prasad1
Active member
For years after the Muzaffarnagar riotsof 2013 that left 63 dead and more than 50,000 homeless, Hindus on one side and Muslims on the other bayed for each other's blood. Hundreds of cases were lodged against members of both communities and the social strain was apparent, with the two sides wary, apprehensive and angry.
Of late, though, there has been a transformation. Peace committees are working overtime to bring back the harmony Muzaffarnagar lost, and it is bearing fruit. Nowadays, often after "unity meetings", Hindus can be heard chanting Allahu- Akbar and Muslims Har Har Mahadev.
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/meerut/-in-muzaffarnagar-hindus-chant-allahu-akbar-muslims-har-har-mahadev/articleshow/62922014.cms
Of late, though, there has been a transformation. Peace committees are working overtime to bring back the harmony Muzaffarnagar lost, and it is bearing fruit. Nowadays, often after "unity meetings", Hindus can be heard chanting Allahu- Akbar and Muslims Har Har Mahadev.
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/meerut/-in-muzaffarnagar-hindus-chant-allahu-akbar-muslims-har-har-mahadev/articleshow/62922014.cms