Taj Mahal Photo #1
[Below is] An aerial view of the Taj Mahal alias  Tejo Mahalaya, ancient Hindu temple complex in Agra. For the last 300  years the world has been fooled to believe that this stupendous edifice  was built by the 5th generation Mogul emperor Shahjahan to commemorate  one of his dead wives--Mumtaz. The two flanking buildings although  identical, only the one in the rear is known as a mosque.
The Taj  Mahal has seven stories. Five of them lie sealed and barred concealing  rich evidence. The marble building in the centre is flanked by two  symmetrical ones. The one in the foreground is the eastern one. The one  in the background is being represented as a mosque because it is to the  west. They should not have been identical if only one was to be a  mosque. In the courtyard at the foot of the eastern building is inlaid a  full scale replica of the trident pinnacle [found at the top of the  dome]. The tiny tower at the left near the western building encloses a  huge octagonal multi-storied well.
Taj Mahal Photo # 2
This is  the massive octagonal well with palatial apartments along its seven  stories. A royal staircase descends right down to the water level  indicated by the tiny white patch showing the sun's reflection.
This  was the traditional treasury well of the Hindu temple palace. Treasure  chests used to be stacked in the lower stories. Accountants, cashiers  and treasurers sat in the upper stories. Cheques called handies used to  be issued from here. On being besieged, if the building had to be  surrendered to the enemy, the treasure used to be pushed into the water  for salvage later after recapture. For real research, water should be  pumped out of this well to reveal the evidence that lies at the bottom.  This well is inside a tower near the so-called mosque to the west of the  marble Taj. Had the Taj been a mausoleum this octagonal multistoried  well would have been superfluous.
Taj Mahal Photo # 3
A  frontal view of the Taj Mahal alias Tejo Mahalaya in Agra. It is  octagonal because the Hindus believe in 10 directions. The pinnacle  pointing to the heaven and the foundation to the nether world, plus the  eight surface directions make the 10 directions. Divinity and royalty  are believed to hold sway in all those 10 directions. Hence in Hindu  tradition, buildings connected with royalty and divinity must have some  octagonal features or the buildings themselves should be octagonal. The  two flanking cupolas (two others to the rear are not seen in this photo)  are also identical.
The towers at the four plinth corners served as  watch towers during the day, and to hold lights at night. Hindu wedding  altars and Satyanarayan worship altars invariably have such towers at  corners. [Many other Hindu temples, such as those at Khajurao, also can  be found to have four towers or temples, one at each corner of the  temple foundation.]
The lotus flower cap on the head of the dome is a  Hindu feature. Muslim domes are bald. This marble edifice has four  stories. Inside the dome is an 83 ft. high hall. The Taj has a double  dome. The dome one sees from inside ends like an inverted pan on the  terrace. The dome seen from outside is a cover on the inner dome.  Therefore, in between them is an 83 ft. hall. This may be considered as  one storey. Underneath may be seen the first storey arches and the  ground floor rooms. In the basement, visitors are shown one room. All  these constitute the four storeys in the marble edifice. Below the  marble structure are two stories in red stone reaching down to the river  level. The 7th storey must be below the river level because every  ancient Hindu historic building did have a basement. Thus, the Taj is a  seven-storied structure.
Taj Mahal Photo # 4
The dome of the  Taj Mahal bearing a trident pinnacle made of a non-rusting eight-metal  Hindu alloy. The pinnacle served as a lightning deflector too.
This  pinnacle has been blindly assumed by many to be an Islamic crescent and  star, or a lightning conductor installed by the British. This is a  measure of the careless manner in which Indian history has been studied  till now. Visually identifiable things like this pinnacle too have been  misinterpreted with impunity. The flower top of the dome, below the  pinnacle, is an unmistakable Hindu sign. A full scale figure of this  pinnacle is inlaid in the eastern courtyard.
Taj Mahal Photo # 5
A  close up of the upper portion of the pinnacle of the Taj Mahal,  photographed from the parapet beneath the dome. The Hindu horizontal  crescent and the coconut top together look like a trident from the  garden level. Islamic crescents are always oblique. Moreover they are  almost always complete circles leaving a little opening for a star. This  Hindu pinnacle had all these centuries been misinterpreted as an  Islamic crescent and star or a lightning conductor installed by the  British. The word "Allah" etched here by Shahjahan is absent in the  courtyard replica. The coconut, the bent mango leaves under it and the  supporting Kalash (water pot) are exclusive Hindu motifs.
Taj Mahal Photo # 6
The  full scale figure of the pinnacle on the dome has been inlaid on the  red stone courtyard of the Taj Mahal. One may see it to the east at the  foot of the riverside arch of the flanking building wrongly dubbed as  Jamiat Khana (community hall) by Muslim usurpers. Such floor sketches in  courtyards are a common Hindu trait. In Fatehpur Sikri it is the  backgammon board which is sketched on a central courtyard. The coconut  top and the bent mango leaves underneath, resting on a kalash (i.e. a  water pot) is a sacred Hindu motif. Hindu shrines in the Himalayan  foothills have identical pinnacles [especially noticed at Kedarnath, a  prominent Shiva temple]. The eastern location of the sketch is also  typically Hindu. The length measures almost 32 ft.
