PM Modi Visits Matua Thakur Mandir, Recalls Meeting with Binapani Devi

Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited the Matua Thakur Mandir in Thakurnagar, West Bengal, ahead of an election rally. He recalled his 2019 meeting with Matua community matriarch Binapani Devi, sharing a photo on social media. Modi highlighted the implementation of the Citizenship (Amendment) Act to help Matuas gain citizenship. He also mentioned his visit to Orakandi in Bangladesh and invoked Syama Prasad Mookerjee's legacy for refugees.

Key Points: PM Modi at Matua Mandir, Recalls Binapani Devi Blessings

  • PM Modi visits Matua Thakur Mandir in Thakurnagar
  • Recalls meeting with matriarch Binapani Devi in 2019
  • Discusses CAA implementation for Matua community citizenship
  • Addresses election rally, mentions Syama Prasad Mookerjee
3 min read

Bengal: PM Modi visits Matua Thakur Mandir, recalls his meeting with Matua Matriarch Binapani Devi

PM Modi visits Matua Thakur Mandir in Thakurnagar, recalls meeting with matriarch Binapani Devi in 2019, discusses CAA and citizenship for Matua community.

"I performed a puja in the temple. When I went to seek Boro Ma's blessings, her compassion was overwhelming. I will never forget this. - PM Narendra Modi"

Kolkata, April 26

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday paid a visit to Matua Thakur Mandir in Thakurnagar of North 24 Parganas district in West Bengal ahead of his election rally there and recalled his meeting with Matua community matriarch Binapani Devi a few years ago.

In a post on X, the Prime Minister also shared a photograph of him meeting Binapani Devi in 2019. "Today, when I was at the Matua Thakur Mandir, I remembered my previous visit to this Temple a few years ago, when I had also got the blessings of Boro Ma Binapani Thakur. Here is a photograph from that visit," wrote the Prime Minister.

Ahead of the Lok Sabha polls in February 2019, PM Modi met the Matua community matriarch Binapani Devi in Thakurnagar and took her blessings. However, in March 2019, Binapani Devi passed away.

Binapani Devi was married to Pramatha Ranjan Thakur, whose great-grandfather, Harichand Thakur, had founded the Matua Mahasangha over a century ago.

Matuas belong to the Scheduled Caste Namasudra community that migrated to India in large numbers, first during the Partition, and then after the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War.

It may be noted that the Prime Minister, in the middle of the 2021 West Bengal Assembly polls and during his trip to Bangladesh, visited Orakandi, where the founder of the Matua sect, Harichand Thakur, was born.

While addressing his election rally in Thakurnagar on Sunday, PM Modi also recalled his visit to Orakandi.

"Many memories were refreshed today. About 4 to 5 years ago, I had the opportunity to go to Orakandi across the border. I met the Matuas there. I went there for the first time as the Prime Minister of India. I performed a puja in the temple. When I went to seek Boro Ma's blessings, her compassion was overwhelming. I will never forget this," said PM Modi.

The Prime Minister said that the Centre implemented the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 (CAA) to help members of communities such as Matuas get the country's citizenship.

"Syama Prasad Mookerjee won from Kolkata. At that time, Jana Sangh got a lot of support from 24 Parganas and Nadia. He stood by the refugees from East Bengal. He spoke for them. Syama Prasad is considered the spokesperson for the refugees. From Partition till today, all the refugees are our responsibility. It is India's historical responsibility to think about them. That is why Modi brought the CAA. Why was this not done before? I will tell the Matuas and Namasudras that you will be given citizenship, permanent address, papers, and all the rights that all citizens of India get. This is Modi's guarantee," said the PM.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While I appreciate the PM's respect for the Matua community, it's concerning how political visits always happen around election time. The Matua community deserves genuine development, not just vote-bank politics. 😒
A
Ananya R
Beautiful to see the PM recalling his meeting with Boro Ma. The Matua Mahasangha has a rich history and their struggle for identity is real. Hope this leads to real action for the community. 😊
V
Varun X
Impressive that Modi visited Orakandi in Bangladesh - shows his connect with the diaspora. But why did it take so long for CAA? These communities suffered for generations. Better late than never I guess.
M
Michael C
As an outsider looking in, it's fascinating how India's politics intertwine with religion and community identity. The Matua story reminds me of refugee communities everywhere - the need for recognition and citizenship is universal.
K
Kavya N
Syama Prasad Mookerjee's legacy lives on! But the real test will be whether citizenship cards actually reach the ground. Many Matua families in Bengal still don't have proper documents. Talk is cheap, action matters.

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