‘No point renaming Mughalsarai station, tackle important issues’ - Hindustan Times
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‘No point renaming Mughalsarai station, tackle important issues’

Hindustan Times, Mughalsarai | By, Mughalsarai
Jun 18, 2017 08:18 AM IST

Yogi Adityanath government’s decision to rename the Mughalsarai railway station after RSS ideologue Deendayal Upadhyaya has not gone down well with many locals.

The Yogi Adityanath government’s decision to rename the Mughalsarai railway station -- one of busiest in the country -- after RSS ideologue Deendayal Upadhyaya has not gone down well with many locals who are against any change of name.

The Mughalsarai railway station building was constructed in 1880 and reconstructed in 1905.(HT Photo)
The Mughalsarai railway station building was constructed in 1880 and reconstructed in 1905.(HT Photo)

Upadhyay was found dead under mysterious circumstances in Mughalsarai in February 1968 when he was travelling by train. The state government is celebrating the birth centenary of Upadhyaya and several programmes are being organised across the state.

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At a glance

Number of passengers per day: Over 1 lakh

Number of railway staff on station 4,000 approx.

Number of trains passing through the station: 280 (including 130 goods trains)

Largest yard of Asia: It is 8.6 km long.

Significance: It connects Bihar (30 km away) and Varanasi (20 km). It is the busiest route on the Kabul-Chittagong Grand Trunk Road

Mithai Lal Chaurasia, resident of Ali Nagar, says: “There is no point renaming the station. The government should pay attention to employment generation and other important issues.”

Maulana Bilal Ahmad Quasami of Madarsa Irfan-ul Uloom (an Islamic seminary), says, “The Mughalsarai railway station is of historical importance. It should not be renamed.”

Read more: Yogi Adityanath govt to name Mughalsarai railway station after RSS ideologue Upadhayay

Congress city president Ramji Gupta is also against the move. His party is staging an indefinite sit-in at Lal Bahadur Shashtri Park here.

Not many locals know who founded the town which has never witnessed a communal riot. It remained peaceful even after December 6, 1992 when the Babri Masjid was demolished in Ayodhya and many parts of the country was plunged into communal violence.

Mukesh Pratap Singh, who teaches history at Lal Bahadur Shastri Post Graduate College, Mughalsarai, says, “The foundation of the town was laid during the rule of emperor Sher Shah Suri, who briefly controlled the Mughal empire, between 1542 and 1543.”

A combination of the words Mughal and Sarai, the town derived its name from the inns set up here during Suri’s time and later, Singh said.

The Mughalsarai railway station building was constructed in 1880 and reconstructed in 1905, Singh said.

Station manager Narendra Kumar said 150 passenger trains and 130 goods trains pass through the station daily, making it one of the busiest in the country. It is part of East Central Railway.

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  • ABOUT THE AUTHOR
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    Sudhir Kumar is Varanasi based senior staff correspondent.He covers all developments, politics, education--primary, secondary and higher -- crime, offbeat, tribes and human angle stories

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