While archeological excavations continue
in Ayodhya to ascertain whether a Hindu temple existed at that site, it
is important to revisit how this contentious issue (temple destruction
during the Muslim rule) has been presented to our people in the past.
Did our historians adhere to the truth? Were they motivated by political
considerations? Or did they deliberately attempt to commit a fraud on
the Indian people and the Hindus in particular?
History is the story of the past. It is
man’s attempt to decipher what happened hundreds or even thousands of
years ago. In this endeavor, he has had to rely on a varied array of
clues like archeological findings, notations on rock edicts and oblique
references; that is mostly indirect evidence. In essence, man has had to
put circumstantial evidence together to come to a logical conclusion.
Despite there being a methodology to this study of the past, history has
never been and never will be a perfect subject like mathematics or
physics. It is to a great extent dependent on human interpretation of
findings. And human conclusions are apt to be influenced by a host of
factors ranging from ethnic background to one’s political beliefs.
Therefore, for anybody to claim that his or her interpretation of events
is the gospel truth is shortsighted and narrow-minded. But this is
precisely what a certain group of historians have done in
post-independent India.
Indian history for the last 50 years or
so has been the preserve of historians who were Marxists by conviction
and who had come to occupy positions of influence in India’s elite
Universities. These historians have callously distorted past events and
interpreted history to suit their political agenda. Their efforts were
not an honest attempt at history writing but a warped exercise in social
engineering. Nowhere is this as evident as in the case of the temple
desecrations that occurred during the Muslim invasion of India.
Opponents (even when evidence was forthcoming) were dubbed as
fundamentalists and their views effectively suppressed.
A preface to an article on temple
desecration which appeared in Frontline (Jan 2001) is a clear example of
the vicious propaganda carried out against anybody trying to ascertain
the truth or to propose a differing point of view:
“The ideologues of the Hindu Right have, through a manipulation of
pre-modern history and a tendentious use of source material and
historical data, built up a dangerously plausible picture of fanaticism,
vandalism and villainy on the part of the Indo-Muslim conquerors and
rulers. Part of the ideological and political argument of the Hindu
Right is the assertion that for about five centuries from the
thirteenth, Indo-Muslim states were driven by a ‘theology of iconoclasm’
— not to mention fanaticism, lust for plunder, and uncompromising
hatred of Hindu religion and places of worship. In this illuminating and
nuanced essay on temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states, which
Frontline offers its readers in two parts, the historian Richard M.
Eaton presents important new insights and meticulously substantiated
conclusions on what happened or is likely to have happened in pre-modern
India.” Ironically, the use of the words “likely to have happened” in the preceding sentence exposes the frailty of the argument despite the arrogant righteousness of the tone.
During the Muslim invasion of India,
which spanned over a thousand years, hundreds, nay thousands of Hindu
temples were destroyed. The vast number of temples destroyed as well as
the malevolence with which the desecration of these institutions took
place is ample testimony to the satanic nature of its perpetrators. The
following excerpts illustrate the crudity of these actions.
John Keay, a British historian, in his
recent book India had this to say about Mahmud of Ghazni’s destruction
of the Somnath Temple: “But
what rankled even more than the loot and the appalling death toll was
the satisfaction that Mahmud took in destroying the great gilded lingam.
After stripping it of its gold, he personally laid into it with his
sword. The bits were then sent back to Ghazni and incorporated into the
steps of its new Jami Masjid, there to be humiliatingly trampled and
perpetually defiled by the feet of the Muslim faithful.”
Khuswant Singh in his book We Indians avers: “Mahmud
of Ghazni was only the first of a long line of Muslim idol-breakers.
His example was followed by Mongols, Turks and Persians. They killed and
destroyed in the name of Islam. Not a single Buddhist, Jain or Hindu
temple in northern India escaped their iconoclastic zeal. Some temples
were converted to mosques; idols and figurines had their noses, breasts
or limbs lopped off; paintings were charred beyond recognition.”
What is even more perverse is the fact
that these notorious acts were extolled proudly by Persian poets
(including the great Persian poet Firdausi), who defined Mahmud as a
paragon of Islamic virtue and a model for other sultans to emulate.
The actual number of temples destroyed
during this dark period appears to be a point of contention. Hindu
nationalists claim that over 60,000 temples were destroyed. Leftist
historians (and their supporters) while disputing this figure are now
willing to concede that there is proof that at least 80 temples were
destroyed during this phase. So we now happen to agree upon the fact
that at least 80 temples were destroyed by Muslim invaders. What was
once considered to be a fantasy of Hindu chauvinists is now accepted as a
reality.
A meticulous look at even this truncated
list of desecrated temples is extremely revealing. There was hardly a
prominent Hindu temple that was spared and there was hardly a Muslim
ruler who did not indulge in this pastime. This list includes temples
from all parts of India including the South. Further, each and every
important Hindu temple appears to have been targeted. Somnath, Mathura,
Banares, Madurai, Kalahasti, Puri, Pandarpur are but a few that appear
on this list. Buddhist monasteries at Odantapuri, Vikramasila, and
Nalanda in Bihar were also vandalised.
