of the RSS" is as pointless and totally irrelevant to the article as me claiming that you were a member of the GNAA. Just for your information, I'm NOT a member of ANY political organisation.
  • Some of Lalit Shastri's contributions to wikipedia can be found here. They may reveal more of his apparent bias (and are in fact quite entertaining). (I mean of course his Ayodhya and RSS related rants.)
  • This article is still a work in progress. A lot of information may still be missing in the article.

--Kyuss 08:48, 13 September 2005 (UTC)

This article has become so infested with ham fisted ignoramus from the RSS like user Kyuss Editing it is like descending into a snake pit

Firstly, can I ask who got rid of pictures of Uma Bharti and Advani standing in front of the mosque, as it was being destroyed and those of Kar Savaks wielding cutlasses. Secondly I wrote the upper third of the article on the architecture, thats still there, I am not defending my own work, there is no need to. But of other contributers which is not there. did you delete these????? I have reverted the article to its original and no doubt you Kyuss will immediately go for the revert button. Meanwhile user Kyuss that was not a "love letter" why should I love you, don't be silly. That was more of a whipping a chastisement. Maybe you are one those who LOVES being caned, some sort of repressed perverted gratification to go with your rabid fanaticism. I have contributed a section on homophobia and the SA of the Third Reich, those other brown shirts, only this time its Khaki short pants from Nagpaur. Keep editing articles that’s what wiki is for. You of the Bajrang monkey Brigade are entitled to express an opinion in this manner expose yourself, this time flashing another very small part of your anatomy your brains. After all Wiki is a democracy.

Lalit Shastri


Exactly, Wiki is a democracy, so please adhere to democratic principles. Can I ask you to read the pages on NPOV and Wikipedia:No personal attacks? And I already wrote that I didn't delete information or pictures, though I moved some text to the temple article. As for the rest, read my above reply. Your contributions to the homophobia of the SA is a very sympathetic contribution of yours. It is in fact sad that homophobics from the Christian Right and others are constantly alleging that the Nazis were gays, while in fact they were very anti-gay. I only wish you would show the same tolerance and open-minded spirit to the critical information in this article. The article may still be in need of improvement, but deleting all critical information from it will not make it any better. Peace, --Kyuss 11:09, 16 September 2005 (UTC)

Two References Missing

  • I had read once, during the 1992-1993 period, that the Muslims had conceded in 1857 the site to the Hindus in exchange for their support during the uprising against the English government, and that after the re-establishment of English rule, the English government negated that agreement. Is there any truth or reference for this agreement?
  • Why is there no mention of the archaeological excavations at the site by the Archaeological Survey of India on the orders of the Indian Supreme Court, and the findings?

WikiSceptic 04:37, 4 October 2005 (UTC)

Numbers

The article says that nearly a million karsevaks destroyed the mosque - i'm really not sure about this number. I've heard numbers like '200000' before, but I know that was in dispute as well. Does anyone know of any accurate estimates? Willardo 03:49, 6 January 2006 (UTC)

Interesting question. I looked up various sources and I got various answers. Jul/Aug 2004 edition of Archaeology says 75,000 whereas Spring 2000 of Growth & Change (an academic journal) uses the 200,000 figure you mentioned.Pepsidrinka 05:05, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
This article [10] (only the first four paragraphs are available for free and the number of participants is not available unless you pay) states the figure at 150,000. Pepsidrinka 21:31, 6 January 2006 (UTC)

Wikiproject: Hinduism

I don't agree with putting this discussion / article in with the wikiproject on Hinduism. We have to remember that there is a significant and crucial difference between Hinduism as a religion, and Hindu nationalism, the significant force behind the Babri destruction. Putting them together is a dangerous political argument. Willardo 10:04, 11 January 2006 (UTC)

I disagree. The Babri Mosque is an important event in the history of Hinduism. It was said to be the birth place of Lord Rama. The temple that commemorated his birth was torn down by islamic invaders and a mosque was built in its place. The Mosque was torn down by Hindus. Hindu nationalism orginates from Hinduism. --Dangerous-Boy 20:09, 12 January 2006 (UTC)
On your central point - that Hindu nationalism originates from Hinduism - I strongly disagree. We can say that (for example) glass originates from sand. Yet to ignore the very dramatic changes - and other ingredients - that are necessary to leap between sand and glass is to ignore the essence of the difference. Hinduism is not Hindu nationalism, and vice versa. If they were the same thing, why did the destruction occur when it did? Willardo 04:58, 13 January 2006 (UTC)
You stated it yourself. Glass needs sands. Saying that Hindu Nationalism is not apart of Hinduism is incorrect. The idealogy originates from Hinduism. It were Hindus that torn down that mosque. It is the Hindus that make up Hindu Nationalism. It like saying Muslims do not make up or did not create the Taliban or Al Aqaeda. Like it or not, that's apart of Islamic history. The tearing of this mosque is apart of Hindu history. --Dangerous-Boy 11:26, 14 January 2006 (UTC)
I think you missed the point of my analogy. I am not doubting that Hindu nationalism draws on Hinduism. But saying that it is 'the Hindus' (as if it is all Hindus) that make up Hindu nationalism is simply not correct. To follow out the analogy, does sand automatically turn to glass? You will never get glass from sand simply by waiting. So what causes sand to turn in to glass? What is the agent that forces change? Please recognise that such difference and such causality is very important when trying to understand a phenomenon. Willardo 00:19, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
But glass still needs the sand to exist. Otherwise, it can't form. --Dangerous-Boy 09:30, 16 January 2006 (UTC)

