Photographs of Taj Mahal’s locked rooms published
Published: 10:38 17 May 2022 Updated: 16:45 17 May 2022

Photo: Collected
The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) released some photographs of the 22 locked rooms in the basement of the Taj Mahal.
This was done to debunk claims about the presence of Hindu idols and structures in the so-called “permanently locked” rooms, as was claimed in a petition filed with the Allahabad high court (HC).
On May 12, the Lucknow bench of the Allahabad High Court had rejected the petition seeking a fact-finding inquiry into the “history” of the Taj Mahal and also opening of the doors of its “22 rooms” to see “the truth, whatever it is”.
The writ petition was filed in the Lucknow bench by Rajneesh Singh, media in-charge of the BJP’s Ayodhya unit, contending that the Taj Mahal was a Shiva Temple known as Tejo Mahalaya, asking for the government to constitute a fact-finding committee to publish the “real history” of the monument.
After the court order, ASI officials had maintained that there is no secret in those rooms, they are just part of the structure, and are not unique to the Taj Mahal, but several Mughal-era mausoleums built at the time, including Humayun’s Tomb in Delhi.
“The work of maintenance of underground cells on the river side was taken up. Decayed and disintegrated lime plaster was removed and replaced by laying of lime plaster and traditional lime processing before application,” said accompanying text, while four photographs of the basement cells, “before” and “after” conversation, were published alongside in the organisation’s newsletter.
Even as ASI officials insist the “January newsletter has been in the public domain ever since”, it was released by the agency on its website on May 5 and tweeted on its official handle on May 9.
About the released photos, officials from the ASI’s Agra Circle told The Indian Express that every month, each of the circles sends “highlights of work done under their purview to the Delhi headquarters, some of which is then included in the ASI’s newsletter”.
“It was between December 2021 and February 2022 that conservation work was carried out at those cells. The published pictures were from December 2021; even after that a lot more work was done and pictures were taken. Whether they find space in the next issues of the newsletter will be an editorial decision,” says the official from the Agra Circle.
“It is not just Taj Mahal; we did work at Jama Masjid, Itmad-ud-Daulah and the Agra Fort, and some of those pictures have also been published in the said issue,” he adds. - TOI, Indian Express
DailyBangladesh/AN/AS
- Israel hits Gaza with air attacks as tensions escalate
- 4 ministers appointed in Sri Lanka’s new cabinet
- Manik Saha made Tripura Chief Minister
- Tripura Chief Minister Biplab Kumar Deb resigns
- 10 dead in shooting at New York supermarket
- Turkey to reject Sweden, Finland`s bid to join NATO: Erdogan
- India’s Supreme Court recognizes sex work as profession
- Taliban say female Afghan TV presenters must cover faces
- Monkeypox spreads to 11 countries: WHO warns
- Visit visa for Umrah within 24hrs: Saudi minister
- Curfew lifted in Sri Lanka
- 3 killed in lightning strike near White House
- Congress President Sonia Gandhi tested Covid positive
- Russia cuts off power supply in Finland
- Monkeypox cases detected in 3 more countries