A spectre seems to be haunting legislators in the states -- from Bihar and Rajasthan to Madhya Pradesh and Arunachal Pradesh. And they are looking at ways of dealing with spooks with the help of purification rituals or by simply steering clear of what they believe are ghost-filled houses.
While RJD leader Lalu Prasad Yadavs son and former Bihar minister Tej Pratap Yadav recently vacated his government-provided bungalow in Patna because he said ghosts had been let loose there, BJP MLAs in the Rajasthan Assembly feared the building was haunted.
The politician had earlier made some alterations to the bungalow to bring in elements of Vaastu Shastra -- traditional architectural beliefs - and also used the rear exit instead of the main entrance to ward off evil spirits.
But Yadav found the changes did little to deter the stubborn ghosts. The MLA finally moved out.
MLAs in the Rajasthan Assembly fear the worst, too. BJP legislator Habibur Rahman believes that a part of the land on which the Assembly building stands was previously a cremation ground and thus unholy.
Rationalists said they were worried about the trend.
Mukta Dabholkar, daughter of slain rationalist Narendra Dabholkar, said it was disheartening that lawmakers had no scientific temper or spirit of inquiry.
"If something is not going right it has to have some explanation. You cannot explain it in terms of black magic or a bad curse, she said.
Some legislators made such statements because they lacked a scientific temperament, she said.
Or perhaps they want to distract peoples attention from real issues, said Dabholkar, who is also a member of her fathers organisation, the Maharashtra Andhashraddha Nirmoolan Samiti.
Anjan recalled that several years ago, a minister at the Centre had called tantriks and witch-doctors agents of social welfare who practised forms of knowledge.
"He said this knowledge should be made a part of university curricula, Anjan said.
Efforts have often been made to eradicate what is called the evil eye. In December, some members of the Madhya Pradesh Assembly, while questioning the untimely demise of nine MLAs in four years, demanded a puja. They claimed the building was not Vaastu compliant.
It is sad that at this time and age when we have the Mangalyaan and are talking about building a colony on the moon, some people are reinforcing and sometimes re-inventing age-old myths and propagating them through modern means, said CPI(M) leader Mohammed Salim.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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