Muslim ordained as priest in India says no one opposed him
A Muslim youth who was ordained as a priest at a Lingayat Mutt in Karnataka's Gadag district in southern India has said he felt blessed and that nobody had opposed his decision to accept the Mutt (monastery) offer.
A Muslim youth who was ordained as a priest at a Lingayat Mutt in Karnataka's Gadag district in southern India has said he felt blessed and that nobody had opposed his decision to accept the Mutt (monastery) offer.
"I am blessed today. I will walk the path of my guru (Basaveshwara). Nobody opposed my decision and choice. The members of the Mutt and my friends helped me," said the 33-year-old Dewan Sharif.
Sharif said his parents donated their property as well as him for the betterment of the society, according to the teachings of Basaveshwara.
"Anyone who follows the teachings of Basaveshwara is welcome. It does not matter what religion you come from," said Murugharajendra Koraneshwar Shivayogi, head of the Mutt. He said one is not born into a religion but only chooses one later.
Basaveshwara was a 12th-century saint and social reformer who fought against the caste system in Karnataka. Located in North Karnataka, Murugharajendra Koraneshwara Shantidama Mutt lies in Asuti village, falling under the purview of 350-year-old Koraneshwara Sansthan Mutt of the village in Kalaburagi. Gadag is 385 km north-west of Bengaluru, India's tech capital.
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