Initially, some historians claimed that
such destructions never occurred. But now in the face of irrefutable
evidence, these historians have concocted a medley of reasons as to why
these destructions were justified. The ridiculousness of these arguments
makes them incomprehensible to a sane mind. Nevertheless, let us
evaluate each reason rationally to see whether they make sense.
Muslim rulers destroyed temples only
during the initial invasion of a kingdom but did not do so when temples
were under their jurisdiction.
This is one of the theories put forward to explain Mahmud Ghazni’s dastardly deeds. Richard Eaton writing in Frontline states: “The
Ghaznavid sultan never undertook the responsibility of actually
governing any part of the subcontinent whose temples he wantonly
plundered.”
As though this was enough justification
for his deeds! Let me state categorically that the desecration of a
temple whether it was during an invasion or not is still a desecration
and does not in any way diminish the magnitude of the crime. However,
for the sake of debate and in all fairness I am willing to test this
theory, despite its obvious absurdity. The examples given below clearly
belie the validity of this concept.
In 1478, when a Bahmani garrison in
eastern Andhra mutinied, murdered its governor, and entrusted the fort
to Bhimraj Oriyya, who until that point had been a loyal Bahmani client,
the sultan personally marched to the site and, after a six-month siege,
stormed the fort, destroyed its temple, and built a mosque on the site.
In 1659, Shivaji Bhonsle, the son of a loyal officer serving the Adil Shahi sultans of Bijapur, seized a government port on the northern Konkan coast and disrupted the flow of external trade to and from the capital. Responding to what it considered an act of treason, the government deputed a high-ranking officer, Afzal Khan, to punish the Maratha rebel. Before marching to confront Shivaji himself, however, the Bijapur general first proceeded to Tuljapur and desecrated a temple dedicated to the goddess Bhavani, to which Shivaji and his family had been praying.
In 1613, while at Pushkar, near Ajmer, Jahangir ordered the desecration of an image of Varaha that had been housed in a temple belonging to an uncle of Rana Amar of Mewar, the emperor’s arch enemy.
In 1635, Shah Jahan destroyed the great temple at Orchha, which had been patronised by the father of Raja Jajhar Singh, a high-ranking Mughal officer who was at that time in open rebellion against the emperor.
In 1669, the emperor Aurangzeb ordered the destruction of the great Vishvanath temple in Banaras, which was in his domain. The reason: Shivaji’s escape from Banaras had been facilitated by Jai Singh, the great grandson (not the son or the grandson) of Raja Man Singh, who may have built the Vishvanath temple. Jai Singh was not the son or the grandson but the great grandson of Raja Man Singh, who may (repeat, may) have built the temple and this was enough reason to destroy it. Is this logic? Can a sane man accept this?
In 1670, Aurangzeb ordered the destruction of Mathura’s Keshava Deva temple and built an Islamic structure (`idgah) on its site. The reason: the leader of a local rebellion had been found near the city (not near the temple). Can this be a reason?
In the 17th century, Aurangzeb ordered an attack on the Bamiyan Buddhas in Afghanistan. To quote Rakhaldas Sengupta, the former head of an Indo-Afghan team for the restoration of the Bamiyan Buddhas, “Parts of the wooden frame were burned and there was damage to the upper part of the face and the lower lip and hands.”
All the above demolitions took place in the respective kingdoms of the Muslim rulers effectively negating the hypothesis that the Muslim rulers did not destroy temples in their domain.
In 1659, Shivaji Bhonsle, the son of a loyal officer serving the Adil Shahi sultans of Bijapur, seized a government port on the northern Konkan coast and disrupted the flow of external trade to and from the capital. Responding to what it considered an act of treason, the government deputed a high-ranking officer, Afzal Khan, to punish the Maratha rebel. Before marching to confront Shivaji himself, however, the Bijapur general first proceeded to Tuljapur and desecrated a temple dedicated to the goddess Bhavani, to which Shivaji and his family had been praying.
In 1613, while at Pushkar, near Ajmer, Jahangir ordered the desecration of an image of Varaha that had been housed in a temple belonging to an uncle of Rana Amar of Mewar, the emperor’s arch enemy.
In 1635, Shah Jahan destroyed the great temple at Orchha, which had been patronised by the father of Raja Jajhar Singh, a high-ranking Mughal officer who was at that time in open rebellion against the emperor.
In 1669, the emperor Aurangzeb ordered the destruction of the great Vishvanath temple in Banaras, which was in his domain. The reason: Shivaji’s escape from Banaras had been facilitated by Jai Singh, the great grandson (not the son or the grandson) of Raja Man Singh, who may have built the Vishvanath temple. Jai Singh was not the son or the grandson but the great grandson of Raja Man Singh, who may (repeat, may) have built the temple and this was enough reason to destroy it. Is this logic? Can a sane man accept this?
