On the serene night of Kartik Purnima, when the sacred moon bathed the land of Fatehpur, Uttar Pradesh, in silver light, a quiet storm of devotion and courage stirred among a group of Hindu women. What began as a humble act of faith turned into a striking display of valour, resilience, and the indomitable spirit of Hindu womanhood.
The women, draped in simple saris and carrying thalis of flowers, diyas, and incense, had gathered to perform Kartik Purnima puja at a disputed site — a place long claimed to be an ancient temple of Thakur Ji, but also identified by others as the Mangi Dargah. For these women, the site was not a battlefield of politics but a sacred ground, where generations before them had bowed in reverence.
Led by the wife of local leader Pappu Singh Chauhan, the women moved forward with chants of “Har Har Mahadev” and “Jai Shri Ram”, their voices echoing in the chilly November air. Their steps were steady, their resolve unshaken. But their progress was soon halted by the police — men in khaki uniforms, faces taut with orders and uncertainty.
The police cited security reasons, asking the women to return. But faith, once awakened, does not retreat so easily. “We came with flowers, not fire,” one of the women said, her voice trembling not with fear but with hurt. “We only wished to perform our rituals — the same rituals our mothers and grandmothers did. Is devotion a crime now?”
What followed was a tense standoff. The women, refusing to let the sanctity of the day fade into silence, sat down on the road, clutching their diyas close to their hearts. Their voices rose again — not in anger, but in prayer to worshipped Kartik Purnima. Some wept quietly; others sang hymns that carried through the night, each word an act of resistance, each tear a testament to their strength.
Despite their peaceful intent, the situation grew heated. The police, acting under administrative orders, prevented them from moving further. The women’s pleas — filled with reverence and emotion — were met with official firmness. Yet even in that moment of confrontation, they did not retaliate with aggression. Instead, they offered their prayers from afar, lifting their thalis high and chanting as if the divine could hear them through the barriers of distance and authority.
And perhaps, He did. For that night, the moon seemed brighter than usual, and the diyas — placed humbly on the roadside — glowed like a line of unyielding hope.
When dawn came, the women dispersed quietly, leaving behind the faint fragrance of camphor and jasmine, and the lingering echo of their chants. But their departure did not mark defeat. It marked a victory of spirit — the victory of Kartik Purnima, faith over fear, of devotion over suppression.
Yet, the aftermath brought another trial. An FIR was registered against 21 women, including Chauhan’s wife, accusing them of disturbing peace. The charges shocked the small community, where these women were known not as agitators but as homemakers, mothers, and devotees. “We did nothing wrong,” said one of them softly. “We only prayed. We harmed no one.”
Their words resonated with many across Fatehpur. People recalled how, in countless episodes of India’s history, Hindu women have stood at the forefront of faith and dignity — from Rani Lakshmibai wielding a sword for freedom to the women of today, who wield courage to uphold their right to worship. These women of Fatehpur were the inheritors of that same legacy — silent yet unbreakable warriors of dharma.
The site itself remains mired in legal and communal complexities. The Math-Mandir Sanrakshan Sangharsh Samiti continues to assert that it is an ancient temple that deserves preservation and respect, while caretaker Abu Huraira maintains it as a historical dargah. But amidst this tug of claims and counterclaims, what stands out is not the dispute itself, but the faith of those who came to worship despite it all.
For those women, Kartik Purnima was not just a date on the calendar; it was a sacred bond — a night when the divine descends into the hearts of devotees who light lamps in faith. To be stopped, to be accused, to be branded offenders — it wounded them deeply, yet it did not extinguish their devotion.
In a world that often measures strength by might and noise, the women of Fatehpur reminded everyone that true valour can be soft-spoken and graceful. Their defiance was not loud, but it was powerful — the defiance of women who bow before gods, not before injustice.
As their diyas flickered against the November wind, they carried a message older than any dispute and stronger than any decree: faith cannot be forbidden.
And so, the story of these women — simple, steadfast, and sacred — becomes more than a local incident. It becomes a testament to the eternal strength of Hindu women, who, in every age and every struggle, have stood as the torchbearers of courage, devotion, and unyielding dharma.
