Ayodhya: Muslims performed ‘Qurbani’ fearlessly

‘Once a year, the local administration unofficially lifts the ban for the Muslim festival of Bakrid’

Ayodhya: Despite the meat ban controversy across the country, the temple town of Ayodhya has set an example of religious tolerance and respect for sentiments of the Muslim community this Bakrid.

‘Ram Nagri’ (City of lord Rama), a holy town, has also banned slaughter and distribution of meat. Even cooked meat cannot be served publicly, but during the three days of Id-ul-Zuha, no Hindu religious leader or mahant has ever objected to the qurbani ritual being carried out by the Muslim population in the city.

In Ayodhya, meat of any kind, cooked or raw is neither sold nor served even in weddings and parties. However, once a year, the local administration unofficially lifts the ban for the Muslim festival of Bakrid. This year too, the ban has been lifted, though there was no official order.

“Everything happens with a great understanding between the two communities,” said Mahant Raghuvar Sharan, a priest of Rasik Niwas temple. “Amid all the controversies over meat and beef, the temple town presents the best example of religious tolerance and respect to religious sentiments of the other community.”

“In fact, this system was so spontaneous that nobody had even noticed it earlier. But now, in the era of religious intolerance when people are being attacked and killed over food habit, Ayodhya leads by example,” said Jamal Akhtar, a local resident.

“We have been observing qurbani in Ayodhya for a long time. Those Muslim families who want to offer qurbani on Bakrid do it without fear of anyone. We regularly offer qurbani in our houses in Ayodhya on every Bakrid, as we did this year also” Haji Asad Ahmad, a former corporator of Ayodhya municipal board said to The Wire.

“We have advised the local Muslims to observe the Bakrid festival without fear, and traditional rituals of qurbani in the premises of their houses were allowed, the festival passed off peacefully under the atmosphere of harmony and brotherhood,” said Ashok Kumar, resident magistrate of Ayodhya.

“Qurbani is the most important ritual of Bakrid, if our Muslim brothers are observing it within the premises of their houses then why any body should object over it, instead I support qurbani ritual that is being carried out in Ayodhya by Muslims, this shows our honest tolerance for the religious sentiments of Muslim community,” said Mahant Yugal Kishore Sharan Shastry, a priest of Saryu Kunj temple, adjacent to Babri Masjid premises.

“We are vegetarian and have never eaten meat, but we visit Muslim families in Ayodhya on Bakrid to greet them, we have no objection over qurbani that they are doing in Ayodhya in their houses,” said Surya Kant Pandey, a social worker in Ayodhya, reacting over qurbani in the temple town.