Pakistan’s top Islamic body approves construction of Hindu temple

Council of Islamic Ideology approves construction of new temple in Islamabad, saying Islamic law allows minority Hindus a place of worship.

A general view of the Shri Krishna Temple in Mithi, some 320km (198 miles) from Karachi [File: Rizwan Tabassum/AFP]

Pakistan’s state-run council of clerics, which advises the government on religious issues, has given its approval for the construction of a new temple for minority Hindus, ruling that Islamic law allows minorities a place of worship.

Lal Malhi, a prominent Hindu leader who is also a member of parliament, applauded Wednesday’s ruling but noted the council also recommended the government not spend public funds directly on the construction of private places of worship.

Currently, there is no functioning temple for Hindus in Islamabad. About 3,000 Hindus live in the capital with its population of more than one million, mostly Muslims.

In a statement, the Council of Islamic Ideology also said Hindus in Pakistan had a constitutional right to perform the last rites of their deceased.

“In light of this right, it is permitted for the Hindu community in Islamabad to have a suitable place where they can perform last rites of the deceased according to religious instructions,” the statement said.

The council also permitted the building of community centres for the minority group to hold weddings and religious events, which the council noted was their constitutional right.

The decision by the Council of Islamic Ideology comes after the government of Prime Minister Imran Khan abruptly halted construction on the temple in the capital Islamabad in June.

Khan’s decision came amid threats from hardline Muslims who called the construction of the temple a blasphemous act.

Some of those Muslims had threatened to try to stop the temple’s construction by force, raising tensions.

Khan turned to the council to decide if public money could be used for construction. He had promised $600,000 for the temple’s construction.

It was not immediately clear on Wednesday whether Khan would follow through with providing the funds in light of the council’s ruling.

However, the council’s ruling left open the possibility the money could be distributed to the Hindu community to use as it sees fit.

Khan, who has promised equal rights for minorities, is expected to issue a formal order to allow the temple’s construction.

Currently, there is no functioning temple for Hindus in Islamabad. About 3,000 Hindus live in the capital with its population of more than one million, mostly Muslims.

Muslims and Hindus generally live peacefully together in Pakistan, but there have been incidents in which Hindu girls were forcibly converted to Islam.

Most of the country’s Hindus migrated to India from present-day Pakistan in 1947 when India was divided by the British government.

Nuclear-armed rivals Pakistan and India have a history of bitter relations. They have fought three wars over the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, which is split between them but claimed by both in its entirety.

Source: Al Jazeera and news agencies