logo
Welcome Guest! You are here: Home » India

Ram Mandir stone carving stopped, artisans leave Ayodhya

Majority of artisans working at Karsevakpuram have returned to their home in Gujarat

Thursday November 7, 2019 9:27 PM, ummid.com with inputs from IANS

Ram Mandir Stone

[Carving of stones has been continuing without a break since 1990 at the workshop in Karsevakpuram. (Photo: IANS)

Ayodhya: For the first time in the past 29 years, carving of stones for the Ram temple at Karsevakpuram here has been stopped.

Carving of stones has been continuing without a break since 1990 at the workshop in Karsevakpuram.

VHP spokesman Sharad Sharma said on Thursday that the decision to stop carving of stones has been taken by the Ram Janambhoomi Nyas.

"The Nyas has decided to stop all work at the workshop.. It has decided to wait for the Supreme Court's verdict. Thereafter, it will take a decision on resuming the work," he said.

"The Ram Janambhoomi Nyas will now decided when carving work will re-start," he said.

Majority of artisans working at Karsevakpuram have returned to their home in Gujarat.

The workshop, however, is attracting a large number of visitors who are curious to see the piles of carved stone pillars, ceiling slabs, floor slabs and slabs for steps, all in red stone, for the proposed mandir, which will not have any iron work.

Many devotees are seen clicking selfies and touching the slabs in reverence.

According to the VHP, nearly 1.25 lakh cubic feet of stone has already been carved which means that the work for one floor of the temple is ready.

The VHP desk at Karsevakpuram, however, is still accepting subscriptions for building the temple.

Meanwhile, several saints are disappointing at the work being discontinued. They feel that with the Supreme Court verdict barely a few days away, work should have been intensified.

Hindu extremists in the presence of top BJP, RSS, VHP and other right-wing organisations had razed to ground the historic Babri Masjid on December 06, 1992. They now want o build a mandir on the same site.

The distance between the workshop and the now disputed site is about 3 kilometres. The workshop has two giant stone cutters under a huge shed that is the workplace for the stone-carvers. In the middle of the workshop is a wooden model of the proposed temple.

For all the latest News, Opinions and Views, download ummid.com App.

Select Language To Read in Urdu, Hindi, Marathi or Arabic.

Share this page

 Post Comments
Note: By posting your comments here you agree to the terms and conditions of www.ummid.com
.
Logo