On Aurangzeb, Kashi Vishwanath, Lies and Half-Truths

A few days ago, I came across this statement by TMMK leader M.H. Jawahirulla. He said:

One of the greatest charges against Aurangzeb is of the demolition of Vishwanath Temple in Banaras (Varanasi). That was a fact. But late historian Bishma Narain Pande’s research efforts exploded many myths about Aurangzeb’s rule. He explained why Aurangzeb razed the temple at Varanasi,  TMMK leader M.H. Jawahirulla, who is a university professor himelf, told IANS.

He razed the temple because the Maharani of Kutch, the wife of one of the Hindu Rajput kings loyal to Aurangzeb, was dishonoured and robbed inside the temple.

Now, the history freak that I am, the immediate thought that came to mind was: Where did the late Shri B N Pande find the evidence for this story?

For this I had to delve deeper.

That is when I came across, “Why did Aurangzeb Demolish the Kashi Vishwanath” by Koenraad Elst. And that is where I found the answer to my question…

But first, let us hear the strange episode involving the Maharani of Kutch. In his article, Dr. Elst refers to this “story”.

The story regarding demolition of Vishvanath temple is that while Aurangzeb was passing near Varanasi on his way to Bengal, the Hindu Rajas in his retinue requested that if the halt was made for a day, their Ranis may go to Varanasi, have a dip in the Ganges and pay their homage to Lord Vishwanath. Aurangzeb readily agreed.

Army pickets were posted on the five mile route to Varanasi. The Ranis made a journey on the Palkis. They took their dip in the Ganges and went to the Vishwanath temple to pay their homage. After offering Puja all the Ranis returned except one, the Maharani of Kutch.

A thorough search was made of the temple precincts but the Rani was to be found nowhere. When Aurangzeb came to know of it, he was very much enraged. He sent his senior officers to search for the Rani. Ultimately, they found that the statue of Ganesh which was fixed in the wall was a moveable one. When the statue was moved, they saw a flight of stairs that led to the basement.

To their horror, they found the missing Rani dishonoured and crying, deprived of all her ornaments. The basement was just beneath Lord Jagannath’s seat. The Rajas expressed their vociferous protests. As the crime was heinous, the Rajas demanded exemplary action. Aurangzeb ordered that as the sacred precincts have been despoiled, Lord Vishvanath may be moved to some other place, the temple be razed to the ground and the Mahant be arrested and punished.

Dr Elst first mentions several “holes” in this story:

  1. The story is very bizarre, to say the least. First of all, it has Aurangzeb go to Bengal.  Yet, in the extant histories of his life and works, no such journey to Bengal, or even any journey as far east as Varanasi, is recorded.  There are fairly complete chronicles of his doings, day by day; could B.N. Pande or any of his quoters give the date or even the year of this remarkable episode?
  2. Nether was Aurangzeb known to surround himself with Hindu courtiers.
  3. And did these Rajas take their wives along on military expeditions? Or was it some holiday picnic
  4. How could the Mahant kidnap a Rani who was there in the company of other Ranis, as well as the appropriate courtiers and bodyguards? Why did he take such risk?
  5. Why did the Rajas  wait for Aurangzeb to take exemplary action: did they fear his anger if they punished the priests or destroyed the temple themselves?
  6. And since when is demolition the approved method of purifying a defiled temple, an eventuality for which the Shastras have laid down due ritual procedures?

He then probes deeper into this whole episode.  Where did B.N. Pande get this story from?

He (B N Pande) himself writes: Dr. Pattabhi Sitaramayya, in his famous book, The Feathers and the Stones, has narrated this fact based on documentary evidence. So, we have to go one more step back in time to find this intriguing “documentary evidence”.

Let us turn to this book, now hard to find, to see what the documentary evidence is on which this whole wave of pro-Aurangzeb rumours is based, but which no one has cared to reproduce or even just specify.

