Yesterday happened to be 133rd Jayanti of Hindu Hruday Samrat #KM_Munshi
It’s time to remember his fight to rebuild #SomnathMandir
Munshi, was a political thinker, constitutional lawyer and expert, an institution-builder, and a great patron of Indian culture and civilisation. ImageImage
Very few remember his contribution towards the rebuilding of the Somnath temple at Prabhas, and the challenges he faced therein.
In 1922, Munshi wrote about the emotional pain that Indians feel about the destruction of the Somnath temple and its ruins

“Desecrated, burnt and Image
battered, it still stood firm – a monument of our humiliation, and ingratitude. I can scarcely describe the burning shame which I felt on that early morning as I walked on the broken floor of the once-hallowed sabha mandap, littered with broken pillars and scattered stones. Image
Lizards slipped in and out of their holes and the sound of my unfamiliar steps, and Oh! The shame of it! – an inspector’s horse, tied there, neighed at my approach with sacrilegious impertinence.”

The Nawab of Junagarh would just not allow the Hindus to rebuild it. But after Image
the accession of Junagarh to India in October 1947, Sardar Patel announced at a public meeting:
“On this auspicious day of the New Year, we have decided that Somnath should be reconstructed. You, people of Saurashtra, should do your best. This is a holy task in which all should
participate.”
There was some resistance. Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, the education minister at that time and a good friend of Nehru, opposed the idea, and in one of the cabinet meetings, argued that the ruins should be handed over to the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), to be
preserved as a historical monument.
However, Maulana Azad never suggested the same measures for Muslim shrines and mosques, which were being repaired by the ASI.

Sardar was very firm and responded with a note:
“The Hindu sentiment in regard to this temple is both strong and
widespread. In the present conditions, it is unlikely that this sentiment will be satisfied by mere restoration of the temple or by prolonging its life. The restoration of idol would be a point of honour and sentiments with the Hindu public.”

Nehru presided over the cabinet
meeting in which this decision was taken.
But Sardar passed away on 15 December 1950. Mahatma Gandhi, who also approved of the temple plan, was already gone. And Nehru became very hostile, not just to the temple project, but to cabinet colleagues—mainly Munshi and V.N. Gadgil ImageImage
who were associated with it. Both Gadgil’s and Munshi’s writings bring this out clearly. The preparations began for the prana-pratishtha as per the shaastras and the President of India, Dr Rajendra Prasad, was requested to conduct the ceremony.

In the midst of all this, Nehru
called Munshi and said: “I don’t like your trying to restore Somnath. It is Hindu revivalism.” Munshi felt humiliated, more so because Nehru made it seem as if things were being done without his knowledge.
On 24 April 1951, Munshi wrote a long letter to Nehru. Many things
related to the rebuilding of the Somnath temple would have remained completely unknown, had it not been for this letter. The letter is available in Munshi’s book ‘Pilgrimage to Freedom’.

“On 13 December 1947, the Standing Committee of the W.M.P. Ministry accepted Gadgil’s Image
proposal that the Government of India should reconstruct the temple in the original form and develop roughly, one square mile of the surrounding area. I understand that this decision was included in the weekly note to the Cabinet.

As I learnt from Gadgil, it was also mentioned
to the Cabinet. At the time, the decision of the Government was that the W.M.P. Ministry should reconstruct the old shrines and they were doing so in the case of certain Muslim shrines and mosques.
The Government of India, thereafter, deputed Government architects to visit
Prabhas and prepare a report for the reconstruction of the temple.
When the whole scheme was discussed by Sardar with Bapu, he stated that it was alright except that the funds necessary for re-constructing the temple should come from the public. Gadgil also saw Bapu and Bapu
gave him the same advice. Thereafter, the idea that the Government of India should finance the reconstruction of the temple was given up…
As you will see, the Government of India not only took the initial decision to reconstruct the temple, but formulated and set the scheme
going; alongside creating the agency for its further implementation. This will clearly indicate to you the extent of association, the Government of India has with the scheme…
Yesterday, you referred to ‘Hindu revivalism.’ It is my faith in our past which has given me the
strength to work in the present and look forward to our future. I cannot value freedom if it deprives us of the Bhagavad Gita or uproots our millions from the faith with which they look upon our temples and thereby destroys the texture of our lives. I have been given the Image
privilege of seeing my incessant dream of Somnath reconstruction come true. That makes me feel—makes me almost sure—that this shrine once restored to a place of importance in our life, will give our people a purer conception of religion and a more vivid consciousness of
our strength, so vital in these days of freedom and its trials.”
Gadgil, the Minister of Urban Development and Rehabilitation then, has also mentioned this attitude of Nehru, after Sardar’s death. Gadgil wrote:
“I quoted from the Cabinet reports to prove that Nehru’s charge that
the thing was being done without informing the Cabinet was not correct. Maulana and Jagjivan Ram said that the matter was discussed. The government of India had spent about hundred thousand rupees on the work.”
But for the courage and conviction of Munshi, the Somnath temple
would have not been built.

Despite Nehru’s strong disapproval and opposition, the President Dr Rajendra Prasad did perform the prana–pratishtha ceremony.

#VANDEMATARAM ImageImageImage

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Raghu Veera
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