Taj Mahal Photo # 7
The  apex of the lofty entrance arch on all four sides of the Taj Mahal  bears this red lotus and white trident--indicating that the building  originated as a Hindu temple. The Koranic lettering forming the middle  strip was grafted after Shahjahan seized the building from Jaipur  state's Hindu ruler.
Taj Mahal Photo # 8
This is a riverside  view of the Taj Mahal. The four storied marble structure above has under  it these two stories reaching down to the river level. The 22 rooms  shown in other photos are behind that line of arches seen in the middle.  Each arch is flanked by Hindu lotus discs in white marble. Just above  the ground level is the plinth. In the left corner of the plinth is a  doorway indicating inside the plinth are many rooms sealed by Shahjahan.  One could step out to the river bank from the door at the left. The 7th  storey is surmised to be under the plinth below the ground because  every ancient Hindu mansion had a basement. Excavation to reach the  basement chamber should start under this door.
Taj Mahal Photo # 9
Most  people content to see Mumtaz's grave inside the Taj fail to go to the  rear riverside. This is the riverside view. From here one may notice  that the four-storied marble structure on top has below it two more  stories in red stone. Note the window aperture in the arch at the left.  That indicates that there are rooms inside. Inside the row of arches in  the upper part of the wall are 22 rooms. In addition to the four stories  in marble, this one shows red stone arches in the 5th storey. The 6th  storey lies in the plinth in the lower portion of the photo. In another  photo a doorway would be seen in the left corner of the plinth,  indicating the presence of apartments inside, from where one could  emerge on the river for a bath.
Taj Mahal Photo # 10
These  corridors at the approach of the Taj Mahal are typically Hindu. They may  be seen in any ancient Hindu capital. Note the two octagonal tower  cupolas at the right and left top. Only Hindus have special names for  the eight directions and celestial guards assigned to each. Any  octagonal feature in historic buildings should convince the visitor of  their Hindu origin. Guards, palanquin bearers and other attendants  resided in hundreds of rooms along numerous such corridors when the Taj  Mahal was a Hindu temple palace. Thus the Taj was more magnificent and  majestic before it was reduced to a sombre Islamic cemetery.
Taj Mahal Photo # 11
This  Naqqar Khana alias Music House in the Taj Mahal garden is an  incongruity if the Taj Mahal were an Islamic tomb. Close by on the right  is the building which Muslims claim to be a mosque. The proximity of a  mosque to the Music House is incongruous with Muslim tradition. In  India, Muslims have a tradition of pelting stones on Hindu music  processions passing over a mosque. Moreover a mausoleum needs silence. A  dead person's repose is never to be disturbed. Who would then provide a  band house for a dead Mumtaz? Contrarily Hindu temples and palaces have  a music house because morning and evening Hindu chores begin to the  sweet strains of sacred music.
Taj Mahal Photo # 12
Such are  the rooms on the 1st floor of the marble structure of the Taj Mahal. The  two staircases leading to this upper floor are kept locked and barred  since Shahjahan's time. The floor and the marble walls of such upper  floor rooms can be seen in the picture to have been stripped of its  marble panels. Shahjahan used that uprooted marble from the upper floor  for constructing graves and engraving the Koran because he did not know  wherefrom to procure marble matching the splendour of the rest of the  Taj Mahal. He was also so stingy as not to want to spend much even on  converting a robbed Hindu temple into an Islamic mausoleum.
Taj Mahal Photo # 13
Such  are the magnificent marble-paved, shining, cool, white bright rooms of  the Taj Mahal temple palace's marble ground floor. Even the lower third  portion of the walls is covered with magnificent marble mosaic. The  doorway at the left looks suspiciously closed with a stone slab. One can  perambulate through these rooms around the central octagonal sanctorum,  now occupied by Mumtaz's fake grave. The aperture, seen through of the  central door, enabled perambulating devotees to keep their eyes fixed on  the Shiva Linga in the central chamber. Hindu Shiva Lingas are  consecrated in two chambers, one above the other. Therefore, Shahjahan  had to raise two graves in the name of Mumtaz--one in the marble  basement and the other on the ground floor to desecrate and hide both  the Shiva emblems from public view. [The famous Shiva temple in Ujjain  also has an underground chamber for one of its Shiva-lingams.]
Taj Mahal Photo # 14
This  is the Dhatura flower essential for Hindu Shiva worship. The flower is  depicted in the shape of the sacred, esoteric Hindu incantation 'OM.'  Embossed designs of this blooming 'OM' are drawn over the exterior of  the octagonal central sanctorum of Shiva where now a fake grave in  Mumtaz's has been planted. While perambulating around the central  chamber one may see such 'OM' designs.
