Key Points

Hyderabad's Milad-un-Nabi procession has been postponed to September 14 to avoid overlapping with Ganesh festivities. AIMIM leaders Asaduddin and Akbaruddin Owaisi met Chief Minister Revanth Reddy to request mosque illuminations and free electricity for the occasion. This marks the second consecutive year the procession has been deferred due to festival timing conflicts. The state government will provide permissions for the celebrations following standard regulations.

Key Points: Hyderabad Milad-un-Nabi Procession Postponed to September 14

  • Procession postponed to avoid clash with Ganesh immersion on Sept 6
  • AIMIM leaders met CM Revanth Reddy for mosque illumination requests
  • Committee seeks state-wide procession permissions for Sept 14
  • 30,000 police personnel deployed for Ganesh festival security
2 min read

Milad-un-Nabi procession in Hyderabad postponed to Sep 14

Hyderabad's Milad-un-Nabi procession deferred to Sept 14 due to Ganesh festivities overlap. AIMIM leaders meet CM Revanth Reddy for permissions and arrangements.

"For the second year in a row, Milad is coinciding with the Ganesh festivities - Article"

Hyderabad, Aug 29

The organisers of the Milad-un-Nabi procession in Hyderabad have decided to defer it to September 14 in view of the Ganesh festivities.

Like last year, the Markazi Milad Juloos Committee has come forward to postpone the procession.

Milad-un-Nabi, the birthday of Prophet Muhammad, is scheduled to be celebrated on September 5, while the 11-day Ganesh festivities conclude on September 6 with the immersion procession.

AIMIM President and Hyderabad MP Asaduddin Owaisi, party leader in Telangana Assembly Akbaruddin Owaisi, along with Milad Juloos Committee leaders, met Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy on Friday.

According to the Chief Minister’s Office, they requested him to arrange illumination of historic mosques and dargahs and ensure free electricity supply on the occasion of Milad.

The committee members also sought permission to organise processions across the state on September 14.

Milad and Ganesh festivities had also coincided last year. On a request by the Chief Minister, the Milad Committee had postponed the procession.

The Committee had requested the Chief Minister to permit them to organise year-long celebrations of the Prophet’s 1,500th birthday in 2025, and he had said that the government would give permissions as per the rules.

Every year, the Committee takes out a procession in the old city of Hyderabad to mark Milad.

For the second year in a row, Milad is coinciding with the Ganesh festivities. The 11-day Ganesh festival began on August 27.

Idols installed across the city are immersed in lakes in and around the city on different dates. However, the majority of the idols are immersed on the final day with a massive procession.

Police have already made elaborate security arrangements for the festival. About 30,000 policemen will be deployed to maintain peace and ensure the smooth conduct of the immersion procession on September 7.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone living in Hyderabad, I appreciate this gesture. The city gets extremely crowded during Ganesh immersions, and having both processions together would strain security arrangements. Practical decision!
Ayesha K
Mashallah, this is the true spirit of Hyderabad! Our city has always been an example of communal harmony. May both festivals be celebrated with peace and joy. Eid Mubarak in advance to all! 🕌
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Vikram M
While I appreciate the gesture, I hope the government ensures equal treatment for all religious processions. The free electricity request for mosques should be extended to all places of worship during their festivals.
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Priya S
This is why I love Hyderabad! Such mature decisions by community leaders. Both festivals are important to different communities and this avoids any unnecessary tension. Ganpati Bappa Morya! 🐘
M
Michael C
Visiting Hyderabad during festival season is amazing. The coordination between different communities here is something other Indian cities should learn from. Great example of secularism in practice!

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