Observing that the monument that homes the grave of Tansen, one of many “9 jewels” within the courtroom of Mughal emperor Akbar, deserves to be protected, the Madhya Pradesh Excessive Court docket dismissed an enchantment searching for permission to carry out non secular and cultural actions on the tomb of Hazrat Sheikh Muhammad Ghaus in Gwalior.
The tomb of Hazrat Sheikh Muhammad Ghaus was declared a protected monument of nationwide significance in 1962 underneath the Historical Monuments and Archaeological Websites and Stays Act, 1958.
A Bench of Justice Anand Pathak and Justice Hirdesh famous that the monument “deserves to be protected with utmost care and warning” and no such actions, as sought by the appellant, will be permitted.
“…Constitutional imaginative and prescient and constitutional morality should prevail over private and vested curiosity. It (the monument) deserves to be protected with utmost care and warning, and no exercise as sought by the petitioner will be permitted, lest the monument lose its originality, sanctity and vitality. It might be a nationwide loss then,” the courtroom stated on June 16.
Based on courtroom paperwork, the premises of the monument include the graves of musical maestro Tansen and Sufi saint Hazrat Sheikh Muhammad Ghaus, each from the sixteenth century.
The courtroom paperwork stated Tansen was remembered for his classical Dhrupad compositions. “Dhrupad, an epic type of music, is taken into account to be invented by Raja Man Singh Tomar (ruler of Gwalior), in medieval occasions,” the courtroom stated, whereas reasoning that the monument the place he’s laid to relaxation deserves preservation and safety.
The courtroom was coping with an enchantment by one Syed Sabla Hasan, who claimed that he’s the Sajjada Nashin (religious caretaker) and the authorized inheritor of Hazrat Sheikh Muhammad Ghaus.
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It was argued on his behalf that numerous non secular and cultural practices had been carried out on the dargah premises for over 400 years and that their discontinuation by the Archaeological Survey of India, following the declaration of the location as a protected monument, was arbitrary and unlawful.
The courtroom burdened that “it’s the responsibility of the ASI and the district administration to guard this monument of nationwide significance with utmost care and strictness” in order that the monument carrying historical past and tradition will be preserved.

