1. Negationism in India, and in De Morgen
(Doorbraak, 5 April 2020; translation of
koenraadelst.blogspot.com 14 Dec. 2020; I do plenty of writing in Dutch, and
once in a while correct the gross and massive disinformation about India.)
On March 25,
2020, the Flemish daily De Morgen (DM) published a double page on "How India is
rewriting history", contributed by Delhi correspondent Aletta André, and
prominently mentioned my name. Let's take the opportunity to educate an
ignorant audience about some basic facts, because India is a domain where
disinformation has been leading the way for too long.
One-sidedness
An introductory
general observation, which cannot have escaped the editorial board’s notice, is
the completely one-sidedness of the article. There is a debate about
historiography in India, and a newspaper can do its readers a service by
reporting on it, preferably objectively. However, this piece is not a report on
a debate, but a loudspeaker for one of the two warring parties within that
debate. Any attempt to create even the appearance of impartiality is missing
here. This is allowed, but as a reader you had better realize it.
Another
observation is that this kind of article on Hindu nationalist history rewriting
is a regular feature, which I have seen popping up many times since 1988; but
that this one is original in that it for the first time leaves unmentioned the
temple/mosque dispute in Ayodhya. There, the Babar Mosque stood on the site of
the ruined temple of Rama's birth, which all parties involved knew or admitted to
have existed, until the Communist "eminent historians" in the late
1980s argued without reason that there had never been a temple there. Almost
immediately, they were joined by utterly ignorant foreign Indologists and
India-watchers in the media.
Those who held
to the time-honored consensus, or presented new evidence for the temple, were
told by the Alettas of that time (like me now, and for that matter, then as
well) that “his sources are in question”, or other excuses to ignore his
evidence. But the evidence continued to pile up and was taken seriously by the
Court. It ordered an archaeological investigation of the site, and the temple
remains were finally revealed. The 'eminent historians' were allowed to come
and explain their allegations on the witness stand, and one by one they
imploded: “I am not an archaeologist”, “I have never been to Ayodhya”, “I
signed that statement because my colleagues also did”.
In 2019, after
69 years of judicial process, the Supreme Court finally assigned the disputed
site to the Hindus so that they can rebuild the Rama Birth Temple. The
Eminences do not want to be reminded of their foul play in the lost historical
debate about Ayodhya, and the friendly media are still playing their game: that
debate has suddenly disappeared into oblivion, also in this DM article. For all
those years it served as an illustration to throbbing articles like this on
"history rewriting", and it indeed illustrates that scientific (slandered
as "Hindu-nationalist") historiography requires a rewriting of the
now dominant version.
Aurangzeb
The story begins
anecdotally with the successful agitation by Hindus for the renaming of
Aurangzeb Marg (street). As a historian, I am not a fan of the erasure of old
names either; but on the other hand, now that there is so much pressure to
erase the name Cyriel Verschaeve, who was merely wrong-headed but killed no one
himself [a once-famous Flemish poet, with streets named after him, who in
old age had recruited Flemish young men for the German Eastern Front troops in
World War II, and whose name is now being scrapped from streets’ nomenclature],
and now ally but “war criminal” Marshall Foch [French World War I leader,
after whom the central square of my home town and WW1 hotspot Leuven was named,
but now held responsible for fanatically wasting many thousands of young lives]
has disappeared from the streets of Leuven, why not the name of Moghul Emperor
Aurangzeb, who has killed thousands?
Well, it is just
one reason to put the spotlight on historian Prof. Audrey Truschke work on this
Aurangzeb. I have already given my thoughts on it in writing (see chapters 13
and 18 of my book Hindu Dharma and the Culture Wars, 2019). She had no
other answer than to block me on Twitter. "There is only evidence for a
handful of destroyed temples under Aurangzeb", as Aletta André quotes
Audrey Truschke? Not at all.
Firstly, there
is the continued accumulation of archaeological evidence. With the regularity
of a clock, the Archaeological Survey of India finds remains of temples in
mosques. Under the rule of the Congress party, the excavators were forbidden to
say a word about it, but now it is spoken about openly, as it should in a
democracy. (Same phenomenon for terrorism: if the police used to track down a
terror network, they were stopped or sabotaged from above, while now they can
go their own way; so that India has become measurably a lot safer.)