My Congrats to all who have contributed to this article

Let me first congratulate all those who contributed to this article. Its quite an accomplishment in itself. The part about the destruction of the mosque is not an easy topic to write about and it is even more difficult to keep it a Neutral Point Of View as this was anything but a neutral event. I hope that this article will be nominated to become a feature article so that more people will read it and understand how complex relations between different communities in India are.

hydkat 20:02, 19 January 2006 (UTC)

Images

Hi. Please note that images licensed "to Wikipedia only", "for non-commercial use", or "for educational use" are candidates for speedy deletion (I3). Wikipedia is an attempt to create a free, reusable encyclopedia, including commercial re-use, and such licenses are incompatible with this goal. Any such images may be deleted at any time, and I would like to very much encourage the editors here to remove such images from this article and find freely-licensed replacements. Thanks for understanding. Jkelly 23:39, 11 April 2006 (UTC)

Urdu instead of arabic?

Should it be urdu instead of arabic in the intro.--Dangerous-Boy 07:42, 15 May 2006 (UTC)

82.44.179.214 edits

The edits by 82.44.179.214 use pov language like "these Nazis", makes offtopic allegations and is unsourced. It needs to be npov'ed and sourced, if there is something valuable in it.

Muslims claim that neither history nor fact can come to prove the Hindu case. Hindu motives are not confined to Babri Masjid. If they succeed in snatching away Babri Masjid from Muslims, it will be made a precedent to extend the agitation to every other place of religious importance to the Muslims.

They claimthat is clear that the allegations, on which, the demands of RSS, Vishwa Hindu Parishad & Hindu Munnani are based for laying claim to Babri Masjid are rooted in hatred.

In India, several Buddhist and Jain temples were demolished and several Hindu temples constructed instead. If the Buddhists and Jain claim on historical demands for justice, then will the Hindu agree to demolish them and allow the Buddhists and Jain to erect their places of worship?

They further say that there is no limit to the Hindu fanatical imagination like of the theory that Taj Mahal is a Shiva Temple? A paper presented at the World Hindu Conference at Columbo in April 1982 claimed that "The Hajrul Aswad (Kaaba, the Black Stone) is only a form of Shivalinga."

According to the District Gazetteer Faizabad 1905, it is said that "up to this time (1855), both the Hindus and Muslims used to worship in the same building. But since the Mutiny (1857), an outer enclosure has been put up in front of the Masjid and the Hindus forbidden access to the inner yard, make the offerings on a platform (chabootra), which they have raised in the outer one."

Militant Hindus in 1883 wanted to construct a temple on this chabootra, but the Deputy Commissioner prohibited the same on Jan. 19, 1885. Raghubir Das, a mahant, filed a suit before the Faizabad Sub-Judge. Pandit Harikishan was seeking permission to construct a temple on this chabootra measuring 17 ft. x 21 ft. the suit was dismissed. An appeal was filed before the Faizabad District Judge, Colonel J.E.A. Chambiar who after an inspection of spot on March 17, 1886, dismissed the appeal.

A Second Appeal was filed on May 25, 1886, before the Judicial Commissioner of Awadh, W. Young, who also dismissed the appeal. With this, the first round of legal battle fought by the Hindu militants came to an end.

During the "communal riots" of 1934, walls around the Masjid and one of the domes of the Masjid were damaged. These were reconstructed by the British Government.

On mid-night of December 22, 1949, when the police guards were asleep, idols of Rama and Sita were quietly smuggled into the Masjid and were planted by a group of Hindu Nazis. This was reported by constable, Mata Prasad, the next morning and recorded at the Ayodhya police station.

According to a pre-conceived plan, the following morning (Dec. 23, 1949), a large "Hindu" crowd made a "frantic attempt" to enter the Masjid on the pretext of offering puja to the idols illegally planted. The District Magistrate K.K. Nair has recorded that "The crowd made a most determined attempt to force entry. The lock was broken and policemen were rushed off their feet. All of us, officers and men, somehow pushed the crowd back and held the gate. The sadhus recklessly hurled themselves against men and arms and it was with great difficulty that we managed to hold the gate. The gate was secured and locked with a powerful lock brought from outside and police force was strengthened (5:00 pm)." Thus, the fight of fanatics became frustrated.

On hearing this shocking news Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru became very furious and directed UP Chief Minister Govind Ballabh Pant, to see that the idols were removed. Under Pant's orders, Chief Secretary Bhagwan Sahay and Inspector-General of Police V.N. Lahiri sent immediate instructions to Faizabad to remove the idols. However, K.K. Nair feared that the Hindu mob would cause "bloodshed and manslaughter" and pleaded inability to carry out the orders. Since then, the Hindu extremists came to believe that "disorder and violence" alone would pay.

They say that it prove that the Hindu militants believe in "bloodshed and manslaughter" as a means to achieve their goals. On Jan. 5, 1950 the chairman of the Faizabad-cum-Ayodhya Municipal Board was appointed Receiver to take charge of the Masjid under Sec. 145 of the Cr.P.C. The Civil suit (No. 2 of 1950) filed by Gopal Singh Visharad on Jan. 16, 1950 before the Civil Judge Faizabad seeking permission to worship these idols (which had been illegally planted in the Masjid), is still pending and the matter is now before the High Court. There are eight defendants including five Muslims and the Govt. of UP. The statement of the Deputy Commissioner, J.N. Ugra, filed before the court, said: "on the night of Dec. 22, 1949, the idols of Ramachandraji were surreptitiously and wrongly put inside the Masjid."

