Hindu temple in Kahuta

This beautiful Hindu temple in Kahuta Pakistan hides a secret

This fascinating Hindu temple in Kahuta Pakistan has a dark story to tell…

In 1947, Kahuta had a population of 3500, with half of them Muslims, all living along the main junction of the ring road that went into Kashmir and looped back at the same spot. The Hindus were of the Mahajan caste (patwari, tehsildar, merchants, etc.); Muslims were of the Rajput clan and Sikhs were in the administration.

KAHUTA TEMPLES

Sikhs also lived around an adjacent town called the Thoa Khalsa, christened by ‘Bana’ a close confidante of Baba Guru Nanak.

Kahuta has vast fruit orchids (mangoes too), watering ponds, waterfalls, a vibrant town with Hindu temples, a gurudwara and a Jamia mosque.

Incidentally, Ajit Doval, the James Bond of India has mentioned in his book that he spent quite some time around Kahuta and met some closet Hindu who recognized his pierced earlobes and nearly blew his cover. The Hindu, he said had a white flowing beard like a Muslim holy man and had deities (moortis’) hidden in his closet.

At the end of March 1947, all that was left standing in the shouldering wreckage was the minaret and the obelisk of the Hindu temples — nothing else survived.

Sikhs’ were the magnanimous ruling class, building administrative centers, schools all around Kahuta. The British ended Sikh rule on Kahuta which was then part of Kashmir and handed it over to Rawalpindi district. As Rawalpindi was also directly administered by the British, Hindus gains ascendancy in Kahuta.

The same power structure was duplicated in other mixed communities with temples around Rawalpindi like Kurri Shehr, Lal Kurti, Kohati Bazar & Saddar Kabari Bazar & Purana Qila.

Muslims stayed the same, poorly educated, politically weak, and living in the surrounding mountains.

In March 1947, rumors of Muslim lynching in India reached Kahuta and enraged mobs from the surrounding mountains, especially Narh, came clambering down for revenge. The sacred Sikh town of Thoa Khasa was burned to the ground with 50 Sikhs killed in one day.

The mob then besieged Kahuta’s main town, dowsed the place in petrol, and set it on fire. The Hindus, Sikhs, and Muslims living in the town Centre were all burned to death. Several were reportedly raped. The remaining stunned people fled.

One eye witness of the horror in Kahuta told me “upward of 1000 died in the fire and nothing was left except the minaret & temple spire” — but no one to worship inside.

 

Mountbatten personally came to visit after the killings. These violent deaths were the result of colonial divide and rule policies, sowing religious divide. I mean, how can you gift Kashmir – a Muslim majority state – to a Hindu Dogra? Is it your Phuphi’s walima feast?

Now, this temple is the prettiest of all the Hindu worship places I’ve visited around Pakistan. All its religious symbols are still intact. I wish someone would interpret them for me.

 

I guess the town folks had had enough of violence for the next hundred years — they left the temples alone.

Hate begets hate; there can be no peace till the healing takes place.

Although the architecture of Hindu temples in Pakistan like the ones in Karachi, Lahore, Rawalpindi, Sialkot, Multan are nothing like the grand temples in Dubai, UAE, Atlanta, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Florida, Omaha — they are older and revered. Just for your information, there are no Hindu temples in the Muslim holy land of Saudi Arabia. Take your pick of the Hindu temples near you.

If you are in Kahuta to see this temple, don’t forget to see the other Hindu temple, which is now home to a lovely Kashmiri family.

do see the video on Kahuta.

6 Comments

  1. the last picture is of Lord Hanuman. Feel free to ask me to help you decipher other murals etc. Regards

    1. Thanks and will contact you if we need help.

  2. Bilawal Ali Khan says:

    Great article. I’m from village Katheel Hoon, Tehsil Kahuta of Rawalpindi. I have visited these temples many times. So remarkable masterpiece of architecture is visible there. I am always looking for the tourists here to come and see their Holy places. Foreign Nationals have to inform and take permission from Pakistani ministry of interior , two months before arriving here. There is no difficulty in taking this permission.
    Welcome dear.

    1. Thank you for reading it and do share our posts

  3. So very beautiful wow I would love to one day visit all of them .

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