Secondly, the
Aurangzeb court records themselves are the best evidence of the tens of
thousands of temple destructions. These contain both the destruction orders and
the reports of their implementation. Most of the documentary evidence about
Islamic iconoclasm, from the Chachnama on the Arab conquest of Sindh in
712 onwards, is indeed of Muslim origin and is quite open about the Muslim
eradication of "idolatry". Often visible remains of the destroyed
temples were built into the new mosques to demonstrate the triumph of idolatry.
It is only since the 20th century that some Muslims under modern-Western
influence have become somewhat embarrassed about their own religious fanaticism,
so that they began to minimize or deny their own iconoclasm -- a negationist
trend of which the presently-discussed article is an offshoot.
Modern standards
of values
The attempt to whitewash
Islam's role is a case of the cardinal sin against historiography: the
projection of modern standards of values onto a past in which they did not
apply. (This includes e.g. the modern secularist inability to empathize with
the seriousness of pre-modern people about their religion.) In modern
propaganda, it is unfortunate to have to admit that your favorite religion has
caused a lot of destruction and slaughter and the destruction of many important
temples. That is exactly what Aletta thinks she can accuse the Hindus of:
"violate history with their contemporary prejudices." No, when Muslim
conquerors and their chroniclers speak of "thousands", which archaeology
confirms, it is "doing violence to history" to say there were
"only a few".
It is further
said in this article that Aurangzeb "protected countless temples"
(from whom?), Or that he "left thousands of other temples". Many
important temples have indeed been destroyed, and the mosques in place are
standing evidence of Aurangzeb's violent Islamization policy and as many
rebuttals of Truschke's whitewash.
But de
minimis non curat praetor [“an important man does not busy himself with
trifles”], so the operation was not 100% impeccable, there were indeed some
shrimps that managed to escape. By tricks or bribery, the Hindus were able to
save even the eminent yet remote Jagannath Puri temple; for Truschke such are
temples that Aurangzeb "left alone", but they actually were on his
list of cultural property to be destroyed. Nonsensical though the whole
argument may be, it is nonetheless useful to crime lawyers: "Yes, Your
Honour, the facts have been proven, my client did indeed commit those murders.
But! Still you will acquit him, because look at how many people he has left
alive! "
Anyone who wants
to fuss about the number of temple destructions can do so scientifically. Take
the thousands of renowned cases of Islamic temple destruction and show that a
different scenario applied there. In 1990, the book Hindu Temples: What
Happened to Them by Sita Ram Goël was published, with a presentation of the
Islamic doctrine of iconoclasm from Mohammed onwards, but above all with a
still very incomplete list of 1862 destroyed temples. There are many more, and
many more have been discovered in the last 30 years, but let's start with that
list. A scientific statement is falsifiable, as Karl Popper taught us. Well,
there you have 1,862 falsifiable statements: go for it, prove them wrong if you
can. But in those 30 years, neither Truschke nor anyone else has been able to
(or even dared to try to) disprove one of them.
Vagueness
Aletta André's
other authority, Manu Pillai, tries to debunk the abundant evidence with two
excuses well-known in India. One is that at the time there was "no
generalization in terms of Hindus and Muslims", so that there was
vagueness about these identities. You have already had conflicting opinions, disputant
doctores, with genuinely meant conclusions from multi-faceted sources that
turn out to be wrong on closer examination; but this assertion of Pillai is
really nonsense to which no source gives cause.
Indeed, there
were sometimes temporary trans-religious alliances, as in the Crusades (e.g.
between the Christian Templars and the Shiite Muslim Assassins, both enemies of
the Caliphate) or the Reconquista, which nonetheless remain unmitigated
examples of Holy War. Such vagueness has been common among Hindus with their
tradition of pluralism; but there is no source of ambiguity about Hindu or
Muslim on the part of the Muslim leaders. The Muslims were sometimes confused
about the many different Hindu communities (that is how the Buddhists were called
the "shaven Brahmins"), but they were all Pagans in any case,
destined for slavery or hell. Or show me a Muslim who confuses a mosque with an
idolatrous temple. As a great precedent justifying the aggression against the
Hindus and Hinduism, the Prophet and his iconoclasm were again and again
invoked, especially the destruction of the 360 images of gods in the Kaaba,
Mecca.