On Jan. 25, 1986, a 28-year old Umesh Chandra Pandey who was not even born when the suit was filed, went to court seeking permission for himself and his co-religionists to worship these idols in the Masjid. The District Judge, K.M. Pandey recorded a statement of the District magistrate (i.e., the Revenue Officer) T.K. Pandey and without even giving an opportunity to the others who were parties to the dispute, passed an interim order related to a dispute whose file was at the High Court. At the time of passing the orders, the main file was not before the said District Judge!

Within minutes of passing the order the locks that had been put 37 years ago (on Dec. 23, 1949) were broken and "idol worship" started. It is very clear that V.C. Pandey, K.M. Pandey and T.K. Pandey all belong to a subsect of a sub-caste, as their very names indicate.

The state TV lost no time to telecast the opening of the locks, the worship and the mob fanfare on that very day. Muslims claim that this goes to show the TV officials might have had prior knowledge of the court's orders. Evidently the media was under the influence of high-caste Brahmins.

The upper Hindu caste-controlled "national press" has hidden the above mentioned facts while highlighting the events related to the Baht Masjid / Ram-Janam-Bhoomi issue. The media is projecting only the Nazi view-point.

Lately, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad and other like minded militant Brahmins are holding meetings where pledges are being taken that the Babri Masjid shall not be released to Muslims irrespective of the final judicial verdict. And these Nazis are the very people who often boast that "judiciary is the only hope of India". Those who advocate the rule of law are breaking the law on Babri Masjid. The tradition of treating the mosque site as the birthplace of Rama appears to have begun in early l8th century. The earliest suggestion that the Babri Masjid is in proximity to the birthplace of Ram was made by the Jesuit priest Joseph Tieffenthaler, whose work in French was published in Berlin in 1788. It says:

"Emperor Aurangzeb got demolished the fortress called Ramkot, and erected on the same place a Mahometan temple with three cuppolas. Others believe that it was constructed by Babar. We see 14 columns of black stone 5 spans high that occupy places within the fortress. Twelve of these columns now bear the interior arcades of the Masjid; two (of the 12) make up the entrance of the cloister. Two others form part of the tomb of a certain Moor. It is related that these columns, or rather the debris of these columns, were brought from Lanka (called Ceylon by the Europeans) by Hanuman, chief of the monkeys." which in French reads as

l'empereur Aurungzeb a détruit la forteresse appelée Ramkot et construit à la même chose placer un temple musulman avec 3 dômes. D'autres indiquent qu'il a été construit par Babar. On peut voir 14 colonnes faites en pierre noire qui soutiennent des découpages. Plus tard Aurungzeb, et certains indiquent que Babar a détruit l'endroit afin d'empêcher des heathens de pratiquer leurs cérémonies.Toutefois ils ont continué à pratiquer leurs cérémonies religieuses dans le places, sachant ceci pour avoir été endroit de naissance de Rama, en le circulant 3 fois et en se prosternant sur la terre..

We see on the left a square platform 5 inches above ground, 5 inches long and 4 inches wide, constructed of mud and covered with lime. The Hindus call it bedi, that is to say, the birth-place. The reason is that here there was a house in which Beschan, (Bishan-Vishnu) took the form of Rama, and his three brothers are also said to have been born. Subsequently, Aurangzeb, or according to others, Babar razed this place down, in order not to give the Gentiles (Hindus) occasion to practice their superstition. However, they continued to follow their superstitious practices in both places, believing it to be the birthplace of Rama."Questions of history

This record reveals that Aurangzeb demolished the Ramkot fortress; that either he, or Babar constructed a Masjid there; the 12 columns of black stone pillars were brought from Lanka; and when veneration of Rama became prevalent after the 17th century, a small rectangular mud platform was built to mark the birthplace of Rama.(History and Geography of India, by Joseph Tieffenthaler, (published in French by Bernoulli in 1785))

However, this account does not explicitly mention the existence of a temple but a mud platform.

Mosque of Babur

In Urdu the name of the Masjid is بابري and the name of Emperor Babur is بابر

Therefore we can derive that Babri Masjid = Babur's Masjid or Masjid (Mosque) of Babur in english. Mustaqbal 20:16, 25 June 2006 (UTC)

NPOV mauled to peices

Many of the claims regarding the scope of the violence are unsubstantiated. Point of fact, articles by Francis Gautier have pointed out that physical violence against people during the repatriation were minimal. Until I clean it up, the TotallyDisputed Tag needs to be there.I'll need to research a bit in order to present the muslim point of view neutrally, as well as get the facts about the actual extent of the violence allegedlyperpetrated by Hindu nationalists, together with death toll figures.(Netaji 13:09, 6 July 2006 (UTC))

I have made some edits. I think it's pretty NPOV, but have put a POV-Check tag on it just in case. By the way, the bit about the architecture of the mosque is very good. I like the pics too. Amazing how a rose can grow out of mud,eh? Pity it had to go... (Netaji 14:11, 6 July 2006 (UTC))

Bots getting better!

