July 15, 2026 06:10 pm (IST)
Follow us:
facebook-white sharing button
twitter-white sharing button
instagram-white sharing button
youtube-white sharing button
'He could die in two days': Delhi HC plea seeks force-feeding of Sonam Wangchuk as fast enters Day 18 | 'Tonight's defeat is hard to take': Emmanuel Macron reacts after France crash out of World Cup, congratulates Spain | Spain cruise past France to storm into FIFA World Cup 2026 final with clinical 2-0 victory | Taslima Nasrin announces Kolkata return after 20 years to attend literary event at Rabindra Sadan | 'We must not watch one of our greatest minds be sacrificed': Zeenat Aman backs Sonam Wangchuk, urges govt to open dialogue | 'I don't want Phunsukh Wangdu to die': '3 Idiots' star Omi Vaidya's emotional appeal for Sonam Wangchuk | Middle East Crisis: Iran strikes UAE tankers in Strait of Hormuz, Indian crew member killed | Picnic turns into horror: Woman allegedly harassed, family chased for 15 km in Nashik | 'Mannat is a private property': Supreme Court clears renovation of Shah Rukh Khan's Bandra residence | Bengal CM Suvendu Adhikari backs move to stop entry to Bankra Mosque inside Kolkata airport operational area
Railways Video
A priest is seen performing religious rituals inside a moving train coach. Photo: X page videograb

Puja inside moving train? Viral video leaves internet divided, railways responds

| @indiablooms | Jul 13, 2026, at 04:08 pm

A video showing a priest performing a religious ritual inside a railway coach recently went viral on X, sparking an online debate over whether such activities should be allowed on trains and prompting a clarification from the Railways.

The clip surfaced just days after another video showing a so-called "honeymoon coach" arranged for a couple left internet users surprised.

In the latest viral video, a priest can be seen performing a Hindu religious ritual inside a moving train as several people participate in the ceremony.

After the video went viral, internet users expressed mixed reactions.

Some pointed out that passengers who commercially book a saloon coach can organise private activities, provided they do not disturb others or damage railway property.

"In a reserved saloon coach you can do anything as you want, either a wedding, puja, a drink party, anything. Only boundary is it shouldn't disturb others and not damaging any property of the railway. This is pure freedom," one user wrote.

Others, however, questioned whether lighting a fire to perform a ritual inside a train should be permitted.

"If you offer prayers from the roadside it's an offence... but doing it inside the train is allowed for a certain community?! What nonsense???" one internet user wrote.

"So lighting fire inside the train is allowed? What is this clarification from Railways????" another asked.

Amid the debate, Northern Railway issued a clarification, saying: "The Saloon Car was booked by IRCTC on 08.07.26. The party made an advance payment of Rs 3,08,580 as commercial booking. The Saloon Car was to be attached in Train No. 12926 Paschim Express on one-way journey from New Delhi (NDLS) to Mumbai (BDTS) on 10.07.2026."

"NR issued notification of commercial run of the Saloon on 10.07.2026 subject to operational feasibility," the post on X said.

The Railways also said that no one was injured during the ritual performed inside the coach.

"The primary roles and responsibilities of ensuring punctuality, safety, security, convenience of the passengers lies with Railways without any compromise. In this incident, none got injured. Priest seen performing abhishek is being performed in saloon car booked by party," the Railways said.

Support Our Journalism

We cannot do without you.. your contribution supports unbiased journalism

IBNS is not driven by any ism- not wokeism, not racism, not skewed secularism, not hyper right-wing or left liberal ideals, nor by any hardline religious beliefs or hyper nationalism. We want to serve you good old objective news, as they are. We do not judge or preach. We let people decide for themselves. We only try to present factual and well-sourced news.

Support objective journalism for a small contribution.