
Originally Posted by
Solomon2
Last Sunday I was at Katas Raj, the ancient religious site (Buddhist and Hindu) in the Salt Range. It is useless to lament the destruction of the pristine site with marble flooring and steel pipe banisters to the stairways where none had ever existed in history. Culprit: the department of archaeology.
Behind the recently ‘renovated’ (and therefore utterly destroyed) two 11th century-Hindu Shahya temples, there was a newish building that I had not noticed on my last visit two years ago. This was a public toilet. But, said the employee of the department trailing us, it had been vandalised.
The doors were smashed, every single windowpane broken, the wash basins were gone. There were shards of porcelain from the broken basins strewn all around and the commodes were either broken or filled with rubbish; their cisterns removed. The man from the department said all this had been done by visitors to one of the holiest sites of Hinduism. He said the toilet had been built only about a year ago.
Well I have been to Katas Raj myself and let me tell you the whole area surrounding that temple is Muslim dominated (and that too very poor Muslims who hardly have their own home to sleep at night). There is hardly any non-Muslim living in that area so who is going to take care of it? I understand it could be Government's responsibility but keeping the geography of that temple in mind it is understandable to see that situation in Katas. Here in London I have seen couple of churches been converted to Mosques due to less attention given to them by the public. There was a church in my local area that is converted to Islamic school in East London (Al-Azhar Academy) and if you go inside that building it looks like a church but you get feeling as if it was abandoned for couple of years.
Having said that, LK Advani visited Katas Raj couple of years ago and I heard from the locals that the Government was trying to nominate that place in World Heritage site and had allocated a fund of 20 million rupees to renovate the old structure of the temple. I did witness some work going on inside of the temple. There is not even a single Hindu you will see around that Temple and only the visitors who would come to take some photos and go away. There are some Hindu pilgrims who come to visit this temple in April of each year and that was inscribed on the stone located near the main entrance of that temple