Saturday, January 24, 2009

THE MYTH ABOUT TAJ MAHAL

"TAJ MAHAL"
A COMPLETE  UNREVEALED STORY 

Aerial view of the Taj Mahal



The interior water well 

   
Frontal view of the Taj Mahal and dome 

 
Close up of the dome with pinnacle
 
   
Close up of the pinnacle
 
   
Inlaid pinnacle pattern in courtyard
 
   
Red lotus at apex of the entrance 

   
Rear view of the Taj & 22 apartments 

   
View of sealed doors & windows in back
 
   
Typical Vedic style corridors
 
   
The Music House--a contradiction
 
   
A locked room on upper floor
 
   
A marble apartment on ground floor
 
   
The OM in the flowers on the walls
 
   
Staircase that leads to the lower levels
 
   
300 foot long corridor inside apartments 

   
One of the 22 rooms in the secret lower level
 
   
Interior of one of the 22 secret rooms
 
   
Interior of another of the locked rooms
 
   
Vedic design on ceiling of a locked room 

   
Huge ventilator sealed shut with bricks
 
   
Secret walled door that leads to other rooms
 
   
Secret bricked door that hides more evidence
 
   
Palace in Barhanpur where Mumtaz died 

   
Pavilion where Mumtaz is said to be buried
 
 

NOW READ THIS.......
 

No one has ever challenged it except Prof. P. N. Oak, who believes the 
whole world has been duped. In his book Taj Mahal: The True Story, Oak says 
the
Taj Mahal is not Queen Mumtaz's tomb but an ancient Hindu temple palace of 
Lord Shiva (then known as Tejo Mahalaya) . In the course of his research O 
ak discovered that the Shiva temple palace was usurped by Shah Jahan from 
then Maharaja of Jaipur, Jai Singh. In his own court chronicle, 
Badshahnama,
Shah Jahan admits that an exceptionally beautiful grand mansion in Agra 
was taken from Jai SIngh for Mumtaz's burial . The ex-Maharaja of Jaipur 
still
retains in his secret collection two orders from Shah Jahan for 
surrendering the Taj building. Using captured temples and mansions, as a 
burial place for
dead courtiers and royalty was a common practice among Muslim rulers. 

For example, Humayun,Akbar, Etmud-ud-Daula and Safdarjung are all buried 
in such mansions. Oak's inquiries began with the name of Taj Mahal. He says 

the term "Mahal" has never been used for a building in any Muslim countries 
from Afghanisthan to Algeria. "The unusual explanation that the term Taj 
Mahal derives from Mumtaz Mahal was illogical in atleast two respects. 

Firstly, her name was never Mumtaz Mahal but Mumtaz-ul-Zamani," he writes. 
Secondly, one cannot omit the first three letters 'Mum' from a woman's 
name to derive the remainder as the name for the building."Taj Mahal, he 
claims, is a corrupt version of Tejo Mahalaya, or Lord Shiva's Palace . Oak 
also says the love story of Mumtaz and Shah Jahan is a fairy tale created 
by
court sycophants, blundering historians and sloppy archaeologists . Not a 
single royal chronicle of Shah Jahan's time corroborates the love story. 

Furthermore, Oak cites several documents suggesting the Taj Mahal predates 
Shah Jahan's era, and was a temple dedicated to Shiva, worshipped by 
Rajputs of Agra city. For example, Prof. Marvin Miller of New York took a 
few
samples from the riverside doorway of the Taj. Carbon dating tests revealed 
that the door was 300 years older than Shah Jahan. European traveler Johan 
Albert Mandelslo,who visited Agra in 1638 (only seven years after Mumtaz's 
death), describes the life of the cit y in his memoirs. But he makes no 
reference to the Taj Mahal being built. The writings of Peter Mundy, an 
English visitor to Agra within a year of Mumtaz's death, also suggest the 
Taj was a noteworthy building well before Shah Jahan's time.

Prof. Oak points out a number of design and architectural inconsistencies 
that support the belief of the Taj Mahal being a typical Hindu temple 
rather
than a mausoleum. Many rooms in the Taj ! Mahal have remained sealed 
since Shah Jahan's time and are still inaccessible to the public. Oak 
asserts they contain a headless statue of Lord Shiva and other objects 
commonly used for worship rituals in Hindu temples . Fearing political 
backlash, Indira Gandhi's government tried to have Prof. Oak's book
withdrawn from the bookstores, and threatened the Indian publisher of the 
first edition dire consequences . There is only one way to discredit or 
validate Oak's research. 

The current government should open the sealed rooms of the Taj Mahal under 
U.N. supervision, and let international experts investigate. 

No comments:

Post a Comment