The Prague Post - India's heritage hit by Delhi 'development' demolitions

EUR -
AED 4.230566
AFN 80.625551
ALL 96.756313
AMD 440.619038
ANG 2.061693
AOA 1056.195597
ARS 1704.944832
AUD 1.761842
AWG 2.073231
AZN 1.957829
BAM 1.955919
BBD 2.319451
BDT 140.55856
BGN 1.954723
BHD 0.434247
BIF 3386.277733
BMD 1.151795
BND 1.501391
BOB 7.986521
BRL 6.171662
BSD 1.15157
BTN 102.167005
BWP 15.462009
BYN 3.925939
BYR 22575.18489
BZD 2.316141
CAD 1.618739
CDF 2603.057196
CHF 0.930864
CLF 0.027565
CLP 1081.351209
CNY 8.26102
CNH 8.208193
COP 4441.897986
CRC 577.835192
CUC 1.151795
CUP 30.522571
CVE 110.690467
CZK 24.329026
DJF 204.696815
DKK 7.465579
DOP 74.003066
DZD 150.520011
EGP 54.374868
ERN 17.276927
ETB 175.782469
FJD 2.619585
FKP 0.875776
GBP 0.876775
GEL 3.127085
GGP 0.875776
GHS 12.583329
GIP 0.875776
GMD 84.659086
GNF 10009.100174
GTQ 8.825576
GYD 240.934674
HKD 8.95235
HNL 30.290976
HRK 7.533779
HTG 150.779183
HUF 387.359652
IDR 19209.639469
ILS 3.749957
IMP 0.875776
INR 102.188191
IQD 1508.851643
IRR 48504.976688
ISK 145.40223
JEP 0.875776
JMD 184.851258
JOD 0.816601
JPY 177.625228
KES 148.810408
KGS 100.723315
KHR 4624.457146
KMF 490.664691
KPW 1036.615509
KRW 1647.159096
KWD 0.35374
KYD 0.959658
KZT 604.983714
LAK 24924.847091
LBP 103143.255041
LKR 350.601353
LRD 211.296561
LSL 20.329295
LTL 3.400952
LVL 0.696709
LYD 6.283046
MAD 10.723119
MDL 19.600279
MGA 5195.316409
MKD 61.535159
MMK 2418.553497
MNT 4130.551075
MOP 9.220361
MRU 46.118348
MUR 52.971228
MVR 17.743436
MWK 2000.668639
MXN 21.301276
MYR 4.836965
MZN 73.656947
NAD 20.328501
NGN 1665.599426
NIO 42.382581
NOK 11.665614
NPR 163.470956
NZD 2.018498
OMR 0.442866
PAB 1.15177
PEN 3.876936
PGK 4.856296
PHP 67.628821
PKR 325.678235
PLN 4.254492
PYG 8172.497727
QAR 4.209356
RON 5.085523
RSD 117.205522
RUB 93.308432
RWF 1673.265588
SAR 4.319626
SBD 9.614484
SCR 16.512715
SDG 691.654077
SEK 10.925296
SGD 1.502943
SHP 0.864145
SLE 25.972775
SLL 24152.567802
SOS 658.246808
SRD 44.690231
STD 23839.834087
STN 24.763596
SVC 10.076614
SYP 12735.118639
SZL 20.329249
THB 37.420101
TJS 10.629217
TMT 4.042801
TND 3.333007
TOP 2.697624
TRY 48.432911
TTD 7.799475
TWD 35.58012
TZS 2832.972647
UAH 48.429249
UGX 4007.261449
USD 1.151795
UYU 45.902796
UZS 13787.839717
VES 257.636072
VND 30306.033919
VUV 140.091206
WST 3.224538
XAF 655.9998
XAG 0.023895
XAU 0.000287
XCD 3.112784
XCG 2.075526
XDR 0.816335
XOF 657.102483
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.760984
ZAR 19.943045
ZMK 10367.537825
ZMW 25.652674
ZWL 370.877568
  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    23.67

