Good, bad or faulty? What’s your take on the Ayodhya judgement? And how do you think this dispute can be solved? Post your comments below.
Recent Posts
- Girl raised in brothel wins scholarship to US college
- B Raman, India’s seasoned spymaster and trenchant US critic, dies at 77
- I love this dirty town
- Sinhala extremism finds new targets in Sri Lanka
- Arunima conquers two Everests
- On the media’s need for whipping boys
- ‘My mother and I are married to the same man’: matrilineal marriage in Bangladesh
- Brotherly Love by Jhumpa Lahiri
- Ignobel Indians
- The moving story behind Delhi’s Yodakin bookstore
Recent Comments
- Bengali on 50 reasons NOT to marry a Bengali man
- KarthikReddy on A striptease class in Bangalore
- Bengali Guy on 50 reasons NOT to marry a Bengali man
- sania on The skeleton in the cupboard
- Cameron on 50 reasons NOT to marry a Bengali man
Categories
Blogroll
- 3 Quarks Daily
- Arts & Letters Daily
- Asia Sentinel
- Beyond Headlines
- Bollywood Food Club
- Chapati Mystery
- Cricinfo
- Empirical Zeal
- First Post
- Human Rights Watch
- India Ink
- IndiaSpend
- Kafila
- Manoj Joshi
- Mumbai Boss
- Pak Tea House
- Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting
- Riding the elephant
- SAJA Forum
- Shunya’s Notes
- Siddharth Varadarajan
- Teeth Maestro
- Thaindian News Portal
- The Daily Beast
- The Delhi Walla
- The Hoot
- The India Site
- The South Asian Idea
- Vir Sanghvi
- Words Without Borders
- World Security Network
- YouTube India




Incidentally, this situation is similar to the Ground Zero mosque issue in USA. Here’s what I was hoping: Due to lack of evidence, the court gives the property rights to the Sunni Waqf Board, and then as a brotherly gesture, the board gives away some land to the Hindu parties and let them worship their idols there. And they live happily ever after.
Alas, in a politically charged and religion-driven world, that just can’t happen.