That basic fact
of Islamic aggression against the infidels since Islam’s beginnings is
systematically obscured by the Truschkes and Pillais, as it refutes their easy
excuse that the conflict-centred description of the Muslim conquests
"dates back to British colonial times". Again and again the
Islamophile provincials try to put blinders on their audience so as not to see
the foreign and precolonial dimension of Islamic imperialism.
"1,200
years of slavery"
Hence, there was
nothing wrong with Narendra Modi's quoted reference to "1,200 years of
slavery". The Islamic invasion did not take place all over India at the
same time, in that sense the choice of "1200" is somewhat arbitrary,
but his point was that colonization started not with the British but with the
Islamic invasion. And that is absolutely correct.
The Caliphate,
the Sultans and the Mughals severely oppressed the Hindus (e.g. win your
lawsuit against your neighbour if you convert to Islam) and exploited them
(toleration tax for unbelievers), literally trafficking millions as slaves, and
always considered themselves as foreigners to India. Until the end of the
Mughal Empire in 1857, the court and judicial language was Persian, and
numerous Muslim administrators (contrasting with the Britons sent to India) did
not speak any native language. The only difference is that, in addition to
their exploitation, the British also imported a number of valuable novelties,
which cannot be said of the Arabs, Afghans and Turks. Furthermore, the
post-colonial Britons have accepted that their former colonization of India is
called by its proper name, while the Muslims make great scandal if you
characterize the sultanates as colonial regimes.
Furthermore,
Pillai is very selective in his historical evidence. Knowledgeable disinformers
won’t allow themselves to be caught in explicit lies, they mislead their
audience by, for example, keeping some facts out of the picture, or by
misrepresenting actual facts. The cited temporary alliance of Emperor Aliya
Rama Raya of Vijayanagar with Sultan Adil Shah in 1558 may seem a compelling
example of multicultural cosiness to naive people, but it does not exactly
constitute an argument in the real world for the symbiosis of Hindu and Muslim,
quite the contrary.
Because what was
the sequel? Rama Raya included two Muslim units in his army, exemplarily
multicultural. But in 1565, an alliance of sultans attacked him, and they
fought at Talikota. He was winning the battle, but then the consciences of the
two Muslim generals began to gnaw. They defected, captured Rama Raya and
beheaded him. That is what can happen, especially to a Heathen.
A similar case
where an untypical blur between Hindu and Muslim proved fatal was the crucial
break-in from the fringes of India to the heartland in 1191-92: King
Jayachandra of Kanauj sought to settle his feud with King Prthiviraj Chauhan of
Delhi by inviting the aid of Sultan Mohammed Ghori. This Ghori lost to Chauhan
at Tarain but was pardoned. He returned a year later, defeated Chauhan at
Tarain and beheaded him; and a little later it was also Jayachandra's turn. He
may have been Ghori’s ally for a while, but to Muslims he was primarily a Pagan.
In the following two years, the greatest iconoclasm in history took place in
the Ganges plain, in which, among other things, the Buddhist universities (both
buildings and scholars) were razed to the ground. The lack of clarity between
Hindu and Muslim that Pillai tries to talk us into, the neglect of their
intrinsic hostility, is what led to the catastrophes of Tarain and Talikota in
real history.
Finally,
according to Pillai, the written sources may contain exaggerations: the
countless Muslim testimonies of massacres among Hindus "served to praise
the sultans to heaven". It does not follow from this that they are false,
without any further indication. But suppose that such flattering false
attribution of agency has indeed happened: what does that say about the
ideology that applied in their environment, namely Islam? Extermination of the
disbelievers and their shrines is indeed glorious there, for it is a faithful
imitation of the example of the Prophet.
Negationism
The word has surfaced:
negationism [from French négationnisme]. Does that term, known from
Holocaust denial, really apply, or is it just a rhetorical exaggeration?
