Letters, Not Answers: The Ram Mandir Donation Theft and the Anatomy of a Cover-Up
Nearly four weeks have passed since the first faint hints of a monumental financial scandal at the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya seeped into public discourse. What has followed is not a transparent probe, not a single press conference by the trust, but a flurry of carefully worded, self-exculpatory letters. The treasurer of the Shri Ram Janmabhoomi Teerth Kshetra Trust, Swami Govind Dev Giri, has now thrown his hands up, confessing that he never actually discharged the duties of a treasurer. The trust chairman, Mahant Nritya Gopal Das, has issued an open letter placing his complete faith in Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath. Meanwhile, the international president of the Vishva Hindu Parishad, Alok Kumar, dispatched a letter to the Ayodhya police, demanding interrogation of opposition leaders for making allegations—while meticulously omitting the names of those within the governing ecosystem who have admitted to large-scale theft and corruption.
This is an elaborate theatre of evasion. The central question—who stole the offerings of millions of Ram devotees, and on whose watch—is being buried under layers of deflection, political intimidation, and manufactured moral outrage. A closer reading of these letters unearths the fault lines inside the temple trust, and reveals how political power is being deployed not to deliver justice but to shield insiders and punish critics.
The Treasurer’s Confession: A Nominal Post at the Heart of Power?
Swami Govind Dev Giri’s two-page letter, addressed to the devotees of Lord Ram, is a textbook in the art of disowning responsibility without a shred of institutional accountability. For more than four years—since the trust’s formation—he held the office of treasurer. Yet now he claims:
- He is “not a signatory” on any bank instrument; all trust expenses go through direct bank transfers, which he never handles.
- He resides in Pune and has “from the beginning” had no connection with the place where devotees’ offerings are counted.
- Guidelines for counting temple offerings, supposedly framed in coordination with the SBI, were shown to him only “last month for the first time.”
- His own expenses are handled by a chartered accountant who visits Ayodhya for the last four or five days of each month, leaving him “worry‑free” about the accounts.
- He has personally received only two cash/donations in all these years—Rs 11,000 in cash and 1 kg of silver bricks—and issued receipts for both.
The admission is staggering. A person entrusted with the financial custodianship of India’s most politically consecrated temple says he neither counted the money, nor signed cheques, nor even saw the counting protocol until the scandal broke. The letter then concludes with a grand moral pronouncement: “Stealing from offerings is a great sin,” and demands that the guilty be punished regardless of their stature.
But here’s the contradiction that cannot be wished away. If the treasurer was merely a namesake, why did he remain silent for over four years? Why did he accept the post if he could not perform even its basic functions? And why, as photographs and video recordings from the grand inauguration on 22 January 2024 show, was he consistently positioned at the very center of power—next to Prime Minister Modi, next to RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat, next to trust general secretary Champat Rai?
Indeed, on the day of the consecration ceremony, it was Swami Govind Dev Giri who delivered the first speech, framing the temple not merely as a religious structure but as the “identity and self-respect of the nation.” A person who could connect the temple to national pride so centrally cannot, today, plead helplessness about the very finances that sustain that edifice. He owes the public an explanation: when he had no real charge of the treasury, why did he not resign? And when accusations of theft and commission‑taking first surfaced—pointed out by Akhilesh Yadav on 7 June—why did he wait a full month before writing an open letter, a letter that pointedly avoids naming any individual within the trust?
The optics also betray the claim. Photographs of the inauguration day show Swami Govind Dev Giri deeply engaged with Champat Rai and Mohan Bhagwat. He belongs to the very inner circle that controls the trust. He cannot now portray himself as an outsider who was kept in the dark. Either he was complicit in the negligence, or he was deliberately sidelined—both scenarios demand his resignation, not a letter to the faithful.
The Chairman’s Appeal: Trust in Modi-Yogi, Not Accountability
While the treasurer was busy disowning his portfolio, the trust’s chairman, Mahant Nritya Gopal Das, broke his silence with an open letter of his own. He wrote that he is “deeply hurt” by the theft of donations and that the guilty must receive the strictest punishment. But the operative part came next: “I have full faith in Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath ji and Prime Minister Narendra Modi ji that they will ensure punishment to every person involved in this sin.”
This is the language of political absolution, not institutional integrity. The trust was set up by a government order; its key members were appointed largely by the central government. Yet when faced with a crisis of legitimacy, the chairman appeals not to an independent judicial process but to the very political executive that placed them there. It is an invitation to believe in the impartiality of those who have a direct stake in protecting the reputational capital of the temple project.
The chairman further urged that “nobody should do politics for personal gains in this matter.” But it is precisely because politics brought the issue to light that we are discussing it at all. Had Akhilesh Yadav not hinted at the theft on 7 June, and had journalists not followed it up, the trust would likely have continued its silence. The demand to keep “politics” out of the scandal is itself a political tactic—an attempt to delegitimise all questioning and to frame critics as anti-Hindu or Ram‑drohi (traitors to Ram). It is a well‑worn strategy, and it is being deployed with surgical precision.
VHP’s Selective Outrage: Interrogate the Critics, Protect the Insiders
The third letter, written by Vishva Hindu Parishad international president Alok Kumar to the Deputy Superintendent of Police, Ashutosh Tiwari, takes the manipulation to a new level. The letter demands that the police summon and interrogate:
- Prof. Ram Gopal Yadav
- Arvind Kejriwal
- Priyanka Gandhi
- Sanjay Singh
for allegedly making unsubstantiated claims about a Rs 1,000-crore loot. The letter argues that such statements could spread “hatred” and calls for action against them.