This is what Gandhian Congress leader Pattabhi Sitaramayya wrote in his prison diary:

“…There is a popular belief that Aurangazeb was a bigot in religion. This, however, is combated by a certain school. His bigotry is illustrated by one or two instances. The building of a mosque over the site of the original Kasi Visveswara Temple is one such. A like mosque in Mathura is another. The revival of Jazia is a third but of a different order. A story is told in extenuation of the first event…”

The late Sitaramayya then mentions the story that has been recounted before. Where did he hear it?

This story of the Benares Musjid was given in a rare manuscript in Lucknow which was in the possession of a respected Mulla who had read it in the Ms. and who though he promised to look it up and give the Ms. to a friend, to whom he had narrated the story, died without fulfilling his promise. The story is little known and the prejudice, we are told, against Aurangazeb persists.

So now, we finally know where the story comes from: an unnamed mullah friend of an unnamed acquaintance of Sitaramayya’s knew of a manuscript, the details of which he took with him in his grave.

This is the  document on which secularist journalists and historians base their evidence of Aurangzeb’s fair and secularist disposition, overruling the evidence of archaeology and the cold print of the Maasiri Alamgiri, to “explode the myth” of Islamic iconoclasm spread by the “chauvinist” Hindutva propagandists.

It is time to nail such lies – here and now….otherwise an entire generation of Indians might grow up believing fabrications and half-truths that have been the hall mark of our “secular” polity for more than half a century.

Will the mainstream media take notice of this? I think not…

The demolition of Kashi Vishwanath is not “news”, it is history…

but the demolition of Kashi Vishwanath to save a Maharani’s honour? Now, thats what I call “news” !

Related Posts:

Lies and half-truths in the name of national integration

Bahadur Shah Zafar & Bharat Ratna – more than a joke

Distorting history and getting paid for it and finally,

Will Arundhati Roy pl. stand up for Francois Gautier?

Image courtesy: Wikipedia; Kashi Vishwanath Temple showing Gynavapi Mosque built by Aurangzeb on the holy well – Gyanvapi and 3/4th part of Temple after destroying it and also a larger white mosque behind within same complex housing modern Temple with only 1/4 of original area while the inner sanctum is occupied by Gold plated Gyanvapi mosque sharing common walls

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69 Responses

  1. JK says:

    Shantanu, excellent post.

    Please take a look at this comment

    http://varnam.org/blog/archives/2008/03/some_facts_about_aurangzeb.php#comment-62474

    Do you know if Aurangzeb gave grants to Hindu temples, and if so why?

  2. Vikas says:

    *** COMMENT COMBINED ***

    Of course Aurangzeb gave grants to temples and also destroyed them. Now I can not give proofs. Neither online nor via snailmail or even personally coz the farmans are archived. I am really sorry. I have not seen them even. But neither have you seen any of that stuff.

    Now if you have faith in internet then just type ‘ aurangzeb temple grants’ and check the results. You will find out that he did have grants for Someshwar Nath Mahadev temple in Allahabad, Jangum Badi Shiva temple in Banaras, and Umanand temple in Gauhati. As you might also notice that at least these 3 are Shaiva temples and not Vaishnav, unlike the Keshav Rai and company that he destroyed. One such page (whose ‘history’ I dont subscribe to, but it still mentions this is http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/southasia/History/Mughals/Aurang2.html).

    If you have a little faith in ‘lefty secular’ (Richard Eaton etc) types then you could check Eaton’s book ‘Temple Desecration and Indo-Muslim States’, which I havent read but I am presuming would detail more such instances. If you want to indulge in polemics then let me tell you again that he both built and destroyed temples. there is enough evidence for both.

    ***

    and one more thing. Au… had the maximum number of Hindu mansabdars under him. More than even the ’secular’ Akbar. How might you explain that ?

    Reference

    M Athar Ali, The Mughal Nobility Under Aurangzeb.