Taj Mahal Photo # 15
This  staircase and another symmetrical one at the other end lead down to the  storey beneath the marble platform. Visitors may go to the back of the  marble plinth at the eastern or western end and descend down the  staircase because it is open to the sky. But at the foot the archaeology  department has set up an iron door which it keeps locked. Yet one may  peep inside from the iron gate in the upper part of the door. Shahjahan  had sealed even these two staircases. It was the British who opened  them. But from Shahjahan's time the stories below and above the marble  ground floor have been barred to visitors. We are still following Mogul  dictates though long free from Mogul rule.
Mahal Photo # 16
On  the inner flank of the 22 locked rooms (in the secret storey in red  stone below the marble platform) is this corridor about 12 ft. broad and  300 ft. long. Note the scallop design at the base of the plinth  supporting the arches. This is the Hindu decoration which enables one to  identify even a bare plinth.
Taj Mahal Photo # 17
One of the  22 rooms in the secret storey underneath the marble plinth of the Taj  Mahal. Many such features of the Taj remain unknown to the public so  long as they see it only as a tomb. If the public knew how much it is  missing in the Taj Mahal it will insist that the government unseal its  many stories. Two doorways at either end of this corridor in the right  side wall leading to inner apartments have been sealed by Shahjahan. If  those doorways are opened, important evidence concealed inside by  Shahjahan may come to light.
Taj Mahal Photo # 18
A corner of  one of the 22 rooms in the secret storey immediately below the marble  platform of the Taj Mahal. Note the strips of Hindu paint on the wall.  The ventilator at the left, meant for air and light from the riverside,  has been crudely walled up by Shahjahan. He did not bother even to  plaster them. Had Shahjahan built the Taj as a mausoleum what was the  purpose of the 22 rooms? And why are they kept locked and hidden from  the public?
Taj Mahal Photo # 19
One of the 22 locked rooms in  the secret storey beneath the marble platform of the Taj Mahal. Strips  of ancient Hindu paint are seen on the wall flanking the doorway. The  niches above had paintings of Hindu idols, obviously rubbed off by  Muslim desecraters. The rooms may be seen door within door in a row. If  the public knew that the Taj Mahal is a structure hiding hundreds of  rooms, they would insist on seeing the whole of it. At present they only  peep into the grave chamber and walk away.
Taj Mahal Photo # 20
This  esoteric Hindu design is painted on the ceiling of some of the 22  locked rooms in the secret storey below the marble platform of the Taj  Mahal in Agra. Had Shahjahan built the Taj Mahal he would not have kept  such elaborately painted rooms sealed and barred to the public. Even now  one can enter these rooms only if one can influence the archaeology  department to remove the locks.
Taj Mahal Photo # 21
A huge  ventilator of one of the 22 rooms in a secret storey of the Taj, is seen  here crudely sealed with unplastered bricks by Shahjahan. History has  been so perverted and inverted that alien Muslims like Shahjahan who  spoiled, damaged, desecrated and destroyed historic Hindu buildings, are  being falsely paraded as great builders.
Taj Mahal Photo # 22
One  of the 22 riverside rooms in a secret storey of the Taj Mahal, unknown  to the public. Shahjahan, far from building the shining marble Taj,  wantonly disfigured it. Here he has crudely walled up a doorway. Such  imperial Mogul vandalism lies hidden from the public. This room is in  the red stone storey immediately below the marble platform. Indian  history has been turned topsy turvy in lauding destroyers as great  builders.
Taj Mahal Photo # 23
Many such doorways of chambers  in secret stories underneath the Taj Mahal have been sealed with brick  and lime. Concealed inside could be valuable evidence such as Sanskrit  inscriptions, Hindu idols, the original Hindu model of the Taj, the  desecrated Shiva Linga, Hindu scriptures and temple equipment. Besides  such sealed chambers there are many which are kept locked by the  Government. The Public must raise its voice to have these opened or it  should institute legal proceedings. Shree P. N. Sharma of Green Park,  New Delhi who peeped through an aperture in these chambers in 1934 A.D.  saw a pillared hall with images carved on the pillars.
Taj Mahal Photo # 24
Burharpur  is a very ancient historic city on the Central Railway between Khandwa  and Bhusawal junctions. Burhanpur and the nearby Asirgarh (fort) used to  provide hospitality to Hindu royals proceeding north or south on  pilgrimage, weddings or military expeditions. Barhanpur has many  magnificent mansions which are currently being described as mosques and  tombs of alien Islamic invaders. This building is one such ancient Hindu  royal palace captured by the Moghuls. Mumtaz died here during her 14th  delivery around 1630 A.D. while she and Shahjahan were camping here. She  is said to be buried in a Hindu pavilion in front of this palace.
Taj Mahal Photo # 25
Mumtaz  is supposed to be buried in this garden pavilion of the ancient Hindu  palace (Ahu Mahal) 600 miles from Agra, in Burhanpur. Another version  says that Mumtaz's corpse was kept here exposed to sun, rain, and wild  beasts for six months. The date of her death, the date of her removal  from Burhanpur to Agra, and the date of her assumed burial in the Taj  Mahal are all unknown because the entire Taj Mahal-Mumtaz legend is a  concoction from the beginning to end. [Mumtaz was only one of several  hundred wives and women that Shahjahan kept in his harem.