I find that a particular editor has edited the page massively with edit summaries like tags/ typos and so on to camouflage the addition/deletion made by him. This is rally sad and a point of introspection: are we building the project or trying to make fun of it! It was really interesting to see a bot revert his edit when he changed thirteen to 31. Bots are intelligent than wikipedians!!! --Bhadani 15:54, 10 July 2006 (UTC)

Really? I just looked at page history and no significant edits have occurred beyond those done before the article was protected. Care to elaborate, since you seem to be 'smarter' than the bot and 'wikipedians' (a contradiction, since you are a wikipedian yourself).(Pusyamitra Sunga 16:02, 10 July 2006 (UTC))
I was talking of some earlier edits - before the page was protected. --Bhadani 16:12, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
Sorry, I misunderstood. Nonetheless, the article has reached some level of NPOV, though I suspect muslims would angrily disagree. What is troubling is the high visibility of the article on the web (google search provides this article as the first hit), so we must be extra careful so as to remain NPOV and not let nutjob fundamentalists (whether muslim or hindutva) mess it up further once the article gets unprotected.(Pusyamitra Sunga 16:27, 10 July 2006 (UTC))
I envision wikipedia to emerge as a source of reference instead the wikipedians searching for the references. For this, each one of us should edit with utmost integrity. Regrds. --Bhadani 16:29, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
In principle, that's what it's supposed to be. In practice, people are lazy, and even though they may get the references later, the text of the article already forms a preconceived bias in their minds. The visibility of a wikipedia article and it's easy accessibility makes it prime grounds for mad mullahs to come and tout their crap. This must be policed by people of good will.(Netaji 14:34, 19 July 2006 (UTC))

An information

P. V. Narasimha Rao, the 9th Prime Minister of India, has termed Babari Masjid as “controversial structure” in his book Ayodhya 6 December 1992. The natural presumption is that a section of the government, including him, believed that it was not a Mosque in the conventional sense as the structure perhaps did not conform to the Islamic principles to be designated as a Mosque. However, my knowledge in such matter is rather poor. I would like to learn more. Thanks. --Bhadani 16:40, 11 July 2006 (UTC)

PV Narasimharao does not seem to have qualification as an Islamic Scholar or an architectural specialist.You seem to be trying to raise the point often raised in Hindutva literature, in a subtle way.The Indian government had begun using this term for reasons perhaps unknown to itself for there has never been any statement from them in this regard.You would have noticed a certain acceptability to calling it Babri mosque after it was felled.Mosques using similar pattern were built in Panipat during Babur's time and there are other mosques in India and other parts of the world that do not have the architectural features non Muslims may associate with a mosque.A mosque cam be as simple as a shed - the only thing important is a place to stand.By the way Rao promised to rebuild the mosque on the same spot in the televised address to the nation that helped in quelling the rioting in that period.

Rushdie 20:42, 11 July 2006 (UTC)

Thank you for explaining the position. But, in the course of this you violated a cardinal policy of wikipedia: WP:AGF by presuming that "You seem to be trying to raise the point often raised in Hindutva literature, in a subtle way." But, as you are very new here with very few edits to still fewer pages, so I give you the benefit of doubt in view of WP:BITE. I trust that you shall continue to brighten wikipedia with your insight and thoughtful comments. BTW, your presumption that non-Muslims may not be aware of so many nuisances of Islam are right, but not an absolute truth - many non-Muslims may be aware of the fact that a simple shed would also serve as a Mosque. I would also like to point out that perhaps, your user name, unless it is your personal name, may not conform to the wiki-guidelines as it is a part of a famous name, though I am not sure. Please continue to enrich wikipedia with regular edits. Thanks. --Bhadani 16:48, 15 July 2006 (UTC)

rv back to jan 9?

I thought this article was fine back then? It was pretty well balanced. What happened?--D-Boy 05:31, 2 August 2006 (UTC)

No, the article is fine now. I think all points of view have been equally well-represented.Netaji 06:45, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps you are right. But, representing all point of views may not make the page encyclopedia. An encyclopedia means the truth and only truth. Perhaps all along we have been wrongly interpreting wikipedia's policy of NPOV. It means the page should be neutral and represent the truth. --Bhadani 10:41, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
But the truth itself is disputed here. Truth according to whom? Muslims, Hindus, terrorists, Hindutva people, Leftist anti-Hindus, Right-Wing people? Whom? The issue is muddied, and nothing is 100% conclusive. When objective truth itself is absent all presented points of view must be there. Until incontrovertible proof is presented to support any point of view (or none) all points of view must be represented as such, which it has been. The 2 sections clearly say "History according to Hindus" & "History according to Muslims". Objective facts (about the Mosque's architecture, location, demolition etc) have been untainted. So the article is fine as is. No bias is there. Bear in mind also that wikipedia is not a traditional encyclopedia.Netaji 10:47, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
Fine. --Bhadani 11:10, 2 August 2006 (UTC)

Disproven Theories

"The Muslim side has been unable to disprove the fact that a Hindu temple existed in the area."