Indeed, in this minimizing discourse, we find some typical techniques used by
Holocaust deniers. The above argument that Aurangzeb "had also saved a
lot" is frequently found in denier literature: "Hitler could hardly
have made work of the destruction of the Jews: see how many still there are,
with their own state and all!"
Very typical is
the frequent swapping of rule and exception. Holocaust deniers make the most of
small successes over fringe events. For example, it is no longer claimed that
Hitler refused to shake hands with the American athlete Jesse Owens during the
Olympic Games because he was black. The negationists had always denied this
urban legend, they say triumphantly. Possibly, but that little correction
doesn't diminish the fact of the Holocaust.
For example, the
favourable elements that Truschke can cite about Aurangzeb's personality are
correct, e.g. that he was an ascetic and was very careful with public money
(for example, he refused payment from the treasury and took his father Shah
Jahan to task for having wasted money on prestige projects such as the
construction of the Taj Mahal), but these do not detract from his campaigns
against Hinduism. On the contrary, they come from the same basic motif, namely
his piety: because it was moulded by Islam, it did not lead to charity or yoga
or anything, but to jihad.
Also common is
that most of them tell demonstrable untruth, but genuinely believe what they
say. The difference is only in social acceptance. Holocaust deniers marginalize
themselves, but they willingly make that sacrifice because they think it serves
the truth. Something like Christian martyrs who would rather give their lives
than convert to Islam or atheism with a knife to their throats: no doubt
courageous and consistent, but also tragic because their “true faith” was a
delusion that did not become the truth just because they gave their lives for
it. There was simply no resurrection, no abolition of sin and of mortality
through it, no virgin birth. The faith for which they make a heroic sacrifice
remains no less a delusion.
This combination
of truthfulness and delusion also explains why some negationists, after further
study, still grow away from negationism, either from specific beliefs (for
example, many have come back from their earlier denial of the mass murder in
Babi Yar, Ukraine, under the influence of new evidence) or of Holocaust denial
as such (e.g. my fellow Orientalist Christian Lindtner, an ex-denier). But, to
reiterate, their apparent sincerity does not alter the fact that their
negationist position was or is mistaken.
Jihad deniers,
by contrast, bathe in social recognition and approval, both in India and
internationally. Perhaps not from the numerical majority (most Europeans and
most Hindus see through the Islamophile excuses) but because of the official
circles in politics, education and the media. They flourish and are given all
kinds of benefits, rewards and promotions. Most members of the vocal class are
conformists and therefore gravitate towards these unfounded but approved
opinions pro Islam, without realizing the true facts in this history dispute.
However, the logical structure of their denial techniques is the same.
“Genocide”
But: although
the denial of the crimes of Muslim conquerors and Nazis is the same, are the
crimes involved therefore similar? In India there are some who speak of
"Hindu genocide" or "the Hindu Holocaust". When the French-Indian
journalist François Gautier founded a museum in Pune for the extermination
struggle against Hinduism and the Hindu movement against it, there were voices
that wanted to call it the Hindu Holocaust Museum. Eventually it was named the Chhatrapati
Shivaji Maharaj Museum after the great freedom fighter, Shivaji Bhonsle (17th
century), but at first that Holocaust reference was one of the contenders. My
advice was also sought, and I strongly urged not to make that mistake.
In the first
place, it is not very diplomatic to go against Jewish sensibilities with this.
Although the term "Holocaust" first referred to the Armenian
Genocide, it has gradually become a kind of property of the Jewish community,
which would take it as very unpleasant if anyone else tried to make off with
it. Beside the votaries of the state of Israel, the Hindu nationalists have
almost no friends abroad, so they’d better respect them.
Secondly, the
term once again draws attention to other people's experience, while the
uniqueness of the Hindu experience still remains underexposed. There are
indigenous terms, and it is now necessary to choose one as the default term and
promote it. These include Hindū-vaṁśa-vicchédana or Hindū-saṁhāraṇa,
"genocide of the Hindus". Since I also find that term imprecise, I
will stick to the more general Hindū-hatya, "slaughter of the
Hindus." That term follows an old pattern, e.g. the Śākya-hatya,
the slaughter of the Śākyas, the ethnic group to which the then very
aged Buddha belonged (by an illegitimate grandson of the Śākya state
leader who was hurt in his honour, so not for doctrinal reasons). The term
leaves undecided what exactly was the nature of that slaughter.
