Amit Shah takes holy dip with Dalit sadhus at Kumbh
BJP President Amit Shah along with Dalit sadhus and others on Wednesday took a holy dip at the ongoing Kumbh Mela here as part of the ‘Samrasta Snan’ (social harmony bath) at the Valmiki Ghat (bank) of Shipra river, overcoming reservations from certain quarters.
Ujjain
Shah arrived here from Indore to take part in the month-long Simhastha Kumbh and joined the Dalit sadhus and other saints in the holy bath billed by the BJP as the ‘Samrasta Snan’ with an eye on the Assembly elections in the politically sensitive Uttar Pradesh next year.
The ‘Samrasta Snan’ comes at a time when RSS is organising a series of functions to draw Dalits and tribals into its fold in the wake of the backlash caused by its chief Mohan Bhagwat’s statement calling for review of the reservation policy before the Bihar Assembly polls last year.
Later, Shah also had a ‘ Samrasta Bhoj’ (social harmony feast) with Dalit sadhus.
Prior to the ‘Snan’, the BJP chief accompanied by Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan and others took part in a ‘samagam’ (meeting) at Valmiki Dham in which Akhil Bharatiya Akhara Parishad head Narendra Giri, Juna Akhara Peeth’s head Awdheshanand and Valmiki Dham’s Peethadheeshwar Umesh Nath among others participated. Later, they all proceeded to take a dip at the Valmiki Ghat. “BJP is the only party which believes in strengthening the country’s culture and fosters the feeling of world as one abode, one family (Vasudevkutumbhkam),” Shah told reporters.
“It (snan) holds more significance as today is the jayanti of Shankracharya, who treaded the path of unifying the main currents of thoughts in Hindu religion at a young age of 32,” he said.
Kumbh is also the subject matter for management students as crores of people converge here without any invitation, he added.
The sadhus who were earlier averse to the ‘social harmony bath’ on Wednesday softened their stand saying they had misunderstood the concept.
They said they were under a wrong impression that the snan was confined to Shah and the Dalits. After learning that the bath will see people from all castes, they said they no longer hold any grudge against it.
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