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Bihar's Muslim minister courts controversy with 'Jai Sri Ram' chant, apologises after 'fatwa'

Bihar's Minority Welfare Minister Khurshid alias Feroz Ahmad earned the ire of a Muslim cleric for chanting 'Jai Sri Ram' in the state assembly premises on July 28.

India TV Politics Desk Edited by: India TV Politics Desk Patna Updated on: July 30, 2017 22:28 IST
Fatwa against Bihar's Muslim minister for 'Jai Sri Ram' chan
Fatwa against Bihar's Muslim minister for 'Jai Sri Ram' chan

A Muslim JD(U) MLA got so carried away by the new-found bonhomie between his party and the BJP that he chanted 'Jai Sri Ram', drawing the ire of a senior cleric who said he stood "expelled from Islam" for his action. A fatwa was issued against Khurshid alias Feroz Ahmad for chanting 'Jai Sri Ram' in the state assembly premises on July 28. 

Feroz Ahmad enthusiastically made the chant, a favourite of the Hindu far right that wants a Ram temple at the place in Ayodhya where the Babri mosque stood before being razed down in 1992, after Chief Minister Nitish Kumar won the trust vote. Khurshid was later inducted into the ministry of newly-sworn in Bihar government of JD(U)-NDA and now holds the minority welfare and sugarcane industries departments. 

"I worship both Ram and Rahim. I don't have any hesitation in saying Jai Sri Ram if it is in the interest of the people of Bihar and benefits them," Khurshid later told journalists, proudly displaying the red Hindu sacred thread called Kalawa or Mouli on his wrist.

Khurshid's secular protestations did not go down well with the Muslim clergy and some politicians but his own party backed him.

Sohail Ahmad Qasmi, the Mufti of Imarat Shariah, Patna, said,"Any person who says he worships both Rasul and Ram, bows his head before every faith, then shouts 'Jai Sri Ram', that person is automatically expelled from Islam." 

"I have seen his statements in newspapers and also circulating on Whatsapp. In this background I have expressed my opinion ... It is not a fatwa which has been issued by the Imarat Shariah. Considering my responsibility as an Aalim and Mufti, I have expressed my opinion," he said.

Minister earns ire of Opposition 

Khurshid also drew criticism from senior RJD leader and former minister Abdul Bari Siddiqui, who said it appeared that the minister had got the "badshahat" (kingdom) somewhere.

NCP leader and former union minister Tariq Anwar said it showed that the minister can stoop to any level to grab power. "People will teach a lesson to such people," he said.

Apologises after 'fatwa'

As criticism mounted, Khurshid tendered apology. The JD(U) MLA from Sikta assembly constituency expressed regret if his action had hurt anyone. "If my statement has hurt anyone, then I tender my apology. My statement has been distorted." 

Khurshid said the chief minister had asked him to consider his statement if it hurt peoples' sentiments and tender an apology. 

He later reached the Phulwari Sharif shrine in Patna to apologise and again recite 'Kalma' (confession of faith). He was accompanied by Bihar's Home Secretary Amir Subhani. 

Defending the minority welfare minister, JD(U) spokesman Neeraj Kumar said, "This is the country where great personalities like Mahatma Gandhi used to take the name of Ram and Rahim simultaneously. This a conspiracy to finish Ganga-Jamuni tradition. The minister's slogan was not intended to hurt anyone's religious sentiments." 

(With PTI inputs)

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