Millions dead
The massacre of
Hindus, according to the Muslim chronicles themselves, has left easily more
than six million dead; as well as millions of slaves, and all kinds of other
forms of personal damage, and enormous (not indirect but very deliberate)
cultural destruction. You even come close to the 5.3 to 5.7 million official
deaths of the Jewish Holocaust if you consider the 20th century alone. At least
two million people, mostly Hindus, were killed during the Partition of 1947
(and more in Bengal over the following years); official historiography
minimizes those figures and presents them as essentially symmetrical, which is
quite incorrect. The surviving Hindu-Sikh “migrants” were all true refugees who
left their homeland only under duress or threat, while most of the Muslims who
moved to Pakistan were genuine “migrants” (Mohajirs) to the Promised Land which
they had carved out themselves and supported in very large majority in the
ballot box. In 1971 the Pakistani army, with local accomplices, committed a
massacre in East Bengal, with at least 80% victims in the Hindu minority, and
the Muslim victims were also killed for anti-Hindu reasons: they still wore
saris and no Muslim clothing, their language was not Arabized etc., so they
were still considered half Hindu. The death toll, according to the government
of the Bangladeshi state, was three million.
Holodomor
To say that a
mass murder killed more than six million people feels like a kind of sacrilege
to some. Note how conformist sources like Wikipedia regarding the Holodomor,
Stalin's mass murder in Ukraine in 1932-33, which was of a similar magnitude
(Walter Duranty of the New York Times, who publicly denied the
Holodomor, privately estimated a 10 million dead), insist on keeping the death
toll as low as possible. Well, I am not an expert on the Holodomor figures, I
will leave them undecided for now, but Muslims have certainly killed more than
six million Hindus. Historian K.S. Lal estimated more than 80 million between
1000 and 1526, all while acknowledging that demographic figures from the Middle
Ages are inevitably inaccurate. He wrote this more than 40 years ago, and since
then no further research has been done about it, because thematizing the crimes
of Islam would be a very bad career move.
But for that
death toll they had over thirteen centuries, from the Arab-Caliphal conquest of
Sindh in 712 to the terrorism of recent years, and a very large country with a
huge population. The mass murder of the Hindus was therefore much less intense
than the Holocaust. Those who say the Holocaust was the worst crime in history
are right in this respect, that it was unusually thorough. For example, Edith
Stein was a Catholic nun of Jewish descent, but that could not save her: the
Nazis made it clear that all born Jews were targeted, they could not escape
their innate identity.
This is what
justifies the term genocide: merely belonging to the Jewish birth-group was
sufficient for extermination. The Hindus, on the other hand, always had the
option of escape through conversion, except in acute conflict situations. They
were not prisoners of their biology. Islam does not decree to physically
exterminate the Heathens, only to wage jihad against them until they submit.
There may be plenty of deaths during that jihad, but that is not the end in
itself, only collateral damage to the goal set by the Quran, namely world domination.
I am not going
to venture into a more precise estimate of the death toll. Like Audrey
Truschke, I studied Sanskrit and Persian, but for years I have lost interest in
the specifics of Islamic history, I only discuss Islam when current events
require me to do so. After all, the general picture of the ideological roots of
Islamic crimes is perfectly clear, the only remaining thing to do now is to
make the right policy decisions regarding Islam. So I am not going to deal with
the reporting of massacres and iconoclasm any further, fortunately there is a
new generation of scholars in India ready to do that work.
So much for the
subject of negationism, which De Morgen exemplifies here.
“Increasingly radical”
Representing the
contemporary context of that "rewriting" of history also requires
some rectifications. The article’s subtitle addresses an "increasingly
radical Hindu nationalism". Ever since that movement caught my attention
in 1989, I have never seen it described in the world media other than as
"increasingly powerful" and "increasingly radical"; this is
how press correspondents justify the space they claim from their editor-in-chief
for the subject. That was true even at the movement’s lowest point in 2009,
after the BJP’s second consecutive election defeat, when its enemies in India danced
on its corpse and even predicted the impending end of Hinduism: a
"post-Hindu India", their openly advertised goal.