There is nothing that even remotely indicates that in the source. BhaiSaab talk 21:34, 17 August 2006 (UTC)

Sure it does.Netaji 21:42, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
Provide a quote. BhaiSaab talk 21:42, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
The article mentions several arguments for and against the Mandir, indicating a lack of consensus. The tome of the article is partisan in favor of muslims. Hence, the lack of consensus is failure on the part of the partisan. It's possible that this sentence might be construed as original research. Ask Blnguyen what he thinks. If he says original research then by all means remove it.Netaji 21:50, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
So you can't provide a quote backing that sentence...BhaiSaab talk 21:55, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
Since you so much, help your Muslim brethren out and find proof there wasn't a temple. Your friend TerryJHo is finding it excruciatingly difficult. He might even be cracking under the pressure.Bakaman Bakatalk 21:57, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
Actually I found an article on JSTOR on the archaelogical findings in the area that has both Hindu and Muslim arguments; I will be using it to improve this article soon. BhaiSaab talk 21:59, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
And I'll be watching as always.Netaji 22:02, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
Every source still states there was a temple under the rubble. The Muslims have not (and will not) been able to find proof the Mosque was built on anything other than a Hindu temple.Bakaman Bakatalk 22:01, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
All this and still no quote. Amazing. BhaiSaab talk 21:35, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
Why do I need a quote? Why don't you find proof for the Muslim side? Of course, the ASI found remains of a temple underneath, so I guess we can say "sayonara" to that sentence now anyways. Its unneeded when definite proof has been found.Bakaman Bakatalk 22:31, 18 August 2006 (UTC)

Cleanup

I have posted a cleanup tag on the History section because the vocabulary and organization of the section is really lacking. Also, the section doesn't seem wikified enough. Mar de Sin Speak up! 12:37, 29 August 2006 (UTC)

Not Neutral...

Wow... there is a Hindu Mulsim war everywhere !! Anyhow... maybe when u guys are done fighting with each other you should pay attention to the 'fact' that this article is not neutral. It bends heavily towards the Hindu point of view (i think it has been written by one). Its pretty nice till the architecture part but then the whole 'history according to the hindu point of view' stinks of propaganda. This matter can be debated forever... so if we have such a strong representation of the history according to the hindus we should also have a equally strong case put forward from the muslim perspective (i'm sure there is one). Now you can probably start disecting me and my character here but i'm just a regular wikipedia fan who hates to see biased articles !

So maybe this article can be moderated by a hindu and a muslim together.. just to keep the balance.

Ainz

61.246.25.36 21:53, 12 February 2007 (UTC)

terrorism

Terrorism needs to be backed up by numerous mainstream sources. The demolition of a building in which nobody was killed is hardly terrorism.Bakaman 19:22, 19 February 2007 (UTC)

Well, hostage taking is terrorism. Having said that, if the destruction of Nalanda and Mahabodhi Temple which also encompassed mass slaughter is not terrorism, then this doesn't seem to either. Blnguyen (bananabucket) 05:33, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
Destruction of mosques wont seems to be terrorism these days. if it was a destruction of any minor threat and if it was a muslim behind it, then it is called terrorism. Please dont try to change the meaning of the word "terrorism" its just not an attribute given to muslims alone.

Pens withdrawn 05:42, 20 February 2007 (UTC).

See the definition of terrorism.And btw,Babri was built on a Hindu temple, according to the ASI report. So Babar is the real terrorist by your definition.Bakaman 05:50, 20 February 2007 (UTC)

acts which are: intended to create fear or "terror" this is what it is described there. Destroying a masjid which was a symbol of harmony for centuries among muslims and hindus to create communal tensions must be described with a more stronger word than terrorism. Pens withdrawn 06:53, 20 February 2007 (UTC)

I will just note that when you say "a symbol of harmony for centuries among Muslims and Hindus" you are sort of wrong. You see, Hindus have a deity known as Rama, who was born there and a temple on his birthplace was demolished, so bad blood existed since then, harmony isn't the word I would use. Your stereotyping of Hindutva as random communalist people that only like to call tensions is far from the truth. Hindutvavaadis, for example, sheltered Sikhs during the 1984 Anti-Sikh riots, yes, Atal Behari Vajpayee was known for saving Sikhs from Hindu mobs and was commended by Hindutva parties for it. Nobleeagle [TALK] [C] 07:03, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
There seems to be consensus that this is not an example of terrorism.Bakaman 02:20, 21 February 2007 (UTC)
I would hardly call that a consensus. 24.250.173.10 23:04, 7 October 2007 (UTC)

most disputed phrase : lets discuss and finalize

"It was destroyed in a well planned move by groups of Hindu extremists(RSS and VHP) in a riot on December 6, 1992"

"It was destroyed by Hindu activists in a riot on December 6, 1992." --- current version


major problem was with the word "extremists" -- lets agree with "activists" (just for compromise)

next part of the problem is inclusion of group names RSS and VHP. User:Nobleeagle says that- they were not the only group and deletes that part (see the history of the page). But no one denies the fact that they are also involved. And it is also know to everyone that the masjid was destroyed in a well planned move (even in the presence of tight security arranged by central govt of India)

So lets make the phrase as "It was destroyed in a well planned move by groups of Hindu activists(RSS, VHP and others) in a riot on December 6, 1992"

word 'others' is added to address User:Nobleeagle's problem and activist is retained.

Trying to hide these facts in wikipedia doesn't erase the history. It id so stupid to think like that. ----Pens withdrawn 11:40, 24 February 2007 (UTC)

those who disagree with it, please make your point here. --- Pens withdrawn 11:46, 24 February 2007 (UTC)


if no one has any other opinion, I am going to make the change on tomorrow. I have already waited five days. Pens withdrawn 05:10, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
Let us not do any original research. Please provide any notable references / citations which clearly says the act as a "well planned move". Otherwise, it is going to be a POV. The same applies to the inclusion of different groups. - KNM Talk 05:35, 1 March 2007 (UTC)

The article states that one thing is clear- There was a temple and it was demolished by Muslims and a mosque built to symbolize Islam victory over paganism. There are evidence from it from many sources. While the site provides the evidence for first assertion it does not provide any for the second. It may be possible that latter a mosque was constructed on the site.

