When a film chooses to revisit a contested piece of history, it steps into a fragile intellectual space where creativity collides with responsibility. The Taj Story, a recent courtroom drama that leans heavily on the long-debunked “Tejo Mahalaya” theory, has placed itself squarely in that terrain. It is visually ambitious yet intellectually precarious, a work that dresses up historical revisionism as inquiry while quietly diluting scholarly rigour in the process.
At its core, The Taj Story is not just another period-flavoured film. It is an ideological artefact, one that consciously or unconsciously participates in India’s ongoing cultural politics around heritage, identity and the ownership of memory. To understand both the significance and the danger of this cinematic moment, we have to look beyond the screen, into the historical and ideological backdrop that the film selectively engages.
A Discredited Theory, Recast as Plot
The cornerstone of the film’s narrative is the theory popularised by P. N. Oak, who argued that the Taj Mahal was originally a Shiva temple-palace called “Tejo Mahalaya,” allegedly built by a Rajput king. Oak claimed to marshal over a hundred pieces of “evidence,” ranging from architectural details to linguistic speculation.
These claims have not simply been questioned. They have been comprehensively rejected. According to a detailed explainer published in Livemint in 2024, the Supreme Court dismissed attempts to revive Oak’s argument decades ago, describing one such petition as “misconceived” and entirely lacking credible evidence.
The Archaeological Survey of India has also been unambiguous. In a response to an RTI query reported by India Today in 2022, the ASI stated that there are no idols of Hindu gods or goddesses in the Taj Mahal’s basement and that the monument was not built on temple land. All available archaeological, architectural and inscriptional data point to its construction under the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan in the 17th century.
Historians have repeatedly attempted to put this controversy to rest. In an interview cited by India Today, historian William Dalrymple called the Tejo Mahalaya idea “ludicrous and malicious nonsense” with “no foundation in fact,” stressing that it is rejected by all serious scholars familiar with Persian chronicles, court records and contemporary eyewitness accounts of the Taj’s construction.
Against this backdrop, The Taj Story’s decision to dramatise Oak’s theory without foregrounding the overwhelming evidence against it is not a neutral creative choice. It effectively invites audiences to treat a fringe idea as a plausible alternative to established history.
Cinema as a Vehicle for Ideology
The film arrives at a time when debates around India’s monuments are deeply politicised. Questions of “ownership” over sites like the Gyanvapi mosque or the Qutub Minar have become flashpoints, and the Taj Mahal is increasingly dragged into a broader project of revisiting medieval history through a majoritarian lens. A report published by UCA News recently observed that such controversies are increasingly shaping public perception of India’s architectural heritage.
In this climate, The Taj Story does not float in a vacuum. It reenters the Taj into the battlefield of identity, and it does so by giving cinematic form to a theory long discarded in academic circles but periodically revived in public rhetoric.
Reviews have been scathing. A review published by The Quint described the film as what happens “when WhatsApp forwards become a film,” arguing that it masquerades as a quest for truth while feeling more like an assault on Indian history and on historians themselves. The critique is not just about artistic quality; it is about the film’s epistemological stance. By relying on fictional “experts” and pseudo-archaeology, the narrative lends a veneer of credibility to ideas that have never passed the tests of evidence and peer review.
The film’s promotional material has added to the unease. A report published in The Indian Express noted that a controversial poster showed a Shiva idol inside the main dome of the Taj, a powerful visual gesture that symbolically repositions the monument within a Hindu sacred geography. The backlash was immediate enough that the makers issued a clarification, insisting that the movie “does not deal with religious matters” and does not claim that a Shiva temple resides within the Taj Mahal, asserting instead that it focuses on “historical facts.”
Lead actor Paresh Rawal echoed this position. According to an interview reported by NDTV, he stated that there is “no Hindu-Muslim jingoism” in the film and urged audiences to watch it before forming opinions. But cultural products do not get to choose the context in which they are received. Once released into a charged public sphere, they inevitably become part of ongoing ideological battles, regardless of the makers’ disclaimers.
