The Economist explains

Why a new temple to Ram in Ayodhya matters so much to Indians

For Hindus it fulfils a centuries-old desire. Its opening will burnish Narendra Modi’s image

The Ram Mandir temple under construction in Ayodhya ahead of inuguration of Hindu God Ram Mandir, India.
Photograph: EPA

BY ONE COUNT there are almost 700,000 Hindu temples in India. Yet for many devotees it was the one that did not exist—a monument to mark the ostensible birthplace of Ram, a Hindu god—that mattered the most. On January 22nd their yearning will come to an end when Narendra Modi, the prime minister, consecrates the Ram mandir, a grand temple in the northern city of Ayodhya. Some 8,000 people will attend the ceremony, including scores of officials from Mr Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and dignitaries from 55 countries. Why is the temple so important?

Explore more

More from The Economist explains

The vocabulary of disinformation

From AI-generated news to verification

What are the rules governing protests on American campuses?

They vary, and are hard to enforce


Who is jamming airliners’ GPS in the Baltic?

Russia seems to be the culprit, but it may be inadvertent