There are very few publications giving a
factual account of historical facts underlying the Ayodhya controversy. Yet this
controversy has played a decisive role in recent Indian politics, giving the
BJP the electoral breakthrough that ultimately brought it to power. Therefore,
it ought to be a matter for surprise that the professional India-watchers and
the academics concerned remain satisfied with the handful of very partial and
highly partisan treatments available in print. But the prevailing poverty of
information on at least the factual basis of the affair has now been remedied. This
book Rama & Ayodhya by Dr.
Meenakshi Jain (Arya Publ., Delhi 2013) will henceforth be required reading for
anyone pronouncing on Ayodhya.
Dr. Meenakshi Jain is a historian formerly
with the Nehru Memorial Library, presently Associate Professor in History at
Gargi College, University of Delhi. In this book she gives a very detailed
enumeration of all the sources of a pre-Muslim veneration for or cult of Rama:
inscriptions, sculptures and literary references. These already start in the
pre-Christian age and soon cover all of India. Yet, the Marxist historians
started the Ayodhya controversy in the late 1980s by claiming that there could
not have been a pre-Muslim Rama temple in Ayodhya as Rama worship is of more
recent vintage. This chapter concurs with the testimonies to Rama worship of
the historians employed by the Vishva Hindu Parishad in the Government-sponsored
scholars’ debate of 1990-91, except that it is far more complete.
Highly original is the chapter on Hindu
testimonies of Muslim iconoclasm and the counter-measures which Hindu society
took to prevent or remedy instances of iconoclasm. Particularly under Maratha
rule, Hindu ownership of Muslim-occupied places was often restored. But this
process was not easy and even in the Maratha domains far from complete. Often
there was a factual Maratha but a nominal Moghul sovereignty to which
lip-service had to be paid. Sometimes also, the local Brahmins were so fearful
of a Muslim return to power that they preferred whatever humiliating makeshift
arrangement they had negotiated to a full restoration of the erstwhile Hindu
temple. Often idols were dug up from their shelters in the ground and rituals
were prescribed in the event of their restoration. These testimonies supplement
the Muslim testimonies of iconoclasm presented by Sita Ram Goel in his
epoch-making book Hindu Temples: What
Happened to Them. Significantly, the “eminent historians” do not touch the
subject with a barge-pole.
Another chapter gives an exhaustive
enumeration of all the testimonies, including statements made in court, for the
tradition that the Babri mosque had replaced a Hindu temple. Here again, many
instances will sound familiar to those who have closely followed the debate,
but the list stands out by its completeness. It includes pre-colonial European
testimonies as well as reports by colonial officers, but most numerous are the
testimonies by local Muslims. It also cites the verdicts and internal
correspondence of the magistrates, and some statements by politicians. They all
prove that until the 1980s, it was a matter of consensus that the Babri mosque
had been built in forcible replacement of a Hindu temple. It was shared by all
parties concerned: Hindus, Muslims, European travellers as well as British
administrators and scholars. Yet, in a very sudden reversal, a statement by the
“eminent historians” from JNU in 1989, statement which already was questionable
at the time and has been proven false since, managed to make practically all
media and all Indian and foreign observers turn against the established
consensus and present it as the “Hindu fundamentalist myth”. I am proud to say
I was an exception. But now, that consensus has been restored, and unwilling
secularists still denying and lambasting it are fighting a fruitless rearguard
action.
An even more damaging part for the
secularists is Meenakshi Jain’s presentation of their own testimonies in court.
For the first time, we get to see how
one after another, the secular “experts” collapse or lose their credidibility
when subjected to cross-examination. One after another admits under oath that
he or she has no experience with or no professional competence on the history
or archaeology of Ayodhya. Their bluff was enough to fool the mass of secular
politicians and gullible press correspondents, but failed to stand up to
critical questioning. The Indologists who have invoked those “experts” as
arguments of authority, can somewhat restore their lost honour by publicly
naming and shaming them and by apologizing for following in their footsteps and
ridiculing the old consensus – rather than, at best, looking away and
pretending there never was an Ayodhya controversy in the first place; or,
worse, still keeping up the false allegations that once swept the concerned
public opinion across the globe.
