
UBT flays Sena over Durgadi temple visit curbs on Eid
During Bakr Eid, Muslim worshippers gather in large numbers to pray at the fort's Idgah section. Consequently, Hindu devotees are restricted from entering the Durga temple located at the fort's front to maintain peace. On Saturday, police prevented both Sena factions from crossing the barricades near the fort.
The Sena UBT's up neta Vijay Salvi criticised Shiv Sena, noting that while the Ghanta Naad movement was initiated by Anand Dighe in 1982, with deputy CM Eknath Shinde leading it for many years, the state administration has now been restricting devotee entry despite his positions as CM and deputy CM showing duplicity on Hindutva."
Sena MLA Vishwanath Bhoir also criticised the administration for the restrictions on temple entry.
— Pradeep Gupta

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Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Sindh Doc's Partition Diaries: Tricolour was hoisted in Pak school in 1947, RSS held shakhas in Ghotki hamlet
Nagpur: Dr Abhimanyu Kukreja, 86, was just nine years old and ensconced in his native Sindh hamlet of Ghotki, when the subcontinent was partitioned. He recalls the day Pakistan declared independence on August 14, 1947, but says his village was untouched by partition pangs. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now "Hindus were in majority and lived peacefully with Muslims, although we heard about riots in Sukkur, 100km away. It was just another day when Pakistan came into being. A Pakistani flag hoisted on Arya Samaj School's terrace was quietly replaced at night with the tricolour by our neighbour, Sangatram. There were no tremors, nobody could find out who did it, and later Sangatram quietly moved to India," recalls Dr Kukreja. Talking to TOI, Kukreja recalls names of his neighbours in Ghotki village of Sindh, who later settled down in Nagpur's Jaripatka colony. On the eve of 78th independence day, Kukreja, now living in Nagpur, recalled his times in independent India, the family's migration from Pakistan, a flourishing RSS shakha in Sindh and Congress Seva Dal's activities. Decades later, Ghotki became a district, even as the Hindu exodus to India continued. "I don't remember any hype over Pakistan's Independence Day. We didn't face persecution, but I can vividly recall elders talking about shifting to India. I was small and didn't want to leave my Ghotki home," he says. "There used to be an open ground near our home, where RSS cadres would hold their shaka. I did not attend any, but I still remember the disciplined congregation. Even Congress' Seva Dal used to carry out patriotic activities," he said. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Kukreja recalls the case of an RSS worker who had to shift to India overnight after he was told that he was on the hit list. However, that was a one-off incident. His father ran an herbal medicine business and practised farming. There was no threat, but as Hindus, many preferred to shift to India, says Kukreja. "We finally moved out of Ghotki in January 1948. We reached Karachi, and the migrants were put up in the Swami Narayan temple there, waiting for their turn to board a ship to Mumbai (then termed Bombay)," he says. Kukreja reached Mumbai with his four siblings and mother. Their batch of refugees was sent to Jabalpur, Faizabad, and then Deolali near Nashik. His father, however, preferred to stay back in Pakistan, while the family travelled to India with an acquaintance. "My father finally came down in November when we were in Deolali. But he quickly returned to Sindh on receiving a telegram that our house was taken over by Muslim refugees from India, who would be termed 'panahgirs'. We were tagged as 'sharnarthis' in India and both words meant refugees. Life began afresh in Ghotki, but the family returned to Mumbai three years later, though Kukreja's father continued to stay in Ghotki. "He finally came to India in 1964. Shuttling between two countries wasn't much of a hassle then. We remained in touch through trunk calls and telegrams. My father would send us money through people coming to India and everything was so simple back then," he says. During the second trip, the family preferred to settle in Nagpur, where there were many others from Ghotki. Kukreja got a bachelor's degree in ayurvedic medicine and surgery. "While he was still in Pakistan, my father chose a bride for me in Ghotki. My wife came to India when she was eighteen, much after the Partition," he says.


Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
Partition, 79 years: The Mohalla Gashala boy, who lived to tell the tale
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Hindustan Times
2 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
BEST credit society served notices ahead of polls
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