NATIVE PEOPLE'S PARTY :
AFJAL GURU : SOME MORE FACTS AS HIS JAILOR TELLS:
NEW DELHI, August 16 (AGENCIES): As a child, he never read the Quran.
He has read it now in the years spent inside Tihar Jail, following his
arrest in the December 2001 terror attack on Parliament.
On death row — with the Union Home Ministry recently telling the President to reject his mercy petition — Afzal Guru has revealed
this and other details to Superintendent of Tihar Jail No. 3 Manoj
Dwivedi. The officer heading the jail where Guru is imprisoned has
written a 180-page manuscript in Hindi on the terror convict, which
Tihar has denied him permission to publish, according to a report in the
Indian Express.
The two first met when Guru complained to Dwivedi
that he wasn’t getting his evening tea. The Superintendent intervened
and, intrigued by a man who many want hanged without any delay, started
having conversations with him on life and religion. Dwivedi, 36, joined
as Jail No. 3 Superintendent in 2009.
“I asked him why he used Guru
as surname, and he explained that his family had converted to Islam but
retained their Brahmin surname. That must have been a few generations
before him,” Dwivedi said.
Guru, who has been reading extensively on
world religions, wanted to know why young children were buried in
Hinduism while adults were cremated.
At another point, Dwivedi
writes that Guru went to a missionary school in Sopore and wanted to
become a doctor. His uncle, a cardiologist, was his ideal. The
manuscript talks of his life at Delhi University, where he studied
briefly.
However, Dwivedi falls short of his claim that the book seeks to answer why Guru participated in the terror attack.
Explaining his interest in a prisoner in his charge — frowned upon by
the Tihar authorities — Dwivedi says: “I figured I could write because I
am also an observer. I interact with prisoners a lot.” DIG, Tihar
Prisons, R N Sharma, confirmed that they had denied Dwivedi permission
for publication.
Dwivedi, who remains hopeful of publishing the book
once he has retired, says Guru himself has given a written go-ahead to
him. “He spoke about his fears; he knew he had no chance. That’s why he
perhaps said yes to me when I asked him if I could write about him.”
The Superintendent adds: “I asked him what if he dies. He said the book
will tell the world how I lived.” Guru has another wish, says the
manuscript: When his son Ghalib grows up, he wants him to be a nice man
and to be good to people.
NV. D.D.RAUT, PRESIDENT, N.P.P.
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