Bengal Leader: After Ram Mandir, now new Babri Masjid? This MLA’s open challenge increased the heartbeat of the country before December 6.

News India Live, Digital Desk: No one can say when which issue will arise in politics and when the spark buried in the ashes will be rekindled. Just now the country was celebrating the construction of Ram temple, the atmosphere was calm, when suddenly a voice came from West Bengal which has refreshed the old memories. Often leaders make statements to come into limelight, but what Humayun Kabir, MLA from Bharatpur, West Bengal, has said has created a stir in the political circles. This is not just a matter of building a mosque, but of the ‘date’ chosen for it. Let us understand in simple language what the matter is and what is going to happen on December 6. MLA’s open announcement: “A mosque will be built again.” Trinamool Congress (TMC) MLA Humayun Kabir has openly vowed in a public meeting that he will build a new mosque. Till now everything was fine, but controversy arose when he talked about naming it Babri Masjid or something similar and linking it to the same historical context. He says that the pain of what happened in Ayodhya is still in the hearts of the people of his community. Therefore, they will build a mosque in West Bengal that will keep that memory alive. Why only the date of 6th December? Friends, 6th December is considered a very sensitive day in the history of India. On this day in 1992, the Babri structure was demolished in Ayodhya. Humayun Kabir has announced that he will lay the foundation stone of his new mosque on 6th December. His statement that “We will not let this day be forgotten” clearly shows that this step is not just religious but completely political. He has claimed that a crowd of lakhs of people will gather in the foundation stone laying program on this day. Politics started, the atmosphere got heated. Obviously, other parties have expressed strong objection to this statement of the MLA. The opposition (BJP) says that all this is being done in view of the Lok Sabha elections and to get votes of a particular community. People say that when the country has moved forward after the Supreme Court’s decision, what is the point of reopening those old wounds? Is it really a question of faith or an attempt to inflame emotions before the elections? The question is big, because on one hand the country is talking about development and on the other hand some leaders want to tear the pages of history and take us back to the place from where we had come out with difficulty.

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