Two or three propagandists are NOT going to determine what an article says. Tearing down a holy building is extremism AT LEAST if not terrorism (though most would argue it is indeed just that). 24.250.173.10 23:07, 7 October 2007 (UTC)

Destruction

Can we get a paragraph detailing the destruction of the mosque, and the aftermath of it's destruction.

Agreed. We don't actually say what happened. We jump from the 1940s to the present day. Secretlondon (talk) 23:43, 6 December 2007 (UTC)

asi report

Criticized by fundamentalist Islamist preachers or criticized by real archaeologists? A bunch of imams whining about the findings of a team of respected archaeologists does not make it controversial.Bakaman 18:17, 20 July 2007 (UTC)

::Dear Bakasuprman, Sir..I have seen a common refrain from you very learned scholar , Sir, that makes you blame the other point of view as coming from "bunch of imams whining" and Sir, somewhere I have also seen you say about the "Wakf Boards" that own the Babri Masjid land as "bunch of fundamentalists" etc..So Dear Sir, Please go through the following lines:

  • NEW DELHI: The Sangh is a Parivar once again, thanks to the [Archaeological Survey of India's controversial report on Ayodhya http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/181530.cms]." The author of this report is not a very bearded fundamentalist but a mainstream journalist from The Times of India
  • Also Sir, the analysis of the peice below did not come through a bearded Muslim fundamentalist but a national newspaper The Hindu
  • THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL Survey of India's [report of its excavation of the Babri Masjid site has important failings which render it suspect http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/op/2003/10/14/stories/2003101400160300.htm]. Both in what it includes, and in what it excludes, the report does not address the task to which the High Court directed it, namely to determine whether a mosque and/or a Ram temple existed at that site. The ASI has said that it has discovered the bases of pillars which originally supported the roof of a temple at a layer below the mosque. It adduces the discovery of terracotta figurines at the site to strengthen this claim. And it claims to have discovered a "circular shrine" which it conjectures contained a Sivalinga, which it would have us believe fortifies the claim to a Ram temple at the site. However, in fact the evidence does not indicate that a Ram temple existed at this site. On the contrary, important evidence which the ASI has not properly examined or accounted for includes animal bones and glazed ware, both foreign to a Hindu Ram temple of medieval times.
  • Dearest Sir, It does not take a space scientist to understand that the contention that this report was controversial comes from reliable and verifiable sources while sir, your removal of these and ascribing of evidences against your point of view are based on name calling, hardly an encycopedic exercise and attitude. Terminador 03:31, 21 July 2007 (UTC)
Kannan Srinivasan is not an archaeologist but a freelance journalist. In fact it is not even an article from the Hindu but actually an opinion page. The fact the Indian Mullah Council of America has him as a featured guest makes him more dubious. The times of india report is meaningless, does it give a name of any body of learning or archaeologist? No. It says some independent (a.k.a fringe) people (w/out bothering to name them). The Sunni Waqf Board is the only named group of any kind that has actually criticized the report, and they aren't a respected body on history.Bakaman 23:07, 21 July 2007 (UTC)
Dear Sir, I have seen this happen many times with your edits.Sir, Your name calling "Indian Mullah Council" above is too rampant to ignore and borders on INCIVILITY.
Sir, Above you convinently ignore the fact that the whole Babri Mosque- Ram Janmabhoomi issue leading to the destruction of the mosque by Hindu Fanatics is not only in the realm of archaelogy, it is a part of legal dispute and also a political activism by the Hindu Right wing in India represented by the Sangh Parivar.
There are two parties of the dispute one the Sunni Wakf Board - a Muslim properties trust under the control of the Government and the other are the Hindu Groups represented by the Ram Janmbhoomi Nyas, Now the fact that the Semi - Government owned trust, also being the other party of the dispute has raised allegations against the ASI report being misleading and the fact that the issue has been reported in the media and commentators have discussed it extensively - there is Reliably sourced evidence that there is a controvery on the ASI report..and you should Sir, be kind enough to accept this fact.
Also Sir, It is very frustrating to work with you when you attack the sources Ad-Hominem.The fact that an author is on a Muslim site's (one that you don't have any respects for calling it "Mullah" Council) panel does it make him a little less relevant.You ask the other editors to give hundreds of sources and stand your own defined tests of credibilty when you yourself do not stand on them yourself.Instead of hitting the revert button indiscriminately you could do the other WP editors a favour by doing a simple Google Search and informing yourself first.which I am copying here
As a Human being Sir, I cannot get the fact that this ASI report was controversial on a GOLDEN CERTIFICATE by an authority that you can trust but I can go by news reports and whatever has been discussed in independent media.Now You can go through these.
[Reply may land ASI into trouble - Times of India http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/522223.cms]
LUCKNOW: Even before the arguments on the controversial Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) report on famous Ayodhya excavations could begin, the ASI seems falling into the 'trap' laid by a battery of Central Sunni Waqf Board (CSWB) counsels and indepedent archaeologists. Already facing a 'perjury' case, the ASI's reply, submitted to the three-member special full bench, may land it in deep trouble.
[Not the last word yet - The Hindu http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/fl2019/stories/20030926005412900.htm]
Competent experts scrutinise the ASI's report on Ayodhya and raise the pertinent question, in the light of the persistent abuse of archaeology by VHP camp followers, whether its conclusions are consistent with what has been discovered at the site.
[ASI excavated more questions than answers in Ayodhya http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/152335.cms]
LUCKNOW: The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) dig at the disputed Ayodhya site just might have succeeded in digging up the Indian equivalent of the ‘Shroud of Turin’. The picture emerging from the information in various ASI reports from 1954 — including the one released this week — remains hazy and vague about a key period in Indian history. More importantly, say scholars, the ASI has failed to shed any light on the site’s link to Lord Rama, the key issue in the entire political controversy.
Sir, I have reasons to believe that you are wasting others energies by either doing biased editing knowingly or Sir, by knowing them fully well and misrepresenting Terminador 04:07, 22 July 2007 (UTC)

