Madhya Pradesh | Faith, history & a verdict
The MP court order on the sensitive Bhojshala issue sees the Hindus celebrating and the Muslims planning to appeal

A judicial ruling on May 15 seems to have settled—albeit for the time being—a long-standing religious dispute in Madhya Pradesh over rights to worship at the Bhojshala temple-Kamal Maula mosque structure in Dhar district. The Indore bench of the MP High Court ruled that the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI)-protected monument was a temple—as claimed by the Hindu side—dismissing contrary claims by the Muslim group (and of late even that of a Jain grouping). Delivering the judgment, the division bench of Justices V.K. Shukla and Alok Awasthi also asked the government to make efforts to bring back an idol of Vagdevi lodged at the British Museum in London, besides allotting the Muslim group alternate land to build a mosque. The court also quashed a 2003 ASI order that had specifed days of the week for Hindus and Muslims to offer prayers at the structure. Celebrations broke out among Hindu groups at the Bhojshala immediately after, and a prayer was organised the next day, which was attended, among others, by the Dhar district magistrate and superintendent of police.

