GUJARAT: As India approaches 2026, a millennium since the first recorded destruction of the Somnath Mandir, the ancient mandir on Gujarat’s western coast stands not merely as a place of worship, but as a powerful symbol of an unbroken civilisational will. Ravaged repeatedly by foreign invaders, converted into a mosque, plundered, desecrated and erased from the landscape again and again, Somnath’s survival tells a story that runs deeper than stone and mortar the story of Hindu resilience.
Exactly 1,000 years ago, in 1026 AD, during the reign of King Bhima I of the Chaulukya dynasty, the Turkic Muslim invader Mahmud of Ghazni launched a brutal raid on Somnath. Contemporary historical accounts record that Mahmud looted an estimated 2 million dinars from the Mandir treasury a staggering sum even by medieval standards.
Somnath temple stands as a testimony that Hindu civilisational spirit cannot be conquered, broken, or dominated. Every time it was destroyed by Muslim invaders, the temple was rebuilt by Hindus.
Exactly 1000 years back in 1026, during the reign of Bhima I, the Turkic Muslim… https://t.co/moHPp7rUbg pic.twitter.com/t0DrrV3dwK
— Monidipa Bose – Dey (মণিদীপা) (@monidipadey) January 5, 2026
The sanctum sanctorum was desecrated. The Jyotirlinga, among the holiest manifestations of Bhagwan Shiva, was shattered into four pieces. According to historical tradition, one fragment was buried beneath the Ghazni mosque, another under the gateway of Mahmud’s palace, while the remaining pieces were sent to Makkah and Madinah a deliberate act meant to humiliate and subjugate a civilisation.
Yet Somnath did not vanish. It was rebuilt. The centuries that followed saw Somnath become a recurring target of Islamic conquest:
- 1299: The armies of Alauddin Khalji, led by Ulugh Khan, once again sacked the Mandir.
- 1395: Zafar Khan, the last governor of Gujarat under the Delhi Sultanate, destroyed it for the third time.
- 1669: Mughal emperor Aurangzeb issued a sweeping decree ordering the demolition of Hindu Mandirs and schools. Somnath was razed yet again and converted into a mosque.
Each attack was intended not only to destroy a religious structure but to crush the cultural and spiritual confidence of the Hindu people. Each time, the strategy failed.
After 1947, as India emerged from colonial rule, the question of rebuilding Somnath became a test of the nation’s civilisational self-respect. Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel championed the reconstruction, seeing it as a moral duty to restore what centuries of invasions had sought to erase.
However, the effort faced resistance from within the newly independent Indian leadership. Jawaharlal Nehru opposed the reconstruction, arguing that the state should not associate itself with religious revival. Despite this opposition, the will to rebuild prevailed.
On May 11 1951, the reconstructed Somnath Mandir was inaugurated in the presence of Dr Rajendra Prasad, India’s first President. His presence sent an unmistakable message: independent India would no longer be ashamed of reclaiming its civilisational heritage.
Earlier, Prime Minister Narendra Modi shared a message on X saying “Jai Somnath!”, underscoring the symbolic importance of the Mandir. Political leaders and commentators have highlighted Somnath as an enduring symbol of faith and continuity, noting that despite repeated destruction over centuries, the Mandir was rebuilt each time.
Jai Somnath!
2026 marks 1000 years since the first attack on Somnath took place. Despite repeated attacks subsequently, Somnath stands tall! This is because Somnath’s story is about the unbreakable courage of countless children of Bharat Mata who protected our culture and…
— Narendra Modi (@narendramodi) January 5, 2026
PM Modi has reflected on the enduring spiritual and civilisational significance of the Somnath Mandir in an article titled “Somnath Swabhiman Parv: 1,000 Years of Unbroken Faith.” In the piece, the Prime Minister described Somnath as a powerful symbol of India’s resilience, self-belief, and unwavering faith, noting that the Mandir has risen repeatedly over the last millennium despite facing repeated adversities.
Highlighting the Mandir’s place in India’s cultural consciousness, PM Modi wrote that Somnath embodies the timeless spirit of Bharat, rooted in heritage, guided by faith, and strengthened by collective resolve. He emphasised that beyond being a physical structure of stone and sanctum, Somnath represents India’s civilisational courage, enduring belief system, and commitment to dharma.
The PM also pointed to the historical milestones associated with the Mandir, noting that while a thousand years have passed since its first destruction, Somnath continues to stand as a living symbol of continuity. He added that 2026 will mark 75 years since the Mandir’s restoration, a moment that honours the generations who worked to ensure that this symbol of faith and cultural identity remained alive.
BJP leader Amit Malviya took it to X, and referred to a blog by the Prime Minister that reflects on India’s civilisational strength and resilience. The writings emphasise that the first destruction of the Somnath Mandir took place in 1026 AD, and that over the centuries, while empires rose and fell and invaders came and went, India’s civilisational spirit endured.


















