Temple tourism set to soar under India's Modi
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[January 22, 2024]
By Krishna N. Das
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday
inaugurated one of the holiest Hindu temples and his government has been
spending millions of dollars to develop many others, boosting tourism
and his appeal among the majority community ahead of elections.
Apart from a $6 billion makeover of the northern city of Ayodhya, where
Modi opened the first phase of a Ram Temple, the federal government has
spent nearly $120 million to develop dozens of Hindu pilgrimage sites in
the past decade, according to government data, and more funding is
planned.
The Ram Temple, built on the site of a Mughal-era mosque that was razed
by a Hindu mob in 1992 and where Hindus believe Lord Ram was born, is
estimated to draw up to 100 million tourists a year, according to
Jefferies analysts. In comparison, about 9 million people visit Vatican
City in a year and about 20 million Mecca.
"The creation of a new religious tourist centre (Ayodhya) with improved
connectivity and infrastructure can create a meaningfully large economic
impact," the analysts wrote in a note.
Since Modi inaugurated the Hindu pilgrimage site of Kashi Vishwanath
Corridor on the banks of the Ganges in 2021 in his constituency of
Varanasi, more than 130 million tourists have visited the area,
according to government data.
The yearly footfall in Varanasi, which like Ayodhya is in India's most
populous state of Uttar Pradesh and is one of the oldest living cities
in the world, was barely 7 million before that.
Analysts say tourism income for locals and hotels in Varanasi - by dying
where Hindus believe to attain salvation and freedom from the cycle of
birth and re-birth - have surged by up to 65%.
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Hindu saints attend the opening of the grand temple of the Hindu god
Lord Ram in Ayodhya, India, January 22, 2024. India's Press
Information Bureau/Handout via REUTERS
With nearly $200 billion in revenue, tourism contributes about 7% of
India's economy, which is below most large emerging and developed
economies by up to 5 percentage points.
The new temple and renovations of many others are likely to greatly
boost the electoral prospects of the Hindu nationalist party of Modi,
who is widely expected to win a rare third straight term in general
elections due by May. Monday's inauguration fulfilled a decades-old
election pledge of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
"With today's event, definitely the momentum is with the BJP,"
political commentator Sandeep Shastri. "It may be fair to say that
any political party would like to make the best of a situation they
find themselves in, and the BJP seems to have mastered the art of
managing the message."
Out of the 46 projects funded under the Ministry of Tourism's
"Pilgrimage Rejuvenation and Spiritual Heritage Augmentation Drive"
since Modi came to power in 2014, only about half a dozen are Muslim
or Sikh sites. Muslims account for about 14% of India's population
of 1.42 billion, most of them Hindus.
(Additional reporting by Krishn Kaushik in New Delhi, editing by Ed
Osmond)
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