Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad, the student wing of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), has said it will launch a campaign to demand that Ahmedabad be renamed as ‘Karnavati.’
A resolution to begin the campaign to rename Ahmedabad as “Karnavati” was approved on Tuesday during a district-level students’ convention held here and sponsored by the ABVP. At a ‘chhatra sammelan’ (student convention) held here, 5,000 students approved the proposal to rename Ahmedabad as Karnavati. We will send a memo to the mamlatdar (revenue officer), collector, college presidents, and any other place we feel is necessary to press for our demand “Yuti Gajre, the ABVP’s secretary for Gujarat, told reporters.
The move comes nearly five years after the then Gujarat deputy chief minister Nitin Patel said the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government was willing to change Ahmedabad’s name to ‘Karnavati’ if it gets past the legal hurdles and receives required support.
While this was going on, the Congress asserted that the right-wing student organisation had brought up the subject of renaming Ahmedabad in an effort to divert youth’s attention from the more important problem of question paper leak, which had recently caused the cancellation of the panchayat junior clerk exam.
Youth Congress spokesperson Kapil Desai said such “propaganda” was meant to distract the attention of students and youth from more relevant issues affecting them. “The BJP is in power at every level, and if the ABVP is really serious about renaming Ahmedabad as Karnavati, then it would get it done without any difficulty, like (Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister) Yogi Adityanath does every now and then,” Desai said.
The ABVP is not really serious about it and intends to use such a “gimmick” to distract the attention of youth from the more pressing issues plaguing them, he claimed. “The ABVP claims to represent students, but it has remained silent on the issue of question paper leak. The propaganda is meant to distract the attention from the issue,” he said.
The proposal has also drawn flak from the Asaduddin Owaisi-led All India Majlis-E-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM), with its state leader Danish Qureshi targeting the ruling BJP over the issue.
“There are many issues in the BJP’s magic box which are not relevant but take the country and its people towards anarchy. They (BJP leaders) talk about the Uniform Civil Code, population control, and keep such non-relevant issues alive to hide their own failures,” Qureshi claimed while talking to PTI.
“Changing a name does not change anything, but works to dilute the issues by creating an anarchic situation. I believe the BJP should emerge from this and people should understand this as it causes a lot of harm,” he said.
In 2017, Ahmedabad was declared a world heritage city by UNESCO, becoming the country’s first city to hold the distinction. Historically, the area around Ahmedabad has been inhabited since the 11th century, when it was known as Ashaval.
Chalukya ruler Karna of Anhilwara (modern Patan) had waged a successful war against the Bhil king of Ashaval and established a city called Karnavati on the banks of the Sabarmati river. Sultan Ahmed Shah laid the foundation of a new walled city near Karnavati in 1411 AD and named it Ahmedabad.