Iron Pillar near the Qutub Tower That the iron pillar bearing a - TopicsExpress



          

Iron Pillar near the Qutub Tower That the iron pillar bearing a Hindu inscription has been standing un-rusted through rain and shine for milleniums beside the so–called Qutub Minar amidst the surrounding temples battered by Invader hordes. Qutubuddin could never have brought piles of material and dug a sprawling foundation for the stone tower called (Qutub) inside the narrow confines of surrounding temples and other building work. Dislodged stones bearing Hindu images on one side and Arab lettering on the other found the so called Qutub Tower also prove that Invader conquerors staked false claim to Hindu monuments through sculptural forgeries. Qutub Minar That this 238 ft. tall tower euphemistically called Kutub Minar was erected by King Vikramaditya for astronomical observation centuries before Islam was even founded. The adjoining township called Mehrauli is the corrupt form the Sanskrit term Mihira-Awali meaning the Mihira Township. Mihira was Vikramaditya’s royal mathematician-cum-astronomer-cum meteorologist. Even the Arabic term Kutub Minar signifies an astronomical tower. Kutub and Kutubuddin was a subsequent unwitting mix-up. Around the tower were 27 constellation temples which Kutubuddin’s inscription vaunts to have destroyed. The tower too has 27 flutings. Near the first storey ceiling are 27 holes one in each is likely. True to the significance of the term Kutub, this Tower’s entrance faces due north. Quwat-ul-Islam Mosque That turned into a mosque called Quwat-ul-Islam the rows of ornamental pillars of this monument by the side of the so-called Qutub Tower are a clear proof of its having been a Hindu temple. No genuine mosque has ever such pillars lest reciters of Namaz standing and bending with half-closed eyes inadvertently break their heads against them. Nizam-ud-din Tomb That the ornamental Hindu style pillars in the white marble structure turned into Nizamuddin Tomb. The arch on the right and parts of arches visible on either side of the dome are clear proof that this haphazard conglomerate of heterogeneous buildings was a part of an ancient Hindu township stormed by invading Invader armies. Fakirs like Nizamuddin following in their wake used to take up residence in the ruins of battered buildings for preaching Islam to terrorize ‘infidels’. On their death they used to be buried in the ruins where they lived. That is why tombs like those of Nizamuddin and Bakhtiar Kaki in Delhi, Salim Chisti in Fatehpur Sikri and of Moinuddin Chisti in Ajmer present a mix-up of Hindu structure devoid of any coherent plan. Around the Nizamuddin tomb in Delhi are fanciful halls called Chausath Khamba, crumbling walls, bastions, towers, decadent graves, cellars ,plinths and cornices which are remnants of the stormed Hindu township still remembered by the term Keel-Ukhri(Kilokri). Keel used to be the central pillar erected when a Hindu township was planned. Since it got up-rooted in the Invader assault that area came to be known as Kilokri. So called Humayun’s Tomb That just about half a mile away from this building known as Humayun Tomb is the narrow staircase from which Humayun the second generation Moghul emperor fell, in Delhi. He was carried to his palace say contemporary chronicles. This was the palace he was carried to and it was there that he died a few days later. He was buried in the central chamber where he lay ill as has happened throughout Invader history in India. This solves the tantalizing riddle why we have tombs but apparently no palaces of luxury-steeped pleasure-seeking alien potentates. This monument still forms part of Jaipur Estate in Delhi. It is surrounded by ruined walls, annexes, guesthouses, and guardrooms. An arcade of arches leads to it. Close-by is a huge annexes euphemistically called Arab-ki-Serai deriving its name from the times that invading Arab hordes encamped in it .The entire grounds are littered with graves of invading Invader soldiers slain by Hindu defenders. Before being turned into a tomb Humayun as a usurper lived in this sprawling Hindu captured palace which was the focal point of the ruined township since known as Kilokri. The nearby ruins in which Fakir Nizamuddin lies buried were a part of this huge Hindu citadel. Roshanara Garden That this is believed to be the tomb of Roshanara, the daughter of the last powerful Moghul emperor Aurangzeb. Note that it has neither domes nor minarets. Instead it has ornamental pillars, Hindu arches and cupolas. Very parsimonious and hardhearted as the Hindu-baiter Aurangzeb was he would hardly spend any money on a Hindu style resting-place for his daughter’s corpse. Obviously, therefore, this is a usurped Hindu garden palace commandeered to serve as a tomb as was usual in those times. Fatehpuri