RAMA SETU MAN-MADE, NOT A NATURAL FORMATION
(Times Now Digital, 13 December 2017)
“The
rocks on top of the sand actually pre-date the sand. So there is more to the
story.” – Archaeologist Chelsea Rose
The
Ram Setu Bridge, also called the Adam’s Bridge, between India and Sri Lanka,
was not a natural formation as previously thought but man-made, a special show
on a popular international channel has claimed citing American scientists. If
true, this could be a ground-breaking discovery with far-reaching implications.
This
finding, to be aired on a show called Ancient Land Bridge on the Discovery
Communications-owned Science Channel in the US, gives credence to the age-old
Hindu mythological text, Ramayana, which first mentions the construction of the
Ram Setu Bridge, under the guidance of Lord Rama.
The
show quotes a few American geologists, archaeologists and scientists as saying
that the Ram Setu, which connects Pamban Island near Rameshwaram in India to
Mannar Island off Sri Lanka, was actually man-made.
The
show is scheduled to air at 7:30 am on Wednesday.
The
promo of the show, tweeted by Science Channel’s official twitter handle, has
already set social media abuzz, garnering more than 16,000 likes and 14,000
retweets in less than a day of it being posted. It has been viewed 1,90,000
times on Twitter till now.
The
promo tweet reads, “Are the ancient Hindu myths of a land bridge connecting
India and Sri Lanka true? Scientific analysis suggests they are.”
In
fact, Union Minister Smriti Irani also retweeted the promo, along with the
words “Jai Shree Ram”.
In
the promo video, Chelsea Rose, an American archaeologist says, “The rocks on
top of the sand actually pre-date the sand. So there is more to the story.”
In
fact, according to the research by the American scientists quoted by the
channel, the stones were dated to be nearly 7,000 years whereas the sand on
which they are situated was only 4,000 years old.
These
data suggest that the structure captured on the satellite image is not natural,
the narrator of the show informs the audience.
It
indicates that even though the sand bar was natural, the rocks were probably
transferred on it from other place, the show’s narrator explains.
The
purported findings have already sparked a political debate in the country with
BJP leaders questioning the Congress previous stand where the party had told
the Supreme Court that there was no historical proof that Lord Rama had
existed.
The
statements formed a part of the UPA government’s argument against the then
opposition BJP’s demand for the scrapping of the Sethusamudram project on the
grounds that it would destroy a part of the Ram Setu.
In
2005, the UPA-1 government had proposed a shipping canal project that would
have dredged the area and damaged the formation, referred to as the Ram Setu by
Hindu organisations. The project was thus challenged by the BJP in the apex
court. – Times Now Digital, 13 December 2017
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