In an opinion piece in Outlook
(“Chaining 1200 years”, 7-7-2014), Hasan Suroor takes issue with PM Narendra
Modi’s diagnosis that Indians suffer from a slave mentality due to “1200 years”
of oppression. He thereby defends the central falsehood that the Marxist
historians have introduced into Indian education, viz. that British rule was
colonial oppression while he preceding Muslim regimes were somehow indigenous.
Fortunately he makes no secret of where he himself stands: by classifying
Makkhan Lal as “ pro-RSS historian” but praising his opponent Mushirul Hasa as
a “noted historian”, he plays the well-known Leftist game of denouncing the
other as ideologically biased but their own as wearing the mantle of
objectivity.
The respective language policies already give the true
story. The British are remembered for imposing English as language of
administration and partly of education. But firstly, this was introduced
against a faction of administrators, the Orientalizers, who had preferred the
use of native languages (a faction unknown in the Muslim regimes), and
secondly, every British official had to take an exam of “Hindustani” before
even being posted to India. The Muslim rulers had mostly not even bothered to
learn an indigenous language and at any rate kept on using Arabic and then
Persian as medium to administer India. Muslim rule was even more colonial than
British rule.
To be sure, though Muslim regimes typically started out as
based in Central Asia and then expanded into India, they all lost their basis
outside India to their local competitors and then had to make do with India.
But that doesn’t make them less foreign. The White regimes in Rhodesia and
South Africa were also nominally independent from the European motherland but
were nonetheless treated as hold-overs of colonialism.
The British exploited India? So did the Muslim regimes. Land
tax was very high under the Delhi Sultanate and peasant famines as frequent as
under the British. Moreover, apart from their negative effect on Indian society
and the economy, the British cloud also had the silver lining of modernization,
as physically represented by the railway system. They “enslaved” India but also
brought the abolition of slavery (which they forced the Moghul and Ottoman
empires to abolish as well). The Muslim regimes cannot boast of such
contributions. On the contrary, they destroyed the Indian universities and
brought only the sterile dogmatism of Islamic theological academies in return.
As for “1200 years”, Suroor rightly considers this
inaccurate, as Muslim rule started in Sindh 1300 years ago, in most of India
centuries later, and in some pockets never at all. He also has the merit of
pointing out that it was effectively over in the 18th century, as
not the British but the Marathas broke the back of the Moghul empire. So, he is
right on this, but then, a political speech is not a Ph.D. dissertation. At any
rate, the fuss about the exact number of years is only meant to belittle Modi’s
message, which is in essence that Muslim rule deserves to be classified as
oppressive and colonial.
Suroor’s article is part of the “secularist” attempt to
keep control of Indian history. Not just the institutions, where the Modi
regime will have a hard time introducing more objective historians against the
anti-Hindu lot presently ruling the roost. But more importantly, the general
public’s perception of Indian history, which his own kind has tried to slant
communally.
In fact, experience teaches that the Marxists have little to
fear from the BJP. The textbook reform by Murli Manohar Joshi of ca. 2002 was a
failure. Subsequent Indologist conferences which I attended all had sessions on
history-rewriting, where the mood among the mostly anti-Hindu scholars was upbeat
and in expectation of a further decline of any Hindu activism. The conclusion
came down to: “The Hindu nationalists are unspeakably evil, but fortunately,
they are also abysmally stupid.” The Hindu movement has never bothered to
invest in scholarship and even after Modi’s accession to power, it simply lacks
the historians equipped to effect the glasnost
(openness) which a Marxist-controlled sector urgently needs.
Regardless of this power struggle between contending views
of history, however, at a deeper level the established historians have already
lost the battle. Of course, the anti-Hindu school has the key positions both in
the relevant Indian sectors (including Bollywood) and in the foreign
India-watching institutions, so they still keep the lid on this development.
But they have suffered some embarrassing defeats.
