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Temple scam : Members of PMDS seething with rage since exposure of malpractices

Magha Shukla paksha 10, Kaliyug Varsh 5116

Members begging to reporters for publishing news about no malpractices undertaken by Vyavasthapan Samiti !

Kolhapur (Maharashtra) : On 12th January 2015, malpractices of Shri Mahalahsmi Devasthan which is managed by Paschim Maharashtra Devasthan Samiti (PMDS) were exposed in a press conference; due to which the members of PMDS and Administrative officers are seething with rage. News about press conference held by  PMDS was published in limited newspapers. A worker of PMDS therefore, called few reporters and begged them continuously for 4 days for publishing explanation given by PMDS, in their newspapers; but few reporters told him that they were not invited for the press conference and cannot publish the explanation given by PMDS. It has caught PMDS in a tight position.   

PMDS had held a press conference on 14th January after ‘action committee’s press conference held on 12thJanuary; but PMDS did not present any proofs in this regard; therefore, many newspapers did not publish news about the same.

Source : Dainik Sanatan Prabhat

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1 Comment

  1. Vinodh Kumar

    There are thousands of Vedic temples usurped by both Christians and Muslims in these many centuries. When are we going to get them all back? Here see below for one fact!
    Historians say the earliest use of the cross as an instrument against Hinduism occurred in the 16th century at Malayattoor, now a
    Christian resort but earlier an ancient Hindu temple. In the 8th century the parents of Aadi Sankaraacharya sojourned at the mountaintop temple in supplication for the birth of a son to them and for other cherished boons. Portuguese colonists apparently broke into the temple with criminals locally recruited and planted a cross by the side of the Hindu image. Tales of miraculous emergence of the cross on its own at the site were soon begun and Hindus deserted the temple in disgust.
    The local recruits eventually came to be known by the figure of their family population which was 700 at the time of the British
    conquest of Cochin fort. In 1719 four of them broke at dead of night into the home of Hindu Nair chief Iravi Maakkotha at Perumanur and planted a cross in the quadrangle of his residence. He abandoned the home upon sighting it and resettled at nearby Kadavanthra where the family still lives. The allegedly self-emerged cross was later turned into a ramshackle chapel. It is now an
    up-to-date church complex built with money paid by the government to the church when it took over a part of the land to build the Cochin shipyard.
    http://www.identitypublishers.org

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