Congress, BJP lock horns over Jawaharlal Nehru's letters to ex-president Rajendra Prasad on temple visit
New Delhi/IBNS: The Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have locked horns once again over Jawaharlal Nehru, this time over the fact whether the former Prime Minister had objected to former President Rajendra Prasad's association with the Somnath temple.
The row started after BJP leader Sudhanshu Trivedi claimed Nehru did not want Prasad to attend the temple's inauguration in 1951.
The Congress refuted the allegation and pointed to letters by Nehru to prove the country's first Prime Minister did nothing of the sort that BJP leader Sudhanshu Trivedi alleged.
"Sudanshu Trivedi has apparently waved some letters on air - of Pandit Nehru on the Somnath Temple. These and many other letters of Nehru, including to then Home Minister Rajaji and President Rajendra Prasad, are all in the public domain and form part of Vol 16-I of the Second Series of the Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru available online at nehruselectedworks.com," Congress leader Jairam Ramesh said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.
"Contrary to what Trivedi claims, these constitute no great revelation. Nehru was completely transparent and left behind written records - written by him personally. Here is some correspondence on the subject that Mr Trivedi did not exhibit," Ramesh said, attaching a few pages of the documents.
Sudanshu Trivedi has apparently waved some letters on air — of Pandit Nehru on the Somnath Temple. These and many other letters of Nehru, including to then Home Minister Rajaji and President Rajendra Prasad, are all in the public domain and form part of Vol 16-I of the Second… pic.twitter.com/jiL6wRzJCZ
— Jairam Ramesh (@Jairam_Ramesh) January 11, 2024
Trivedi had alleged Nehru opposed the association of Prasad and some Congress leaders with the rebuilding and inauguration of the Somnath temple.
The comment came after Congress chief Mallikarjun Kharge, senior leaders Sonia Gandhi and Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury "respectfully declined" the invitation to attend the Ram temple's consecration in Uttar Pradesh's Ayodhya on Jan 22.
The Congress has accused the BJP of making the consecration a "political project" for electoral gains.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other top BJP leaders will attend the Ram temple's consecration and planning for the grand event is under full swing.
In Nehru's letter of March 11, 1951, shared by the Congress, the former Prime Minister told the then Home Minister C Rajagopalachari, "I wrote to him that while there was obviously no objection to his visiting this temple or any other temple or other place of worship normally, on this particular occasion the inauguration of the temple would have a certain significance and certain implications. Therefore, for my part, I would have preferred if he did not associate himself in this way."
"As the President is also anxious to associate himself with this function, I do not know whether it is desirable for me to insist that he should not do so. I propose, therefore, subject to your advice, to tell him that he can exercise his own discretion in the matter, although, I still think that it would be better for him not to go there," Nehru said in the letter.
On March 13, 1951, Nehru also wrote to Prasad on his visit to the Somnath temple, saying, "... If you feel that it will not be right for you to refuse the invitation, I would not like to press my point any further."
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