Ayodhya Case: In British rule, there used to be Friday prayers & Hindus also used to worship
Ayodhya Case: In British rule, there used to be Friday prayers & Hindus also used to worship
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New Delhi: The 10th-day hearing is on in the Constitution bench of the Supreme Court on the Ayodhya Ram temple and Babri Masjid case. Senior advocate Ranjit Kumar, appearing for the petitioner Gopal Singh Visharad in the case, said, "I am a Ram worshipper and I have every right to worship at the birthplace and this right cannot be taken away from me.

Quoting the testimony of 80-year-old Abdul Ghani, Ghani said that the Babri Masjid was built at the birthplace of Ram. Under the British Raj, the mosque used only for Friday prayers, Hindus also came there to offer prayers. Ranjit Kumar has said that after the mosque collapsed, Muslims stopped praying there, but Hindus continued to worship at the birthplace. Earlier on Wednesday, Ram Lalla Virajman's lawyer CS Vaidyanathan had completed his cross-examination.

Vaidyanathan had said that whether the temple was on the disputed land, whether the statue or not, the faith of the people is enough to prove that it is the birthplace of Shri Ram. Vaidyanathan had said that when the property is vested in God, no one can take away that property and the right of God cannot be taken away from that property. The law of adverse registration will not apply to such properties.

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