Kashi Vishwanath or Gyanvapi masjid?
The question continues…
Years have been passed and the foreign invaders have continuously been invading and looting Hindustan and its culture and also have tried to destroy the Hindu culture. But yes, nothing budged for our culture.
South region of India has always been rich and full of Indian architecture and has a bloom of Indian culture or Hinduism.
We all know about Varanasi and the famous “Kashi Vishwanath mandir”. A person visiting that temple comes with a question every time that how a temple and a mosque collab with each other and why?
The answer is to the question that the temple in the Mughal dynasty was captured and had been disintegrated, not only that temple but many more.
The mosque which is in the side of temple was built by the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb in 1669 CE, after destroying a Hindu temple. The remains of the Hindu temple can be seen on the walls of the Gyanvapi mosque. The demolished temple is believed by Hindus to be an earlier restoration of the original Kashi Vishwanath temple. The original temple had been destroyed and rebuilt a number of times. The temple structure that existed prior to the construction of the mosque was most probably built by Raja Man Singh during Akbar's reign.
Anyone with a common sense can easily figure it out.
It is said that the holy deity “Nandi” always faces to the statue of lord Shiva and guess what it faces to the Gyanvapi mosque.
There is well inside the mosque after which the mosque is named, “The Gyanvapi well”.
The present Kashi Vishwanath Mandir was reestablished in 1776 by AHILYABAI with 800 tons of gold plated on the towers.
Not only Kashi’s mandir but many more were destroyed by so called great Mughal emperors.
Taj mahal which is one of the most overrated things is one of the destroyed Hindu temples and also not a sign of love because Mumtaz died of delivering her 14th child. Instead of her weak heath, Shahjahan continued to pregnant her, if it is love then you are wrong.
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