'Ask, Don’t Tell Mahabharata Stories': Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla Advises MPs During Question Hour

1 month ago

Last Updated: August 02, 2024, 17:08 IST

Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla conducts proceedings of the House during the Monsoon session of Parliament. (PTI photo)

Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla conducts proceedings of the House during the Monsoon session of Parliament. (PTI photo)

Birla's comments came after BJP MP Pradip Purohit reference to an ayurvedic college, where he traced the history of local herbs back to ancient times during a question to the Union Ayush Minister

Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla on Friday advised members to focus on asking direct questions rather than narrating stories or invoking the Mahabharat during the Question Hour.

“Do not tell stories, ask the question (aap Mahabharat mat sunao, aap prashna poocho),” Birla said, emphasising that MPs should avoid lengthy narratives.

He remarked, “Invoking the Mahabharat is currently in vogue (aaj kal, Mahabharat sunane ka kissa zyada chala hai yahan par),” noting that references to the epic are becoming increasingly common in the House.

The Speaker’s comments came after BJP MP Pradip Purohit reference to an ayurvedic college, where he traced the history of local herbs back to ancient times during a question to the Union Ayush Minister.

Birla’s remarks were also made in the context of a speech earlier in the week by Leader of Opposition and Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, who claimed that the country is being ensnared in a ‘chakravyuh‘ created by a small group.

Gandhi’s speech included references to the Mahabharat and accused the Modi government’s 2024 Union Budget of favoring big businesses and political monopolies that undermine democratic structures.

In response, BJP leader and former Union minister Anurag Thakur had criticised Gandhi’s speech, listing historical grievances he attributed to the Congress, including the Partition of India, concessions to China, the Emergency, the Bofors scandal, anti-Sikh riots, and alleged attacks on India’s culture and traditions.

Thakur had said Prime Minister Narendra Modi took the country out of the ‘chakravyuh‘ of the Congress.

Gandhi’s reference was to the Mahabharat legend according to which Abhimanyu was killed in a ‘chakravyuh‘.

Chakravyuh‘ refers to a multi-layered military formation aimed at trapping a warrior by opponents placed strategically in an alignment resembling a lotus-shaped labyrinth.

(With inputs from PTI)

News Desk

The News Desk is a team of passionate editors and writers who break and analyse the most important events unfolding in India and abroad. From live upd

...Read More

Read Full Article at Source