The book also discusses related court
cases, the strange fact that a deity can act as a juridical person (though,
like a minor, it has to be represented by a fully empowered citizen), and the
archaeological findings as well as the unsavoury controversy around these.
Ultimately, they all turn out to support the old assumption that the Babri
mosque was built on a demolished Hindu temple.
One point I disagree with, is her seeming
acceptance of the VHP thesis that the Babri mosque replaced a “magnificent”
Rama temple. Some temples which lay out
of the way of the population centres and military routes failed to attract
attention and thus survived; the famous temples of Khajuraho come to mind. But
Ayodhya became a provincial capital of the Delhi Sultanate, and it is simply
unthinkable that a sizable Hindu temple, a place of pilgrimage moreover, could
have survived the Muslim conquest and occupation. This
scenario denies the large-scale and systematic Islamic iconoclasm which could
not have spared a major place of Hindu pilgrimage; a deluded secularist could
have thought it up, but those who believed the VHP was anti-Islamic will be
surprised to learn of the whitewash of Islam implicit in the thesis that a Rama
temple could subsist for centuries in a centre of Sultanate power. More likely,
Babar found an existing mosque on the spot, in dilapidated condition (as a
consequence of the collapse of the pre-Moghul Lodi dynasty) or, like in the
recent past, under Hindu occupation. Only because he restored it as a mosque
has it been called the Babri mosque. Early in the Ayodhya debate already, a
theory surfaced that the “Babri” mosque had been built in the preceding
Sultanate period, as testified by its building style.
On closer inspection, this position is truthfully
described in some detail on p.292-4 as coming from the pro-temple archaeologist
R. Nath as well as from the pro-Babri (and otherwise also disgraced) historian
Sushil Srivastava, but without evaluation. In the preface (p.xvii), she only
says that Babar “allegedly” destroyed the Rama Janmabhumi temple, so the reader
cannot find anything wrong in her presentation of the controversy. At any rate,
the mosque called Babri Masjid was certainly built after the demolition of a
Hindu temple, but it is not sure that this was done by Babar. Not everything in
this case is known, but the core of the matter, viz. that Islamic iconoclasm
motivated by Prophet Mohammed’s precedent destroyed a major Hindu temple, has
been firmly established.
This is henceforth the standard book on the
Ayodhya affair. Any so-called expert who now fails to refer to it, is not to be
taken seriously.
(India First, 24 September 2014)
(India First, 24 September 2014)
The Allahabad High Court Judgment apportioning the property amongst three parties is an eye opener on the duplicity of leftist and liberal historians who staked their personal reputation for passing off half truths. That judgment also records many archaeological details. Until the supreme court decides the appeal and the Hindus take possession of two thirds of property allocated to them, this issue will lie dormant.
ReplyDeleteReading your article about the book on Ayodhya inspires me to request you to write on the true nature of Tipu Sultan. Many in India have hailed him as a Deshpremee fighting against British imperial power.
ReplyDeleteHe massacred Hindus in my home town and nearby places and in Goa, destroyed temples, Hindus put idols of many temples in wells to escape him. As usual Left and Secular historians say these happened only to the forces who resisted his advance and he destroyed temples to loot the wealth and not because of jihadism. Secularists/ leftists and many people in Karnataka state treat him as a ruler who cared for the people irrespective of their religion and who donated to Hindu temples there and consulted Hindu priests. Many history books and a serial in Doordarshan made by Bollywood yesteryear actor Sanjay Khan account for this attitude. Today in a leading daily in Malayalam (known for its vote bank readership Muslim appeasing and pseudo secularism policies) in its Sunday supplement a dreamy leftist/secularist has written a lead article on Tipu's benevolence towards Hindu temples in Karnataka. He found out a special puja still offered in the famous Mookambika Temple near Mangalore in Karnataka in Sultan's name as an example for these. Kindly say something on Tipu Sultan's true color.
Dr. Elst, you have emphasized several times in your posts the importance of establishing centers of genuine Hindu scholarship in academia. What is your evaluation of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies?
ReplyDeleteThe Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies certainly asks Hindus for their money, but is not a pro-Hindu institution. All I can say in its favour is that there are even more anti-Hindu institutes, though they too collect Hindu money under false pretexts and have a good laugh afterwarts.
ReplyDelete