The Ethics of Representing Disputed History
The most troubling aspect of The Taj Story is not its production design or performances, but its epistemology. It adopts a courtroom drama frame, a genre that naturally evokes the pursuit of truth, and uses it to stage a debate between “two sides” of history: one aligned with mainstream scholarship, and the other with the Tejo Mahalaya claim.
On screen, this can look like a balanced inquiry. In reality, it creates a false equivalence between rigorously researched history and a theory repeatedly demolished by evidence. The film’s structure suggests that the question of the Taj’s origins remains an open controversy among experts. It is not.
Cultural and academic commentators have warned that cinema can reshape collective memory more quickly than any textbook. A report published by UCA News noted concerns among historians and civil society groups that films built on debunked claims can, through repetition and powerful imagery, replace history with narrative in the popular imagination.
Aesthetic Ambition, Intellectual Fragility
There is no denying that The Taj Story is made with visible craft. Its sweeping shots of the Taj, atmospheric lighting and meticulous courtroom choreography reflect real cinematic ambition. Paresh Rawal’s performance has been widely praised, even by critics unsparing about the script. A review in The Times of India described his portrayal as the film’s strongest element.
Yet style cannot rescue a weak spine. The film’s narrative architecture depends on a familiar trope: the lone truth-teller up against an establishment that wants to suppress “real history.” This can make for compelling drama, but only when the truths being suppressed actually exist. In this case, the “hidden facts” are those already examined and rejected by generations of historians.
The speculative edge of the narrative echoes a 2022 petition seeking to open sealed rooms in the Taj to “prove” the temple theory. According to a report in India Today from that year, the Supreme Court dismissed the petition as a “publicity interest litigation,” underscoring how firmly the judiciary sees these claims as baseless.
There is nothing wrong with questioning dominant narratives. The problem arises when a film questions everything except its own assumptions.
Memory Politics and Monumental Narratives
Every nation crafts stories around its monuments, but the Taj Mahal occupies a particularly loaded space in India’s imagination. It is at once an architectural masterpiece, a tourist magnet, a symbol of romantic love, and a visible reminder of Mughal rule. That combination makes it vulnerable to competing narratives about who truly “owns” India’s past.
Attempts to rebrand the Taj as a Hindu temple intersect with a broader discourse that seeks to frame medieval Muslim rulers primarily as invaders rather than historical actors with complex legacies. In this narrative, revising the Taj is less about architecture and more about civilisational assertion.
Cinema is a potent participant in this process. Visual impressions linger far longer than disclaimers. A narrative shown on screen can, over time, harden into inherited memory.
The stakes are not merely academic. They shape belonging, exclusion, indigeneity and perceptions of who inherits India’s heritage. When the Taj is divorced from its Mughal origins, what is contested is not marble but memory.
The Cost of Pseudo-History
The Taj Story positions itself as a bold challenge to “glorified” history, but boldness without evidence is not courage; it is carelessness. Its decision to resurrect a theory dismissed by courts, historians and the ASI does not signal intellectual bravery. It signals a romanticisation of pseudo-history at a moment when the country can least afford it.
Cinema does not have to reproduce textbooks. But when it engages with live controversies in a polarised climate, it acquires an ethical obligation: to distinguish between what is historically grounded and what is speculative or symbolic.
In The Taj Story, that line is blurred. The film will certainly spark debate. The question is whether that debate will deepen public understanding or simply harden preconceived positions.
A society falters when myth is elevated to the status of memory. When a monument as globally recognisable as the Taj Mahal becomes the canvas for unproven theories dressed up as truth-seeking, the damage goes beyond a single film. It chips away at the shared ground on which plural societies stand: a basic agreement about what is fact, what is interpretation and what is fantasy.
Cinema cannot carry the whole burden of historical responsibility. But in times like ours, it cannot pretend to be innocent of it either.