The primary fact
in India's religious conflict is that Hinduism is fighting for its survival in
its only homeland, while the "minorities" (in fact the Indian branch
of powerful and wealthy multinationals) are only angling for additional
conquests. In addition, Hinduism is steadily declining, also numerically,
mainly because, unlike its challengers, it has no strategy and no ideological
backbone, and especially no political leadership. It remains to be seen whether
there is any radicalization against this background.
The Hindu
nationalist party BJP (Indian People's Party) has never been more powerful than
after its election victory in 2019, at least in a strict party-political sense.
But more radical? Only liars and their ignorant parrots can say that. Compare
the party program in the years after 1951 with that of today, and you see the
opposite. At the time, for example, there was talk of a "Hindu state"
as the target. In marginal circles belonging to the mass organization RSS
(National Volunteer Corps, which spawned the BJP) you can still hear this, but
not with their leaders, and the party discarded that ideal during its 1980 refounding.
Today, even the term "Hindu" is being questioned: "Every Indian
is a Hindu", claims the RSS chairman, Mohan Bhagwat.
The BJP is still
a nationalist party, and almost only Hindus vote for it, but programmatically
it is certainly no longer a Hindu party. There are a number of discriminations
against Hindus in the Constitution. You read that right: there are a number of
legal privileges for the minorities and disadvantages for the Hindus. This
mainly concerns the right to founding and managing their own schools and places
of worship, two sectors crucial for a religion’s flourishing. Those of the minorities
are independent and inviolable, those of the Hindus can be nationalized at any
time and plundered by bureaucrats. That is why a number of Hindu sects have
approached the court with varying degrees of success to have themselves
recognized as a non-Hindu minority -- a race to the exit that is non-existent
among minorities.
In India,
citizens are not equal before the law according to religion (so it is not, as
claimed here, a "secular state"), and it is the majority that is
disadvantaged. A majority that allows itself to be minorized: it is bitter
reality in the largest democracy in the world, but it is something that you
cannot get explained abroad. Incidentally, that explains my own involvement in
this tangle: a Fleming was needed to understand how a majority can be
disadvantaged and allow that to continue. [Explanation: within Belgium, the
Flemish are linguistically the majority but have always been, and in a few
respects still are, second-class citizens, and this is partly due to their
non-assertive nature.]
This is all the
more curious because other societies with legally established inequality give a
kind of justification for this that does not apply in India. In the US, blacks
enjoy the privilege of "affirmative action"; it is debatable whether
this is a just and effective response to the historical oppression of blacks --
but no one disputes the very fact of that oppression. Well, in India the Hindus
have never oppressed the Muslims (nor the Christians), just the opposite. So
here you get the absurd situation where the majority pays
"compensation" for their own oppression to the offender community.
Ideologically
lost
The Modi
government has not taken any initiative to rectify this inequality, especially
enshrined in Articles 25-30 of the Constitution. (It has, however, overruled
Article 370 that gave privileges to the state of Kashmir, but the terms the
terms “Hindu” and “Muslim” formally do not appear in the laws underlying that
controversy.) One of its MPs introduced a bill to that effect in 2018, but the
government has not supported it nor mobilized a public opinion basis for it,
and nothing has come of it. The reason is that the BJP has been so brainwashed
by decades of "secularist" propaganda that it barely remembers its
pro-Hindu origins and is ideologically lost. Former party chairman LK Advani
showed himself to be an ideological babe in the wood by stating that "a party
needs no ideology, only the offer of good governance", the long-standing
mistake that governance can be ideologically neutral.
The history
rewriting and the underlying Hindu radicalization that prompted Aletta André to
write this article is simply non-existent. This also applies in the field of
historiography. At the end of the first Modi administration in 2019, education
minister Prakash Jadevkar was asked by some politically conscious people in his
constituency what he had done about the grotesque distortion of history in the
textbooks, and he proudly declared that he had not changed a letter in it. So
he militantly chose the anti-Hindu camp, an example of how BJP leaders today
have no higher (albeit futile) ambition in life than a pat on the shoulder from
their enemies. The history rewriting and the underlying Hindu radicalization
that prompted her to write this article is simply non-existent.
