India News | Maha Kumbh: Cleric Fears Mass Conversions; Others Flag Seers' 'demand' to Bar Muslims

Get latest articles and stories on India at LatestLY. Ahead of the Maha Kumbh, a senior cleric has written to Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath expressing fears that mass conversions of Muslims will take place during the event, while other community leaders have flagged the alleged demand raised by some Hindu seers' body to keep Muslims out of the mega gathering.

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Lucknow, Jan 5 (PTI) Ahead of the Maha Kumbh, a senior cleric has written to Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath expressing fears that mass conversions of Muslims will take place during the event, while other community leaders have flagged the alleged demand raised by some Hindu seers' body to keep Muslims out of the mega gathering. Last year, the Akhil Bharatiya Akhada Parishad (ABAP) had allegedly given a call to procure goods for the Maha Kumbh exclusively from Hindu shopkeepers to ensure that purchases were made solely from the true followers of Sanatan Dharma. Also Read | Rajasthan Shocker: Man Kills 5-Month-Old Son and Wife With Sharp Edged Weapon in Hanumangarh.

Held every 12 years, the Maha Kumbh will be organised in Prayagraj from January 13 to February 26. All India Muslim Jamaat president Maulana Shahabuddin Razvi Barelvi, who was in the spotlight recently for advising Muslims not to visit the Maha Kumbh, urged Adityanath on Friday to "thwart plans" to convert hundreds of Muslims during the event. Also Read | Jammu and Kashmir: PM Narendra Modi To Virtually Inaugurate Jammu Railway Division on December 6.



Speaking to PTI, Barelvi claimed he received information from reliable sources about plans to convert Muslims during the Kumbh, and as a concerned citizen, he informed the chief Minister about his apprehension. "Now it is the responsibility of the state government to act on this," he said. However, Barelvi, who earlier termed the alleged demand to bar Muslims from visiting the Kumbh "undemocratic" and "unconstitutional", put forward a different view on the matter in his letter to the chief minister.

"The Akhara Parishad and Naga seers held a meeting in November last year, where they talked about banning Muslims from setting up shops at the fair premises. That is why I have advised Muslims not to go to Maha Kumbh to avoid any trouble," he said. Maulana Kaab Rashidi, legal advisor to the Uttar Pradesh unit of Jamiat Ulama-e-Hind, said perhaps this is the first time that Muslims are at the centre of discussions before the biggest religious gathering of Hindus.

On the alleged demand to keep Muslims away from the event, Rashidi said, "Such calls violate the rights enshrined in the Constitution because India is known all over the world as a secular country. So, talking about banning Muslims from Maha Kumbh is like crushing the soul of the Constitution." "If a festival or a gathering like the Maha Kumbh is seen through the prism of religion, the country will move on the wrong path.

Muslims are an integral part of the country. How can they be kept away from the world's largest gathering of faith," Rashidi asked. Maulana Yasoob Abbas, general secretary of the All India Shia Personal Law Board, said, "If a Muslim goes to Maha Kumbh to increase his knowledge, what's the harm in it? Islam is not so weak that a person of the faith will be in danger just by attending a fair or by visiting a place of worship.

" On Barelvi's apprehension of conversions, Abbas said, "If the foundation of someone's faith is strong, no one can convert him." Taking a dig at Barelvi, Mohsin Raza, chairman of Uttar Pradesh Haj Committee and a former minister of state for minority welfare, said, "You must have heard RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat Ji's statement that some people want to become leaders by creating controversies. Such people are found everywhere.

If there are four brothers, their temperament will differ." "I have been to Kumbh many times, as have many Muslims. Also, many community members are involved in the arrangements for the Maha Kumbh.

So, demanding to keep them away cannot be a Sanatani 'sanskar'. Our culture is known for harmony and brotherhood, so the statement to ban Muslims from Maha Kumbh can at best be someone's personal view," the former Uttar Pradesh minister said. On Barelvi's claims on religious conversions, Raza said, "Those who have written to the chief minister were involved in illegal conversions.

They must have got the information that the people they converted illegally will go to Maha Kumbh for 'ghar vaapsi'. "Barelvi must have received such a report and that is why he is getting anxious. Whatever he is doing, he is doing to save himself.

" Meanwhile, Maulana Khalid Rashid Farangi Mahli, a senior member of the All India Muslim Personal Law Board and president of the Islamic Centre of India, said the centre will not issue any advisory on Muslims attending the Maha Kumbh. (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body).