Undos by Sir Bakasuprman

Dear Friends, One great contributor Sir Bakasuprman has been reverting edits from other users citing WP:V and WP:ATT, Now it is amply clear that all the edits in this change are verifianle and from reliable sources.If Sir, Bakasuprman has some care for the Wikipedia, he should be able to explain why inspite of all that has been discussed just in the para above , the ASI report on the site excavations in Ayodhya are not controversial.[[11]]

Otherwise, I believe reasons exist that Sir Bakasuprman , has been exhausting other contributors patience by attacking well known facts verifiable through reliable sources instead of informing himself before removing other user's edits.59.177.0.127 05:13, 29 July 2007 (UTC) Terminador 05:15, 29 July 2007 (UTC)

The report was only criticized by Muslim bodies not archaeologists, as has been stated ad nauseam. Also, your use of Hindu "extremists" does not meet WP:ATT. Rather than trolling, and hiding behind IP's to promote Hinduphobic bs like "cult of Rama" indicates that you are merely here for an agenda.Bakaman 17:16, 29 July 2007 (UTC)
You also seem to be harping on what a bunch of random mullahs and their Pseudo-secular journalist friends wrote, while disregarding the scholarly report and the actual findings of said report. The fact that remains of a temple were found under the rubble.Bakaman 17:26, 29 July 2007 (UTC)

>>You also seem to be harping on what a bunch of random mullahs and their Pseudo-secular journalist friends wrote, while disregarding the scholarly report and the actual findings of said report. The fact that remains of a temple were found under the rubble.Bakaman 17:26, 29 July 2007 (UTC)


>> The report was only criticized by Muslim bodies not archaeologists Hindu activists nets 46k] Response:

OK, and it has been proved ad nauseam that your above assertion Sir, is 101% baseless and misleading.
In fact , you, Sir, are holding the other Wikipedia contributors and readers of this article at ransom by making them believe that there is just one correct version of events and that too one that comes from the Hindutva fundamentalist point of view.
Read this report from Times of India -Archaeologists dig holes into ASI report

NEW DELHI: The Archaeological Survey of India's excavation report on Ayodhya, suggesting ‘‘a huge structure indicative of remains, which are distinctive features associated with the temples of north India, has been found wanting at many levels by archaeologists and historians.

Archaeologist Suraj Bhan, who visited the site during the excavation, says the report has not ‘‘taken into account certain features of the western wall of the pre-Babri Masjid chamber.
Now Read this too Archaeologists fail to end Ayodhya temple site row
So, When it has been reported that the ASI report has been inconclusive how can you use a language that terms that ASI found "definite proof" of the temple


>>You also seem to be harping on what a bunch of random mullahs and their Pseudo-secular journalist friends wrote..

Response:

It is amply clear Sir, that this dispute is between the Semi Governmental Muslim Trust called the Wakf Board that owns the title deed of the land where the mosque stood.The other party in this dispute is Muslim so whether they are extremists, mullahs or to use your own words borrowed from the Hindutva terminology of terming the traditional secular people as Pseudo Secular - their reactions need as much portrayal as anyone. Unless you are on a gagging spree on Wikipedia and want to portray the issue in your own coloured versions.
It is unfortunate Sir, that you even after spending so much time on Wikipedia have not learnt anything better than Cunningness and exhausting other's patience by your continued postings in favour of the Hindu Right Wing.I sincerely doubt your abilities on writing into Controvesial articles through your blanking of the NPOV.

>> Rather than trolling, and hiding behind IP's to promote Hinduphobic bs like "cult of Rama" indicates that you are merely here for an agenda.

Response:

Well Sir,You know very well that my language even though at times I have not logged on (and hence the fixed Delhi IP) is the same and is understandable from the same sequence.I have not misused my IP to support actions from my user name.

Terminador 03:25, 30 July 2007 (UTC)

>> Also, your use of Hindu "extremists" does not meet WP:ATT.