On Ayodhya, for more than twenty years they have managed to
make the world think that history is being falsified by Hindu extremists
asserting that the Babri mosque there had been built in forcible replacement of
a Hindu temple. This was in defiance of the preceding consensus among all the
parties concerned that there had indeed been a Hindu temple at the site, as
still asserted in the 1989 edition of the Encyclopaedia
Britannica. But suddenly the consensus reversed, not because of any
scientific discovery, but because of political compulsions. Like babes in the
wood, all the India-watchers world-wide started toeing this new line and
lambasting the Hindus for “falsely” staying true to the old consensus. One
Dutch professor who had personally registered evidence for the temple, felt
compelled to eat his own findings and parrot the new consensus. Unfortunately
for all of them, the Archaeological Survey of India (2003) and the Allahabad
High Court (2010) reconfirmed the old consensus: of course, a Hindu temple had
stood at the site and had been forced to make way for the mosque. So, all these
Leftist efforts to impose a rewritten version of history had been in vain. Moreover,
in her recent book Rama and Ayodhya,
Meenakshi Jain has documented what a sorry figure these supposed “experts” have
cut when they were questioned in court during the Ayodhya proceedings. One
after another was forced to admit that he didn’t really know, that he hadn’t
been to the site though pontificating on its archaeology, that is was all just
a hypothesis. So, those were the people who had been cited as authority by all
the politicians, journalists and India-watchers. If the truth of their
politically motivated deception is given proper publicity, their game will be
over.
On Nalanda, the Left has staged a really daring history
falsification. This Buddhist university, then the biggest in the world, was
destroyed by Bakhtiar Khilji’s mujahedin in 1194, and has recently been
refounded under tight Leftist control. Today, the Buddha is being used as a
weapon against Hinduism, so the anti-Hindu forces would like to take possession
of the memory of Nalanda. Unfortunately, that would normally force them also to
memorize the way in which the historical Nalanda University had disappeared.
What to do? Well, in 2004, the then president of the Indian History Congress managed
to put the blame on the Hindus and simply ignored the true story, though as
usual it had been proudly proclaimed by the Muslim perpetrators themselves. As
Arun Shourie has shown (“How history was made up at Nalanda”, Indian Express, 28 June 2014), he
violated all the norms of his discipline by citing a hearsay foreign document
of five centuries later, and only giving a manipulated quote from it, all while
keeping out of view the real, immediate and contemporary testimony. The
historical fact that Nalanda was destroyed by warriors for Islam still stands,
but the reputation of this prominent Leftist historian among his many parrots
should be revised.
The anti-Hindu bias taught by the History professors also
translates into a bias on contemporary matters, where it has not fared better. In
autumn 1996, I attended the Annual South Asia Conference in Madison, Wisconsin.
The NDA alliance led by the BJP had been in power for 13 days and was widely
expected to accede to government for real. The Indian, American and
Indo-American academics at the conference outdid each other in doomsday
predictions: Fascism was going to be installed, the Muslims were going to be
thrown into the Indian Ocean, the Government was going to come down on
Dalits/women/artists/journalists, India was going to attack Pakistan, and so
on. The BJP did come to power in 1998 and led the government till 2004, yet
nothing at all of these dire forecasts came true. The BJP observed all the
democratic procedures, Pakistan attacked India (Kargil) but not the reverse,
and on the social front nothing sensational happened, except that the economy
boomed. Rarely has an army of accredited “experts” been proven so completely
wrong.
In 2002, in spite of BJP rule, Muslims felt confident enough
to start a pogrom of 59 Hindus in Godhra. Hindus had not reacted to a series of
Islamic terrorist acts including attacks on the Parliament buildings in
Srinagar and Delhi, but this time they finally did. Communal riots ensued,
killing some 800 Muslims and 200 Hindus. Bad enough, but by Congress standards
not that unusual: the 1984 massacre of Sikhs by Congress Party activists killed
3.000, and afterwards Congress leader Rajiv Gandhi had only seen fit to
minimize the issue. This time, however, the man in charge had the wrong
political colour: Gujarat CM Narenda Modi. He was accused of being complicit in
the riots, or even of having organized them. Though he was campaigned against
and scrutinized like nobody before him, he was repeatedly cleared by the
courts. All the Indian and foreign “specialists” who go on accusing him, are
simply in contempt of court.
