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Desai’s Bhumata Brigade Detained En Route to Trimbakeshwar Temple

Trupti Desai’s Bhumata Brigade marched towards Nashik’s Trimbakeshwar temple, demanding entry into the inner sactum.

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India
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Trupti Desai and her protesting Bhumata Brigade has been detained by the police on Monday, en route to Trimbakeshwar Temple in Nashik, Maharashtra.

Continuing the campaign against gender discrimination at places of worship, around 150 women under the banner of the Bhumata Brigade left on Monday for the famous Trimbakeshwar, seeking to break the ban on female devotees at the inner sanctum of the Lord Shiva shrine.

On 26 January, the outfit, led by Trupti Desai had made a high-voltage attempt to breach a similar ban at the Shani Shingnapur temple in Ahamednagar district and vowed to carry on with its campaign for gender justice.

Choosing the occasion of Maha Shivratri to resume their campaign, the outfit urged the authorities not to block them as they had done during the earlier march. The ancient temple in Trimbak town, located 30 km from Nashik, houses one of the 12 Jyotirlingas. The shrine has been turned into a fortress in view of the country-wide terror alert and also because of the flow of lakhs of devotees on account of the festival of Maha Shivratri.

Desai, president of Bhumata Brigade, who left Pune with nearly 150-175 activists as part of her plan to push for entry of women into the garbhagriha (sanctum sanctorum) of the temple, urged Chief Minister Devendra Fadanvis to make sure that their members are not detained on the way, as the authorities did during the earlier campaign.

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Trupti Desai’s Bhumata Brigade marched towards Nashik’s Trimbakeshwar temple, demanding entry into the inner sactum.
Trimbakeshwar temple in Nashik, Maharashtra. (Courtesy: Wikimedia Commons)
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Trupti Desai Expects Police to Lead the Women Into the Sanctum

Since Chief Minister had supported us on the Shani Shinganapur issue, we hope that we are not stopped today and will be allowed to enter the ‘garbhagriha.’ Also, since a high alert has been announced, Nashik Police had requested us not to come in buses. Hence we are going by small vehicles. We have even reduced our women members and there are only 150-175 women, who will try to enter the sanctum in a peaceful manner.
Trupti Desai, President, Bhumata Brigade

She also expects police to lead them to the sanctum under complete “bandobast” in order to avoid a law and order situation.

On this auspicious day, we feel that the local administration will allow us inside the inner chamber of the temple and if we are restricted, it would be an insult to women on the eve of International Women’s Day and on the day of Maha Shivratri
Trupti Desai, President, Bhumata Brigade

Nashik Rural Police tightened security around the temple in the pilgrimage town to avoid a face-off similar to what happened at Supa village on January 26, when the women activists were proceeding towards Shingnapur.

“We have deployed extra police force and also put barricades to restrict activists of Bhumata Brigade with a view to maintain law and order of this small town,” Deputy SP, Praveen Munde said.

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Trupti Desai’s Bhumata Brigade marched towards Nashik’s Trimbakeshwar temple, demanding entry into the inner sactum.
Trupti Desai, the leader of the Bhumata Brigade, is leading around 150 activists to the Trimbakeshwar Temple. (Photo: ANI Screengrab)
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Right Wing Organisations Fight Back

Meanwhile, right-wing organisations including Mahila Dakshata Samiti, Sharada Mahila mandal, Purohit Sangh and others have came together and decided to stop the activists before they reach the temple.

According to Kailas Ghule, member of the Trimbakeshwar Temple Trust, the bar on entry of women into the sanctum sanctorum is an age-old tradition and not something enforced in recent times.

Women, however, can have ‘darshan’ from outside the core area. He said men too are not allowed into the core worship area for an hour between 6-7 AM on all days. According to tradition, only men are allowed entry into the area where the main ‘linga’ is placed, that too by adorning a specific gear called the sovala (silk clothing).

Some priests in the temple town said most of women devotees may not want to defy the tradition. Seeking to give a scientific angle to the practice, they said there are certain rays that concentrate in the core area which could probably be harmful to the health of women.

Desai had stirred a national debate on gender bias at various temples across the country with her attempt to enter the inner platform (chauthara) at the Shingnapur temple where women are traditionally not allowed to worship.

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