Varanasi: The court of Varanasi’s seniormost judge is expected to decide today whether a case filed by five Hindu women seeking the right to worship inside the city’s Gyanvapi mosque, located next to the famous Kashi Viswanath temple, is “maintainable” or not.
District judge AK Vishvesha is likely to pronounce orders on whether the case by the women — that led to a survey inside the Gyanvapi mosque — will continue to be heard or whether it will cease to have any legal standing.
In May, the Supreme Court assigned the case to the Varanasi district judge’s court, shifting it from a lower court where it was being heard till then.
intervention in the case, the Varanasi civil court had ordered the filming of the Gyanvapi mosque, based on the petition by the Hindu women who claim there are idols of Hindu Gods and goddesses in the Gyanvapi mosque complex.
A report of the filming at the mosque was then submitted to the Varanasi court in a sealed cover, but the Hindu petitioners controversially released details just hours later.
The report claimed a “Shivling” had been found in a pond within the mosque complex used for “Wazoo” or purification rituals before Muslim prayers. The judge hearing the case at the time had ordered the sealing of this pond.
This filming inside the centuries-old mosque was challenged in Supreme Court by the Gyanvapi mosque committee.
The petitioners said the filming goes against the Places of Worship Act of 1991, which maintains the religious status of any place of worship as of August 15, 1947.
The mosque committee made similar arguments before the Varanasi district judge’s court in the “maintainability” case, while lawyers for the Hindu petitioners claimed the law does not bar their case and that they could establish in court that the mosque premises were actually a temple as on the day of Independence.