In 1670, Aurangzeb ordered the destruction of Mathura’s Keshava Deva temple and built an Islamic structure (`idgah) on its site. The reason: the leader of a local rebellion had been found near the city (not near the temple). Can this be a reason?
In the 17th century, Aurangzeb ordered an attack on the Bamiyan Buddhas in Afghanistan. To quote Rakhaldas Sengupta, the former head of an Indo-Afghan team for the restoration of the Bamiyan Buddhas, “Parts of the wooden frame were burned and there was damage to the upper part of the face and the lower lip and hands.”
All the above demolitions took place in the respective kingdoms of the Muslim rulers effectively negating the hypothesis that the Muslim rulers did not destroy temples in their domain.
Having failed to find ample proof for
this convoluted theory, some historians went a step further. A
sub-hypothesis was proposed: Muslim rulers destroyed temples in their
domain only to discipline errant subordinates (as though it were
justification enough) or to put down a rebellion in those areas.
Even this far-fetched explanation cannot
pass muster. Did they punish disloyal Muslim officers in the same
fashion? The answer is a resounding: No. Infractions short of rebellion
normally resulted in demotions in rank, while serious crimes like
treason were generally punished by execution, regardless of the
perpetrator’s religious affiliation. No evidence, however, suggests that
ruling authorities attacked public monuments like mosques or Sufi
shrines that had been patronized by disloyal or rebellious officers. Nor
were such monuments desecrated when one Indo-Muslim kingdom conquered
another and annexed its territories. This further proves beyond any
doubt that Hindus and Hindu temples were specifically selected out for
victimization.
In contrast there is not a single
instance where an invading Hindu king destroyed or desecrated a mosque
or meted out the same treatment to a mosque in his control.
I quote Richard Eaton from his article in Frontline, “When
Hindu rulers established their authority over the territories of
defeated Muslim rulers, they did not as a rule desecrate mosques or
shrines, as, for example, when Shivaji established a Maratha kingdom on
the ashes of Bijapur’s former dominions in Maharashtra, or when
Vijayanagara annexed the former territories of the Bahmanis or their
successors. In fact, the rajas of Vijayanagara, as is well known, built
their own mosques, evidently to accommodate the sizable number of
Muslims employed in their armed forces.”
To recapitulate this bizarre train of
reasoning: First these historians claim that no Hindu temples were
destroyed. When this is disproved, they theorize that temples were
demolished only by invading Muslim kings and no further destruction
occurred when these temples came under their jurisdiction. When even
that does not hold water, they go on to suggest that when destruction
did occur in their kingdoms, it was to punish disloyal subordinates. But
even that rationale has no grounds for justification.
Let us stop trying to find justifications
(for this criminal conduct) where none exist. No amount of explanations
is going to mitigate the gravity of these dastardly acts. Attempts to
whitewash these crimes will only exacerbate the situation. When one
denies that a crime has been committed, one perpetrates another crime
against the victim. Let us be man enough to accept them for what they
are: hate crimes, plain and simple.
What is the express reason for
documenting these ghastly deeds? Is it to hold the present day Muslims
for the wrongdoing of their forefathers? Certainly not. Is this
recapitulation an attempt to wreak vengeance on the Muslims of today?
Again the answer is No. Then what is the purpose of this exercise? As a
civilized society, we are duty-bound to ensure that such barbaric acts
do not occur in our country again. The best way to effect this is to
remind people continually of such ghastly misdeeds. If we do not do
this, we will be doing a great disservice to our future generations.
Further, I find it puzzling and
disturbing that present day Muslims consider themselves duty-bound to
stand up for the crimes perpetrated by their ancestors. All over the
world, reconciliation and expression of remorse are the order of the
day. President Clinton apologized to the Blacks for slavery, the
Australian government expressed regret to the Aborgines and the Swiss
apologized to the Jews they did not save during the holocaust. The
people who asked for forgiveness, in each of these cases, were not the
ones who had committed the crime. These magnanimous gestures were meant
to soothe past wounds and dispel the rancor from aggrieved hearts. In
contrast to this, the Muslims of India are bent on a path of
confrontation, aided and abetted by pseudosecularists that see this as
an opportunity for political gain. Is it so hard to give up Ayodhya,
especially when it means so much for the Hindus? This is a question
every right-thinking Muslim must ask himself or herself.
To those who say that these events
belonged to a time gone by and will not occur again, they only have to
remember what happened in Afghanistan recently. The Islamic Taliban
ordered the destruction of all idols (Buddhist and Hindu) that reflected
Afghanistan’s rich history. Included among the list of structures
destroyed were two statues of a standing Buddha (in Bamiyan) measuring
175 and 200 feet and noted to be among the tallest in the world. Can
these destructions be justified as instruments of political conquest?
I end this article by quoting Simon Wiesenthal, the legendary Nazi hunter, “I see what I am doing as a warning to the murderers of tomorrow. A warning that they will never rest in peace.” And that alone is the reason for recalling our unfortunate past: nothing more or nothing less.
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