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KASHI'S
OLDEST HINDU TEMPLE DESTROYED BY MUSLIM RULERS
KASHI'S OLDEST HINDU TEMPLE DESTROYED BY MUSLIM RULERS
Times of India, February 28, 1995
Lucknow: In the narrow winding lane from the Dashwashwamedh Ghat
leading
towards the famed Vishwanath Mandir in Varanasi, the atmosphere is
one of
extreme piety at all times of the day. The temple is, perhaps, one
of the
most potent symbols of Hinduism in the country in a city which by
all accounts
is one of the oldest centers of pilgrimage for the Hindus.
The original Vishwanath temple is supposed to have been built
around 490 AD
during the Gupta period. Historical records suggest that it was
destroyed by
Muslim rulers. The first Muslim invader to attack Varanasi was
Ahmed
Nihalidin, the governor of the Indian province of the Ghazani
empire, in the
11th century. His aim was to acquire the wealth accumulated in the
temples
of Varanasi. Later, Qutub-ud-din Aibak of the slave dynasty
invaded the city
and more than 1000 temples are said to have been destroyed in this
onslaught.
After the defeat of Ibrahim Lodi in 1526, the city passed under
the
control of Afghans but was later captured by the Moghul ruler
Babur. In
1539, it was captured by Sher Shah Suri. In the tolerant regime of
Akbar,
many temples and other structure were rebuilt by Hindu kings in
Varanasi.
Raja Todar mal, one of the "jewels" in Akbar's court,
constructed a new
temple on the site of the destroyed Vishwanath temple in 1585.
This was
again destroyed by Aurangzeb in 1669 while on his way to conquer
the Deccan.
Aurangzeb got a mosque constructed in its place. The present
temple was
reconstructed by Maharani Ahilya Bai Holkar in 1777. The dome of
the Vishwanath
temple was gold-plated by Maharaja Ranjit Singh in 1839.
Adjacent to the temple is the Gyanvapi Masjid, which was built by
Auragzeb
on the remnants of the original temple. He had, however, agreed to
the plea
of the Kashi Brahmins that a temple would be allowed to exist
adjacent to the
Gyanvapi masjid as also to the reconstruction of the Kali temple
at
Aurangabad, about three km away. This temple, too, was destroyed
by the
invading Muslim armies.
The remnants of the original Vishwanath temple are revered by the
devout Hindus as Shrinagar Gauri, the abode of Lord Mahadev.
Muslims offer
namaz in the premises of the Gyanvapi masjid but not in the main
hall.
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