Key Points

Rahul Gandhi and Tejashwi Yadav visited the historic Khanquah Rahmani institution in Munger as part of their Bihar campaign tour. They met with Muslim scholars to discuss community issues and challenges ahead of the state elections. The opposition leaders criticized the Election Commission's voter list revision drive as discriminatory and biased. Their visit to the century-old educational institution signals the grand alliance's outreach to Muslim voters in poll-bound Bihar.

Key Points: Rahul Gandhi Tejashwi Yadav Visit Khanquah Rahmani Munger Bihar

  • Opposition leaders meet Muslim scholars at historic Munger institution
  • Discuss community challenges amid Bihar election preparations
  • Campaign targets Election Commission's voter list revision
  • Khanquah Rahmani known for education and freedom movement contributions
3 min read

LoP Rahul, Tejashwi visit Khanquah Rahmani in Bihar's Munger, meet Muslim scholars

LoP Rahul Gandhi and RJD's Tejashwi Yadav visit historic Khanquah Rahmani in Munger, meeting Muslim scholars during Bihar Vote Adhikar Yatra campaign tour.

"People have hit the streets rallying support behind the move - Pramod Tiwari"

New Delhi, Aug 22

Leader of the Opposition (LoP) in the Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi and RJD leader Tejashwi Yadav, who are touring the poll-bound state of Bihar as part of the Mahagathbandhan’s ‘Vote Adhikar Yatra’ reached the Khanquah Rahmani, a noted minority institution in Munger on Friday.

The duo, having pledged to unseat the Chief Minister Nitish Kumar government, met Muslim scholars at the Khanquah Rahmani centre and discussed issues and challenges before the community.

Congress leader Pramod Tiwari said that senior Congress MP Rahul Gandhi’s call for cancelling the Election Commission of India’s Special Intensive Revision (SIR) drive in Bihar is receiving immense support on the ground as people have hit the streets and rallying support behind the move, being seen as ‘discriminatory and biased’.

KC Venugopal said that SIR has stirred the electorate in Bihar as many claim that their names have been struck off the voters list.

The 'Voter Adhikar Yatra', being steered by LoP Rahul Gandhi and Tejashwi Yadav, reached Munger on Friday with leaders of other Opposition parties including Mukesh Sahani, Pappu Yadav and Deepankar Bhattacharya accompanying them.

Their visit to Khanquah Rahmani, a noted Muslim institution set up in 1901 by eminent scholar Hazrat Maulana Mohammad Ali Mungeri assumes significance, as it is seen as the grand alliance’s outreach to the Muslim scholars and in turn wooing the community at large.

The Muslim institute has been visited by many famous personalities in the past, including former Presidents late Rajendra Prasad and Abdul Kalam Azad and late Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and former Prime Minister late Rajiv Gandhi.

Khanquah Rahmani is known for its contribution to India’s freedom movement and after Independence, it also has served as a platform for protecting various rights and liberties as guaranteed by the Constitution, besides being the voice for social justice, education and public health.

Here, the students are not only imparted religious education but are also taught and trained in subjects like Science, English and Mathematics. It prepares students from the community for competitive engineering and medical examinations including JEE and NEET.

Earlier, Tejashwi Yadav addressed a large public gathering in Munger and dared the poll panel to disenfranchise any voter of Bihar. He accused the ECI of colluding with the BJP and said that the people will expose this ‘secret dealing’ soon.

LoP Gandhi reiterated his ‘vote chori’ and ‘vote fraud’ charge, alleging that the ECI rigged more than 1 lakh votes in Karnataka elections and its ploy to ‘steal’ the elections has been unearthed.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The voter list issue needs serious attention. If names are really being removed unfairly, it's a threat to our democracy. EC should conduct a transparent review and ensure every eligible citizen can vote. 🇮🇳
R
Rohit P
Why do politicians only remember minority institutions during election season? This pattern repeats every 5 years. Real development work should happen consistently, not just when votes are needed.
S
Sarah B
Impressed to read about Khanquah Rahmani's educational approach - teaching both religious and modern subjects. This is the kind of balanced education we need more of across India. More power to such institutions!
V
Vikram M
While the visit is politically significant, I hope the discussions focused on actual development issues rather than just electoral politics. Muslim community needs employment opportunities and educational access, not just political promises.
K
Kavya N
The history of this institution is remarkable - visited by Presidents and Prime Ministers. It's good that current leaders are continuing this tradition of engaging with centers of learning and community service.

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