In September 2003, I was in Karachi, Pakistan, as part of a “Labour for Peace” delegation during Atal Behari Vajpayee’s tenure as prime minister. In the evening, while we were going around the city in a bus, a member of our delegation asked the Pakistan representative about the Ayodhya issue’s impact in Pakistan. He smiled and said, “In Pakistan, it is very common to demolish places of worship of other religions and construct mosques in their place.” From the bus, he pointed to a newly built mosque outside and said it was standing at a place where, until recently, there was an old Hindu temple. “You can find several such examples across Pakistan. That’s why the people of Pakistan do not find anything strange in the demolition of the Babri Masjid,” he said.