Friday, November 28, 2025
15.1 C
New Delhi

WATCH: Nitish Kumar Declines Skullcap At Madrasa Event, Over A Decade After He Rebuked Modi For Same

Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar on Thursday politely resisted when a Muslim community leader offered to place a skullcap on his head during a programme of the Bihar State Madrasa Education Board in Patna. Smiling, he held back with both hands, refusing the gesture, before eventually accepting the cap in his hands. He then placed it on the head of his party colleague and Minority Welfare Minister Mohammed Zama Khan.

The video of the incident has gone viral on social media.

A Political Flashback to 2013

The episode drew attention because Nitish Kumar himself had criticised Narendra Modi more than a decade ago for declining a similar gesture. In 2013, while campaigning for the Lok Sabha elections, Nitish had remarked that an Indian leader should embrace both “topi” (skullcap) and “tilak” (Hindu mark), an apparent jibe at Modi, then the Gujarat Chief Minister, who had refused to wear a cap offered by a Muslim cleric.

Nitish had broken ties with the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) at that time, opposing Modi’s elevation as the coalition’s prime ministerial candidate, citing the 2002 Gujarat riots. He later allied with the RJD and Congress to win the 2015 Bihar polls, only to return to the NDA in 2017. After another split in 2022, Nitish re-joined hands with the BJP in 2024. The two parties are now preparing jointly for the Bihar Assembly elections due in October–November 2025.

‘Work Done for Muslim Community’: Nitish Kumar

Addressing the madrasa event, the Janata Dal (United) leader highlighted what his government has done for minority welfare. “Muslim women who are abandoned by their husbands face hardships…to support and improve the condition of such Muslim women, the state government started financial assistance of ₹10,000 per month in 2007. This amount has now been increased to ₹25,000 per month,” he was quoted as saying by PTI.

He added that, since 2006, graveyards had been fenced to prevent conflicts, and that madrasas had been registered and granted recognition by the government. “Now, madrasa teachers are getting salaries equal to those of government school teachers,” he noted.

Claiming that little was done for minorities before 2005, Nitish said, “We have worked for the development of all sections of society — including Hindu, Muslim, Upper Caste, backward, extremely backward, Dalit, or Mahadalit… Opponents speak unnecessarily, but it holds no meaning. We stay focused on our work.”

Go to Source

Hot this week

‘Didn’t speak English much’: DC shooter suspect Rahmanullah Lakanwal often seen playing video games

Neighbors of 29-year-old Rahmanullah Lakanwal were aware that the family of Afghan refugees were living in the area but they never got to know much about the family as ‘they never made a peep’. Read More

Donald Trump claims any document signed by Joe Biden using autopen is ‘terminated’, warns former prez could face ‘charges of perjury’

In a dramatic turn of events, ex-President Donald Trump has announced the invalidation of executive orders issued by Joe Biden via autopen, alleging misuse of the device. Read More

SC: Will frame rules, menstrual shaming must end, period.

NEW DELHI: Taking cognisance of a recent incident of three women sanitation workers of Maharshi Dayanand University in Haryana being compelled to send photographs of their sanitary pads to prove they were menstruating, Supreme Court o Read More

‘Want America-hating migrants in US’: Donald Trump Jr slams WSJ for defending Afghan refugees in op-ed after DC shooting

Donald Trump Jr. criticised the Wall Street Journal editorial board on Friday after the paper published an op-ed defending Afghan refugees living in the United States. Read More

India may guarantee long-term pulse purchases from Canada as tariffs threaten crop plans

India’s government is considering guaranteeing Canada ongoing pulse crop sales so its farmers keep growing the vital protein source, Indian High Commissioner to Canada Dinesh Patnaik said during a visit to Saskatchewan. Read More

Topics

‘Didn’t speak English much’: DC shooter suspect Rahmanullah Lakanwal often seen playing video games

Neighbors of 29-year-old Rahmanullah Lakanwal were aware that the family of Afghan refugees were living in the area but they never got to know much about the family as ‘they never made a peep’. Read More

Donald Trump claims any document signed by Joe Biden using autopen is ‘terminated’, warns former prez could face ‘charges of perjury’

In a dramatic turn of events, ex-President Donald Trump has announced the invalidation of executive orders issued by Joe Biden via autopen, alleging misuse of the device. Read More

SC: Will frame rules, menstrual shaming must end, period.

NEW DELHI: Taking cognisance of a recent incident of three women sanitation workers of Maharshi Dayanand University in Haryana being compelled to send photographs of their sanitary pads to prove they were menstruating, Supreme Court o Read More

‘Want America-hating migrants in US’: Donald Trump Jr slams WSJ for defending Afghan refugees in op-ed after DC shooting

Donald Trump Jr. criticised the Wall Street Journal editorial board on Friday after the paper published an op-ed defending Afghan refugees living in the United States. Read More

India may guarantee long-term pulse purchases from Canada as tariffs threaten crop plans

India’s government is considering guaranteeing Canada ongoing pulse crop sales so its farmers keep growing the vital protein source, Indian High Commissioner to Canada Dinesh Patnaik said during a visit to Saskatchewan. Read More

No Indian metro had ‘safe’ air in past 10 years: Study

MUMBAI: No major Indian city has “good” air quality. Read More

Palash and Smriti update their bios with ‘evil eye’ emojis

As the whirlwind rumours around Palash Muchhal and Smriti Mandhana’s wedding and personal life continue to spin out of control, the couple have seemingly shared an update. Read More

Alisha Chinai says Anu Malik case was ‘harassment, not assault’

Singer Alisha Chinai has opened up once again about the sexual harassment case she filed against music composer Anu Malik in 1996 — a move that she says led to her being “shunned” by the industry at the time. Read More

Related Articles