    -0.34%

  • AZN

    -0.6800

    81.72

    -0.83%

  • BTI

    1.2500

    52.44

    +2.38%

  • BCC

    -2.1500

    68.34

    -3.15%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    15.84

    -0.76%

  • GSK

    -0.5100

    46.35

    -1.1%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    23.9

    -0.38%

  • NGG

    -0.5100

    74.74

    -0.68%

  • RBGPF

    -3.0000

    76

    -3.95%

  • BP

    -0.2600

    34.87

    -0.75%

  • RIO

    -1.3700

    70.37

    -1.95%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.88

    -0.14%

  • RYCEF

    0.2100

    15.36

    +1.37%

  • BCE

    -0.1900

    22.67

    -0.84%

  • RELX

    -0.0700

    44.17

    -0.16%

  • VOD

    -0.6700

    11.38

    -5.89%

India's heritage hit by Delhi 'development' demolitions
India's heritage hit by Delhi 'development' demolitions / Photo: - - AFP

India's heritage hit by Delhi 'development' demolitions

For nine centuries, Indians prayed at the forest shrine of Baba Haji Rozbih, a revered Sufi saint whose grave is one of the capital Delhi's oldest Islamic sites.

Text size:

Then, in early February, the Delhi Development Authority reduced the site to rubble, the latest victim of a "demolition programme" it says has cleared "illegal religious structures" including a mosque, tombs, shrines and Hindu temples.

The destruction has sparked heartbreak from residents and worried warnings from historians at the loss of priceless heritage.

"It's a blow... to the history that made India what it is today", said historian and author Rana Safvi.

The demolitions come at a sensitive time, as Hindu nationalists have been emboldened to claim ancient Islamic monuments for the country's majority faith.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi in January inaugurated a temple in the northern city of Ayodhya, built on the site of a centuries-old mosque whose destruction by Hindu zealots in 1992 sparked sectarian riots that killed 2,000 people nationwide, most of them Muslims.

General elections due this year are expected to begin in April -- with Modi's Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) widely tipped to win.

The Delhi demolition campaign is officially about development, and it has targeted Hindu structures as well as Muslim ones.

But the DDA has not given details on what, if anything, will replace the razed structures, many of which were built hundreds of years before current zoning rules were put in place.

"This shrine was of a Sufi saint, who was one of the earliest -- if not the earliest -- to come to Delhi", said Safvi.

"I have seen people of all faiths going and paying reverence to the saint."

- 'Maze of modern development' -

Baba Haji Rozbih's shrine dated from the late 12th century, when the great Mayan city of Chichen Itza was at its height in Mexico.

It was already 500 years old when India's Taj Mahal was built.

Baba Haji Rozbih's shrine was less ambitious, a simple low-walled enclosure deep in the sprawling forest park of Sanjay Van -- far from any roads or buildings and difficult for all but regular worshippers to find.

But for those who visited the shrine, its loss was no less bitter.

"I have spent nights here praying -- and everything is gone," said a man who asked not to be named for fear of backlash.

"If we do not protect our history, then who will?"

The DDA is a federal agency whose mission is to ensure that Delhi's "unique historic character, its traditions and ethos" are not "lost in the maze of modern development".

It said the removals were approved by a religious committee, and that the "entire demolition programme (was) successfully completed without any hindrance and disturbance/protest".

Areas "reclaimed" added up to the area of a soccer pitch (5,000 square metres, 1.25 acres), the DDA added in a statement, without giving further details.

The Hindustan Times newspaper reported that, along with the mosque and shrine, the DDA cleared four Hindu temples and 77 graves.

- 'Heritage is common' -

Last month, bulldozers smashed down the Akhonji mosque in Delhi's Mehrauli forest, which its caretakers said was around 600 years old.

"You see the walls of a structure and realise how long it existed for," said Zakir Hussain, 40, the mosque's imam, describing how workers arrived before dawn to raze the buildings.

"We have lost that. You cannot rebuild it, no matter how hard you try."

Safvi said losing the mosque was a loss for all.

"Heritage is common," she said. "So you can't say that this mosque is only a blow to a particular community or to Muslims because they prayed there."

The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), which described Baba Haji Rozbih's shrine on its heritage list in 1922, said the cave-dwelling mystic was "revered as one of the oldest saints of Delhi".

The ASI's listing said "local tradition" reported a second grave in the shrine belonged to the daughter of Delhi's 12th-century Hindu leader Rai Pithora, who "embraced Islam through him".

Rozbih's proselytising reportedly sparked anger.

"Many of the Hindus embraced Islam by his advice, and the astrologers regarded this as an ill omen" that "foreboded the advent" in the 16th century of the Muslim Mughal empire, the ASI report said.

Centuries after that, demolitions began.

H.Vesely--TPP