COVER STORY: KING BIRENDERA'S
MURDER
Gorakhnath Math Twist Of Faith
An eerie silence
envelops the Gorakhnath Mandir, the centrepiece of Gorakhpur and
just a short drive from the Nepal-Uttar Pradesh border. As the
world's last surviving Hindu king, Birendra was a symbol of
tradition for the math here. He looked upon Mahant Avaidyanath, the
religious and temporal head of the Gorakhnath monastery, as a guru.
The relationship was a legacy of history.
Yet in the aftermath of the murder
Gorakhnath was in the news for a strange reason. As the story goes,
Gorakhnath, the god-like figure who is credited with being the
creator of the math, appeared as a sage before Prithvi Narayan Shah,
the first king of modern Nepal. He vomited curd and asked Prithvi
Narayan to eat it. The king threw the offering to the
ground.
![](gorakhnath_files/coverstory13.jpg) |
TEACHER IN TRAUMA: Avaidyanath says he has
lost a confidant |
Angered, Gorakhnath cursed the king saying
his 10 fingers symbolised the number of generations that would rule.
The 11th would be the last. Birendra, and now Gyanendra, are the
11th generation after Prithvi Narayan.
Avaidyanath, a former BJP-backed MP, is
understandably sombre at his disciple's death. "Till a few years
ago," he recalls, "people in Nepal would celebrate Makar Sankranti
only after their king made an offering at Gorakhnath." King
Birendra's last visit was on November 30, 1992: "The king himself
drove down from Kathmandu. They were such a simple
family."
To Avaidyanath and the VHP-the Vishwa Hindu
Mahasangh is a fraternal organisation in Nepal-the king was also a
trusted ally. As the ageing monk-politician recalls, "At the time of
the amendment of the constitution in 1990, I was in Nepal. I asked
the king to ensure the continuation of the Hindu state, the Hindu
king and a ban on cow slaughter. He readily agreed."
In Gorakhnath and beyond there is a dogged
refusal to accept the evidence against Dipendra. RSS' K.S. Sudarshan
and Shiv Sena's Bal Thackeray suggest an ISI conspiracy. Meanwhile,
the head priest of Gorakhnath is wondering how he can help his newly
elevated disciple, Gyanendra, and the disciple's subjects.
--Subhash Mishra
|