How history was
rewritten
The Hindu
mentality has not only been conditioned into an inferiority complex by
"1,200 years of slavery", it is especially after independence that
there has been a systematic undermining of Hindu self-respect and a progressive
elimination of Hindu moves against it. That was mainly the work of the first
Prime Minister (1947-64) Jawaharlal Nehru, a native Hindu who hated Hinduism
(like the ex-Catholic popist-eaters here), his education minister Maulana Abul
Kalam Azad (Muslim fundamentalist), his daughter Prime Minister (1966- 77 and
1980-84) Indira Gandhi, her secretary PN Haksar and her education minister
Nurul Hasan. The rewriting of history was a central item on their agenda.
It started with
Nehru himself, who in his book The Discovery of India presents some
strong examples of negationism. For example, he speaks of Mahmud Ghaznavi, who
organized a series of raids in India around 1000, including temple destructions,
and he claims: “Architecture interested Mahmud...” This refers to his conquest
of the city of Mathura and the speech to his army when they entered the temple
complex. around Krishna's birthplace. He praises it to heaven: "Here are
magnificent temples as strong as the faith of the faithful. Surely it took an
army of angels years to build it…” In his pretended silliness, Nehru ignores
the blatant sarcasm of that speech, which culminated in the order to destroy
all the temples. And so it happened. Later, the birth temple was rebuilt, but
destroyed again by the aforementioned Aurangzeb, and replaced by a mosque. It
still stands today, as one of the countless "silent witnesses" of
Truschke's and Pillai's spectacular wrongness.
The whitewashing
of Muslim rule accelerated under Nehru's daughter Indira. In a power struggle
within the Congress party, she needed the support of the Communists, who in
return demanded and gained control over culture and especially education. Their
first priority was to establish a curriculum that would "promote
integration between Hindus and Muslims" by obliterating any memory of
historical conflict and oppression. As if in Germany, in order to spare
everyone, they were to delete all references to the crimes of the Nazi regime.
A then education bureaucrat told me how, at the first announcement of that
policy, he protested that a history book should simply report the facts; he was
promptly promoted away.
In 2002,
competent minister MM Joshi made a clumsy attempt at a correction, but it was
without consequence. The situation since then has been that Indian youth has
been presented with a very streamlined rewritten version of history. The
current government has done nothing about it and is not making any moves. It
has filled the relevant administration with incompetent RSS-BJP gerontocrats
whom it wanted to thank for their services rendered to the organization, and
who have neither the expertise nor the dynamism to change the game. Aletta
André's outrage over a "history rewriting" (actually a rectification
of the Communist rewritten history, a glasnost) is simply devoid of a
real-world object.
Conclusion
Most India
watchers live in a fantasy world, with India as a secular state (which it is
not) threatened by an increasingly monstrous Hindu nationalism. To keep the
flame burning, they regularly tell a scare story to keep the blushing virgins
in a state of alarm and hatred against resisting Hinduism. In doing so, they
are making a good career move, becoming spokesmen for a confluence of interests
between the Islamic internationale, the missionary lobby and cultural Marxism,
each of which has declared war on Hinduism for its own reasons. If, on the
other hand, they were to show a realistic, let alone a favorable image of
militant Hinduism, then some degree of exclusion awaits them. So the eternal
return of articles on the alleged cunning of the Hindu Chauvinists will be with
us for some time.
It seems to be that the British rule of 200 years brought a serious disconnect between us and our past, especially by changing the education system pursuant to T B Macaulay's minutes which wanted to produce Indians who learnt English and thought like the English and served the empire. So also, in Law, the Common law was imposed from above obscuring the administration of justice which had prevailed in India on the basis of Yajnavalkya Smriti and Mitakshara. This British tradition was successfully continued by Nehru and his successors. BJP and RSS leaders are stupid and lack basic knowledge of India's past. They know what Golwalkar told them about India's past. They dare not face the hue and cry which will arise, if they undertake the correction of History. Loudmouths like Prakash Jawader can hardly be trusted to even think about it.
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