Moreover, he has been accused of piloting history textbooks
that praised Adolf Hitler and denied the Holocaust. Naturally, this propaganda
offensive too has been copied in media around the world. However, investigation
of the textbooks showed that these did not praise Hitler, did mention the
Holocaust, and had been issued by a previous Congress government anyway. But
this follow-up did not get any attention in the world media. The slander may
have been successful in the short run (e.g. I heard it cited and discussed in
all seriousness in a session on Hindu-Jewish relations at the American Academy
of Religion Conference in 2009), but truth has a way of prevailing in the end.
Modi’s accession to power and the respect he clearly enjoys
among the neighbouring governments (and even in the US, which has to rescind
its visa ban against him, in spite of the pressure by Indo-American Leftists)
may well be an apt occasion to rethink our attitude towards the ideological
power struggle in India. So far, Indians and foreigners, and even many inside
the BJP, have looked at India through the glasses which the wrongly-named
“secularists” have put on their noses. Millions of people busy with other
things have relied on the “experts” to decide for them what is what, not
realizing that the positions normally associated with expertise have been
cornered by a politically motivated school. It is time to change this power
equation.
Meanwhile, we can already free ourselves from this school’s
exceeding sympathy for the Muslim regimes in Indian history. These regimes were
part of a long intermezzo of oppression, which has conditioned the minds of the
Indians (especially of those people loyal to the native civilization) to
attitudes of servility. It remains to be seen whether Narendra Modi’s
government will live up to the expectations. But by publicly redefining the
intermezzo of colonization as including the Muslim period, he has already
changed the terms of discourse.
excellent sir.. thanks for writing such beautiful article.
ReplyDeleteexcellent sir.. thanks for writing such beautiful article
ReplyDeleteInsightful and well-informed piece, as usual, Dr. Elst!
ReplyDeleteThe Steve Farmers of the Indo-Euresian kind of course label you as a pro-Hindu rabble rouser! Well, the frogs in the well must also have their freedom of speech !
ReplyDeleteBrilliant and lucid for any one to understand. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteIndian nationalism itself is a relatively recent phenomenon and so if you say by Indians as various communities that inhabited the land of India there may not be much controversy. However, to think that Indian nation was colonized and oppressed by Muslim invaders is as such very ridiculous since still India can be called at best a 'nation in the making'. So many invading tribes and communities got influenced by and absorbed into general hierarchical structure of Hindu society or santana dharma society but Muslims alone could not be so absorbed and hence comes all this dispute and rivalries. Hope in times to come the country will grow stronger and more progressive and secular in the sense of keeping distance from mindless religious wrangles and come out of this rut of religious orthodoxies and obscurantism.
ReplyDelete'The Marathas broke the back of the Mughal Empire'.This has been one of the favourite myths of Koenraad Elst and also of the Hindu nationalists.But this myth is also being toted by the opposite camp namely Hasan Suroor for the the exactly opposite reason.It would do immense good for Koenraad Elst and the Hindu nationalists to read William Irvine's 'Later Mughals'and Jadunath Sarkar's 'Fall of the Mughal Empire',both of which give the political picture of India in the 18th century.NO, though the Mughal Empire had declined soon after Aurangzeb's demise the Muslim hold over the country continued till the so called first war of independence.
ReplyDeleteThe Marathas did not break the back bone or any other bone of the Mughals,because,there was nothing left in the post-Aurangzeb Mughal dynasty to break.The Mughal regime was afflicted with a swift acting canker and therefore it became rotten in no time.But the shame was,none of the non-Muslim powers took advantage of the situation to wrest the country or a large part of the country from the Muslim control.The Sikhs under Maharaja Ranjit Singh did take advantage of it to a certain extent but that was too late, and by that time the mighty Europeans had taken almost the entire country.
ReplyDeleteThe BJP does not have the historians to effect the reform in history text books? Agreed, the Hindu movement had not produced historians so far.But is it very difficult or even impossible for the present government to get into the act and start making the necessary changes in the history text books? Can't they institute a body of competent academics to go into the text books to determine the blatant distortions that had been effected by the Nehru dynasty? The crux of the matter is: The second BJP government has little or no inclination to reform the text books.And Mr.Koenraad, you seem to be spirited in discouraging the BJP men from laying their hands on text books by saying that they have failed to produce the necessary historians, and that the leftist academics are too powerful to be surmounted and blah blah blah.Is a generation required for the BJP to unearth qualified historians?Can't the entrenched leftist historians be challenged with unassailable facts and truth?