But look at the names that the VHP chief omitted—deliberately and dishonestly:
| Person | Affiliation | Statement / Allegation |
|---|---|---|
| Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh | Sitting BJP MP (till recently) / Father of BJP MP Karan Bhushan | “In Ayodhya so much loot took place that I have not even gone for darshan till today… from the first day the game was on.” |
| Nripendra Mishra | Chairman, Temple Construction Committee; former Principal Secretary to PM Modi | “There has not just been theft, there has been dacoity.” - reiterated in multiple interviews. |
| Engineer Mahipal Singh | Affiliated to VHP / RSS ecosystem | Alleged in 2020-21 that temple offerings were being stolen; accused Anil Mishra of taking 40% commission on construction. |
| Kamal Nain Das | Successor designate of Mahant Nritya Gopal Das | Admitted that theft and corruption were rampant at the temple. |
| Vinay Katiyar | Former BJP MP | Publicly acknowledged “dishonesty and corruption” in temple affairs. |
The VHP letter did not include any of these names. It did not ask the police to question Nripendra Mishra about his “dacoity” remark. It did not summon the engineer who spoke of 40% commission. It did not even acknowledge that the entire episode was first flagged internally in 2020-21. Instead, it trained its guns on the opposition, on those who dared to amplify what insiders already knew.
This is not an investigation; it is a gag order wrapped in legal language. It is an attempt to criminalise dissent while the trust’s own house burns. The true purpose of the letter is to send a chilling message: if you speak about the loot, you will be deemed a spreader of hatred and face consequences. Meanwhile, the actual perpetrators—whoever they may be—remain unnamed, unbowed, and protected.
The Grand Cover‑Up: No Press Conference, an Endlessly Extending SIT
In a functional institution, a theft of this magnitude would trigger an immediate press conference, suspension of office‑bearers, and a forensic audit. The Ram Mandir Trust has done none of these. Not a single spokesperson has faced the media. Instead, the trust has resorted to letter‑writing as a substitute for accountability, dispersing blame and buying time.
The Uttar Pradesh government initially announced that a Special Investigation Team (SIT) would separate “milk from water” within 15 days. Those 15 days expired, and the deadline was extended by another 15 days. Thirty days later, there is no public report, no interim findings, no list of suspects beyond a few low‑level employees. The Chief Minister, who visited Ayodhya on 19 June to celebrate the trust chairman’s birthday, used the occasion to declare from the stage that “people associated with the Ram Mandir were never sold” and asked the faithful to have “faith.” It was a certificate of integrity issued by a political authority to an institution under investigation—a gesture that collapses the necessary distance between the investigator and the investigated.
Contrast this with the letter of the treasurer, who writes that he was never told about the counting process. If the SIT were genuinely probing, one of its first tasks would be to establish why a statutory office‑bearer was kept in the dark, and who actually signed the cheques. Yet we hear nothing. The silence is loud.
The Older Land Scams and Commission Charges
The focus on donated cash and silver is itself a diversion. The real scandal predates the consecration. Since 2021, allegations of massive irregularities in land purchase by the trust have been raised repeatedly by Samajwadi Party leader Pawan Pandey and others. Documents show a piece of land bought for Rs 2 crore being valued at Rs 18.5 crore within minutes. The trust has never explained these transactions, nor has the SIT been tasked to probe them with the same urgency seen in anti‑corruption cases elsewhere.
Add to this the sworn statement of engineer Mahipal Singh that construction work involved a 40% commission. With an estimated total budget of Rs 2,000 crore, that would translate to Rs 800 crore in siphoned funds. And yet the VHP letter, and the trust’s entire communications strategy, studiously avoid these figures. Instead, they fixate on whether a few kilograms of silver were properly receipted—a disaster of priorities that points to a systemic effort to contain the narrative.
The Faith Gambit: Weaponising Sentiment to Shut Down Questions
The moment critical voices grow louder, a familiar semantic shift occurs. The theft of offerings is recast not as a law‑and‑order or governance failure, but as a “test of faith.” Any demand for transparency is branded an insult to Hindu sentiments. Opposition leaders who skipped the temple visit are declared unworthy of speaking on the matter. Images of them are juxtaposed with the temple to suggest they are “Ram‑drohi.”
This is the most dangerous aspect of the entire episode. When financial corruption inside a temple trust is turned into a litmus test of religious identity, the state and its proxies grant themselves a licence to ignore criminality. The public is told to “trust” the very political leadership that appointed the trust members, while those who demand proof are threatened with police interrogation. The trust, the VHP, and the ruling party are together manufacturing an environment where asking “Where is the missing money?” becomes an act of heresy.
Criticisms
- The Ram Mandir Trust functions as a closed cabal of ruling party‑affiliated figures; it has refused a single press conference, opting instead for manipulative letters that shed responsibility without naming the powerful.
- Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who personally inaugurated the temple and stood shoulder‑to‑shoulder with the very office‑bearers now under a cloud, has maintained a calculated silence, treating the theft of crore‑rupee offerings as beneath his attention.
- Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath issues pre‑emptive certificates of integrity to trust members and extends SIT deadlines indefinitely, turning a criminal investigation into a performance of administrative busyness.
- The BJP and its ideological affiliates indulge in intimidation—through letters to police threatening opponents—while ignoring the damning statements of their own insiders and former office‑bearers who have confirmed large‑scale theft and commission‑taking.
- The mainstream media, often called “godī mīḍiyā,” amplifies the diversionary narratives of the VHP, broadcasting videos of a recovered golden “Ramcharitmanas” without asking why the trust itself has not authenticated them, or why the original donors were never given receipts.
- By portraying every question about financial embezzlement as an attack on faith, the government and its ecosystem convert a criminal matter into a communal loyalty test—silencing millions of genuine devotees who have a right to know where their money and gifts vanished.