Response:

Only if you cared to be circumspect Sir, you can find that your above assertion is indeed once again false.
BBC 1992: Mob rips apart mosque in Ayodhya
A mob of Hindu militants has torn down a mosque and attacked other Muslim targets in the north Indian town of Ayodhya...Hindu extremists have been campaigning to get rid of the Babri mosque in Ayodhya
India on alert for Ayodhya demolition anniversary
Security forces across India are on high alert for the 10th anniversary of the demolition of a mosque by Hindu extremists that triggered some of the country's worst sectarian violence.
I believe Mr. Bakasuprman, Sir, from the sources that have been specifically marked in WP:ATT and Wikipedia:Guidelines for controversial articles , that it is clear that this was a mob of Hindu Extremists that destroyed the mosque.If your intentions were sacred Mr.Bakaman Sir, you would indeed have read other reliable sources like this Case Western University paper that said "On December 6, 1992, the secular foundation of the Indian State col-lapsed, as a mob of over 200,000 Hindu extremists, clad in saffron head-bands, tore down and demolished the Babri Mosque, a long-standing Mus-lim edifice located in the northern town of Ayodhya."
In the light of above sources including the BBC and CNN - see Wikipedia:Guidelines for controversial articles and others News and Journals found on internet, Hindu Extremists, should be the term used, though this was initially not a change that I made in the article Terminador 04:50, 30 July 2007 (UTC)
You obviously have not read WP:ATT or the perhaps more relevant policy WP:WTA, which notes that words like "extremist", are not to be used in a dispassionate narrative voice. You also vandalized the summary of the report, choosing only to broadcast the opinions of a bunch of random left-wing columnists. The obvious conclusion is that your version is just a bunch of links and a few handpicked mullah's opinions, while the old version I edit actually discusses the report while not giving undue weight to the opinions of political groups like Waqf Board and the Rss.Bakaman 05:50, 30 July 2007 (UTC)
Ha, Sir, Your futile and baseless excuses on some pretext or others and continued gagging of the facts pertaining to all substantial points of view hardly hide behind your crafty sentences like the one above.Yes, I have "obviously" read the ATT and perhaps the equally (not more relevant as you would say above) WTA and I stand a firmer ground in proving my edits with verifiable reliable sources while You , Sir, have hardly contributed anything more than the name callings of "handpicked mullah's opinions" and "random left-wing columnists". I believe Sir, you need a mentor, who can teach you that it is not always the best policy to attack sources with the same perspective as that of a religious right wing movement Sangh Parivaron a neutral space like Wikipedia.Terminador 20:45, 31 July 2007 (UTC)
There are a number of sources not using the word controversial.

[12], [13], [14]. Hmm... lets take a look at the tribune chandigarh. The Waqf Board and AIMPLB are the only prominent critics noted in all the papers provided on the web. I fail to see why you blank the note on the actual conclusion of the ASI report while soapboxing for an op-ed columnist. I dont need a wikistalking WP:SPA to tell me what I can, will, or can't do on wiki.Bakaman 23:02, 31 July 2007 (UTC)

Incidentally, Bhan and Habib were criticized in the indian express.Bakaman 22:07, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
And coincidentally Bakasuprman Sir, it does not take a rocket scientist to figure out the disclaimer at the end of the article "(The author is a freelance journalist)" Terminador 12:35, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
I think it's safe to say, dear Bakasuprman, that you were pwnd. I've been waiting for months for someone who has as much time on their hands as you to challenge your biased garbage and expose you for the fraud you are. Kudos to Terminador. And a big HAHAHA to you. 24.250.131.113 19:33, 8 October 2007 (UTC)
If you didnt catch the tongue-in-cheek nature of the link, it is merely a testament to your ineptitude. Hindu activists is used in reputable sources much more often than "extremists" (even when a gsearch would also include your LeT and Saudi Islamodainiks). Hindu activists nets 46k to Hindu extremists netting 33k.Bakaman 02:33, 12 October 2007 (UTC)
Just because some sources gloss over the fact that it indeed was extremism doesn't prove your point. It just proves that some sources tend to use a term less likely to annoy the likes of you. Just as some groups are called terrorist by some and militants, extremists, fundamentalists, etc. by others doesn't change the fact that they are, indeed, terrorists. When referring to Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, and basically anyone in India not Hindu, you are the first to go with the terrorist interpretation, as I have personally viewed some of your "work". The fact that thousands use the term extremist (and if you check one of the BBC links, even a Hindu priest from Ayodhya) makes the usage here valid. It therefore supersedes the term "activists". 24.250.182.41 12:13, 12 October 2007 (UTC)

noting a source

Kristin M. Romey, Flashpoint Ayodhya in Archaeological Ethics, (Karen D. Vitelli, John Stephen Colwell-Chanthaphonh Eds.) Rowman Altamira, 2006, ISBN: 075910963X. Doldrums 12:22, 1 August 2007 (UTC)

The what now?

The text reads ‘The contemporary Tarikh-i-Babari records that Babar's troops "demolished many Hindu temples at Chanderi’." - Why are we quoting non-existant memoirs? The only memoirs of the era are the Ta'rikh-e Rashidi and the baburnama, neither of which contain the previously quoted text. Explain. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 195.7.55.146 (talk) 19:19, 30 October 2007 (UTC)

WikiProject class rating

This article was automatically assessed because at least one WikiProject had rated the article as start, and the rating on other projects was brought up to start class. BetacommandBot 17:23, 9 November 2007 (UTC)

Comment

Why is there not actually any content in this article describing the destruction of the Mosque? Kind of a big thing to be missing, it just jumps from the 40s to the present day. Also the actual text of this article is utter garbage, it really shows that all the effort here went into pov-pushing instead of actual writing. I am adding copy-edit and cleanup tags to the article. --PatLarsen 02:04, 11 December 2007 (UTC)