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A prominent Muslim cleric on Monday, 7 October slammed TMC Lok Sabha member Nusrat Jahan for attending Durga puja celebrations, and said the popular Bengali film actor should change her name and religion because she is “defaming Islam and Muslims” by her actions.
Jahan, the first-time MP from Bashirhat, has been in the line of fire of the Muslim clergy for sporting symbols of Hindu matrimony like 'mangalsutra’ and ‘sindur' since her marriage to a Hindu entrepreneur Nikhil Jain earlier this year.
Resplendent in a saree and sporting sindur, Jahan had attended Durga puja celebrations of Suruchi Sangha with her husband on Sunday. TV channels showed her lip-syncing to hymns being recited by a priest, her eyes closed and hands folded in solemn prayer. She also beat a drum and danced joyously.
Jahan had later told journalists that she had prayed for peace and prosperity of all.
"I don't bother about controversies. Controversies touch me? No," the doughty actress, who has often insisted she represents an inclusive India, said, when asked about whether her celebrating Durga puja will set off a fresh row.
Reacting sharply to the Deoband cleric's comments, Waseem Rizvi, the chairman of Uttar Pradesh Shia Waqf Board, said Jahan was free to wear emblems of Hindu marriage like sindur, bindi or mangalsutra.
Jahan was trolled by several Muslim clerics for taking oath as MP on 25 June while wearing a saree and sporting sindur and mangalsutra, with Qasmi and some others calling it un-Islamic.
But the plucky actor had responded to criticism with characteristic boldness, asserting she represented an inclusive India.
“I represent an inclusive India.. which is beyond the barriers of caste and creed and religion.. as much as I respect all religions.. I still remain a Muslim.. and none should comment on what I choose to wear.. faith is beyond attire.. and is more about believing and practicing the invaluable doctrines od all religions. Nusrat (sic),” she had said.
Meanwhile, Jahan, facing the wrath of a section of Muslim clerics found support in Union minister Debasree Chaudhuri who said personal choices should be respected and an Indian woman is known by her husband's faith.
Reacting to the statement by Mufti Asad Qasmi, the Union minister of state for woman and child development also wondered why the clerics chose to remain quiet when Azaan is being played inside a Durga puja pandal in Kolkata.
"Does it not tantamount to hurting religious sentiments?" the BJP leader asked.
Chaudhuri was referring to Azaan along with Sanskrit hymns being played inside a puja pandal at Beleghata in north Kolkata as part of a theme - communal harmony.
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