
Bengaluru school says email on Gyanvapi mosque was sent ‘without proper screening’
The Hindu
The email to alumni had appealed to change location of ‘mosque’ as ‘temple’ on Google maps, stirring a row
Following the furore over an e-mail to alumni asking ‘Hindu brothers and sisters to change the location of Gyanvapi mosque to Gyanvapi temple on Google Maps’, New Horizon Public School in Bengaluru has released a statement saying that the school ‘embraces diversity’ and the ‘e-mail was sent without proper screening that is required of all our email communication’.
The email was sent to alumni three days ago. It gave detailed instructions on how to change the location of Gyanvapi mosque to Gyanvapi temple in Varanasi. Many alumni had criticised the school for the email on social media platforms.
Suraj Sudarshan said, “As a school, you should be promoting secularism! You should not be sending out sensitive mails like this.”
Karthika Namboothiri said, “My former school in Bengaluru has the audacity to send us emails to fan religious hatred and division. I am ashamed of them.”
Many alumni had come down heavily on using the educational institution as a platform for political activity, especially divisive communal politics.
“...This email shows a turn into hard Hindutva that’s unsafe for all,” tweeted independent journalist Rohini Mohan, also an alumnus of the school.
“The email I got was very disturbing, and I have written back to the school condemning the same,” said a senior advocate and alumni of the school.

On December 23, the newly elected office bearers of the Anna Nagar Towers Club, led by its president ‘Purasai’ B. Ranganathan, who is a former MLA, met with Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. K. Stalin and conveyed their greetings. According to a press release, besides, ‘Purasai’ B. Ranganathan, the Anna Nagar Towers Club delegation that met Stalin at Anna Arivalayam, the DMK Party headquarters, included vice-president R. Sivakumar, secretary R. Muralibabu, joint secretary D. Manojkumar, treasurer K. Jayachandran and executive committee members N. D. Avinash, K. Kumar, N. R. Madhurakavi, K. Mohan, U. Niranjan, S. Parthasarathi, K. Rajasekar, S. Rajasekar, M. S. Ramesh, R. Satheesh, N. C. Venkatesan and K. Yuvaraj. Karthik Mohan, deputy secretary of DMK’s Information Technology Wing, was present on the occasion.