Mosque That this so called Fatehpuri Mosque at one end of Delhi’s crowded Chandni Chowk highway was a pre-Invader Rajput temple of the city’s guardian and royal deity Lord Shankara alias Eklingaji. Its entrance arches have the Hindu stone flower emblems on either side of the apex. The word ‘Fatehpuri’ means a conquered (Hindu) township. The marble slab on the red-stone entrance proclaiming it to be a mosque is evidently as interpolation. The monuments, arches and pillars and cupolas are entirely of Hindu Rajput style. The so-called mosque’s rental revenue is all derived exclusively from Hindu shops swarming its fringes. This proves that while the stalls remained with the Hindu their temples fell a victim to conquest and conversion. Mausoleum of Safdar Jang That this so called Safdarjang tomb in Delhi was an ancient Rajput palace which devolved on the Invader aristocracy through conquest .It has an ornamental Rajput style gateway and a protective wall with watch-towers and bastions which are superfluous for a genuine tomb. Safdarjang, an ex-chief Minister of the Nawab of Oudh had been disgraced and dismissed prior to his death. Who would foot the bill to build a palace for an unemployed deceased nobleman’s corpse? A little prodding with two sharp questions brings down the entire illusory structure of tall Invader claims to Hindu building-work. We ask that if Safdarjang’s corpse could afford such a stupendous palace he should have had at least ten palaces when living. But there is none. The other question is that if his heir and successor built this palace for the corpse of the deceased Safdarjang the former must himself have had tens of palaces in Delhi. But he too had none. Our answer to this riddle is that Safdarjang and in fact all alien Invader rulers and noblemen were buried in their own palaces. Diwan-I-Khas, Red Fort, Delhi That contrary to popular belief the Red Fort in Delhi is a very ancient structure. Prithviraj used to stay in this Lalkot (red palace). Saffron and ochre are colours sacred to the Hindus, but avoided by Invaders The main highway of Delhi known as Chandni Chowk connects the Red Fort with the royal and guardian deity’ temple now turned into Fatehpuri Mosque. Around this axis was built Old Delhi protected by a massive wall. According to Akbarnama and the Agni Purana, Delhi was built by the Hindu King Anagpal around 372 A.D. before founding of Islam. Imambadas in Lucknow The so called Imambadas in Lucknow for instance are ancient Hindu places which are being merrily ascribed to this or that alien Invader nawab who subjugated that part of Hindusthan. IN THE HON’BLE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT ALLAHABAD. (Under Article 226 of constitution of India) Annexure No. Civil Misc. Writ Petition No. of 2004 (District – Agra) Institute of Rewriting Indian History Through its Founder President, P. N. Oak. S/O Late Shri Nagesh Krishna Oak, R/O - Plot No. 10, Goodwill Society, Aundh, Pune – 411007 and another…………..Pettioners VERSUS Union of India through Secretary, Human Resources and Development (HRD), Government of India, New Delhi. ……………….Respondents THE ANCIENT AND HISTORICAL MONUMENTS AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES AND REMAINS (DECLARATION OF NATIONAL IMPORTANCE) ACT, 1951. Act NO.LXXI OF 1951 An Act to declare certain ancient historical monuments and archaeological sites and remains in Part A States and Part B States to be of national importance and to provide for certain matters connected therewith. [28th November, 1951] BE it enacted by Parliament as follows:-- 1.Short title.--This Act may be called the Ancient and Historical Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains (Declaration of National Importance) Act, 1951. 2.Declaration of certain monuments and archaeological sites and remains to be of national importance.--The ancient and historical monuments referred to or specified in Part I of the Schedule and the archaeological sites and remains referred to or specified in Part II thereof fare hereby declared, respectively, to be ancient and historical monuments and archaeological sites and remains of national importance. 3.Application of Act VII of 1904 to ancient monuments, etc., declared to be of national importance.-- All ancient and historical monuments and al archaeological sites and remains declared by this Act to be of national importance shall be deemed to be protected monuments and protected areas, respectively, within the meaning of the Ancient Monuments Preservation Act, 1904, and the provisions of that Act shall apply accordingly to the ancient and historical monuments or archaeological sites and remains, as the case may be, and shall be deemed to have so applied at all relevant times.
Posted on: Thu, 19 Sep 2013 20:30:27 +0000

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