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Trupti Desai offers prayers inside sanctum at Trimbakeshwar temple

April 22, 2016 12:42 IST

Gender rights activist Trupti Desai on Friday visited the Trimbakeshwar temple and offered prayers inside the sanctum sanctorum of the popular Lord Shiva shrine
which houses one of the 12 ‘jyotirlingas’.

Desai, along with three of her colleagues took darshan of the ‘shivlinga’ in the ‘garbha gruha’ around 6 am and left after nearly 15 minutes, said H P Kolhe, in charge of Trimbakeshwar police station.

The Bhumata Ranragini Brigade chief along with her aides followed the dress code, wet cotton or silk sarees, as decided by Trimbakeshwar Devasthan Trust and stood in the queue with other devotees before entering the core worship area, he said.

Later, they left the temple town in a vehicle.

Interacting with newspersons outside the temple after the ‘darshan’, Desai said their struggle for gaining entry into Shani Shingnapur in Ahmednagar and now at Trimbakeshwar temple has succeeded.

Desai vowed to take forward the struggle for entry of women into worship places across the country.

On Thursday, four activists, led by Vanita Gutte of Pune-based Swarajya Mahila Sanghatana, offered prayers inside the sacred sanctum amid police protection.

Recently, the Trimbakeshwar Devasthan Trust decided to allow women into the temple’s ‘garbha griha’ for an hour everyday with a rider that they must wear wet cotton or silk clothes while offering prayers in the core area.

The development is significant as it came days after women were permitted entry to the Shani Shingnapur temple in Ahmednagar district of Maharashtra.

The issue of gender bias hogged national limelight in January when hundreds of women activists attempted to storm into the Shani Shingnapur temple. After months of protests, and the Bombay high court observing that entering a temple was a fundamental right of every person, the Shingnapur temple trust finally decided to allow women’s entry on to the sacred platform (chauthara)--on which rock idol of Lord Shani is placed-- on April 8.

The decision opened doors for women to contest similar bans at other temples.

 

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