    Of course he is a Muslim. But I can bet my life that he was not lying.

  3. Praada Verna says:

    Vikas,

    This does not give the reason the Aurangazeb played proactive role in giving the grants for temples. If you see the same historians claims of Hindus holding high positions in the reign of Aurangazeb, this is no anamoly.

  4. vikas says:

    Praada Verna,

    You are not clear in what you are saying.

  5. B Shantanu says:

    Vikas: Thanks for your comment and the links. I will have a look at them.

    You say, “…If you want to indulge in polemics then let me tell you again that he both built and destroyed temples. there is enough evidence for both…”

    I am prepared to accept that…The key question is:

    On balance, did he commit more atrocities against Hindus (as compared to other Mughal kings) and were his acts of benevolence really exceptions?

    My belief is (and I think you will agree) that the answer to the question above is a “Yes”.

    As for having more Hindu manasabdars under him, that at least partly, was a reflection of the dwindling Mughal authority (in spite of increase in area under control) and the need to counter-balance the Marathas and the Sikhs who were openly challenging Delhi’s rule.

    I hope others more well read than me can chip in on this conversation.

    Finally, you may find this interesting: The truth about Aurangzeb

  6. v.c.krishnan says:

    Dear Sir,
    As Shri. Gautier states, let us face the “hHISTORY”. Let us not bury it to suit the whims and fancies of a few.
    If Aurangazeb is what he is as what Shri. Gautier states or if he the truth of the Kashi Viswanath temple is as per what the tmmk LEADER SAYS LET US FACE IT.AND let us accept it.
    Let us not hide truth just to get a few brownie points or a few beers and drinks from a society which tries to put “Bharatiys History” as “NO HISTORY AT ALL”!
    Just as we are willing to look at a newer side of the “supposed to be discriminatory caste system’ as non existing in true “VEDIC SOCIETY” let us get a new side to History and truth and face it. Let us not brush it under the carpet for a future generation to suffer any sort of indignities.
    Shri’ Gautier states that he has got the info directly from the horses mouth, the writings of Aurangazeb itself. Let us ascertain where the other historical records of the Tmmk leader is available and accept the truth “WHATEVER IT MAY BE”!
    Regards.
    vck

  7. vikas says:

    Dears,

    Do you then believe that I will be a good Hindu if I kill 100 thousand Muslims and 90 thousand Hindus?

    And as far as Gautier’s FACT is concerned all the paintings he has used for his exhibition are 19th century, and not “from the horse’s mouth”. None of them is a Mughal paining and none of them is contemporary to Aurangzeb.

  8. B Shantanu says:

    @ vikas: What is your point re. killing 100,000 Muslims and 90,000 Hindus?

    I am also concerned that you like to quote sources/books without bothering to read them yourself (as in Richard Eaton’s book above).

    If you did actually check the link in my comment above, you would have read this paragraph:

    “Thus, we thought we should get at the root of the matter. History (like journalism) is about documentation and first-hand experience. We decided to show Aurangzeb according to his own documents. There are an incredible number of farhans, original edicts of Aurangzeb hand-written in Persian, in India’s museums, particularly in Rajasthan, such as the Bikaner archives. It was not always easy to scan them, we encountered resistance, sometimes downright hostility and we had to go once to the chief minister to get permission. Indeed, the director of Bikaner archives told us that in 50 years we were the first ones asking for the farmans dealing with Aurangzeb’s destructive deeds…”

    These edicts and firmans were all original and straight “from the horse’s mouth” – as you say.

    The exhibition paintings themselves were reproductions of these edicts – that does not invalidate them.

  9. Vikas says:

    *** COMMENT COMBINED ***

    My friend,

    There are two ways one can deal with a fact. Ignore it, or deny it. And do not be concerned about my not having read Eaton’s book. I speak to him once a week. So I know what I am doing. Take your own care.

    As far as the FACT exhibition is concerned it is in trouble because it does not show the firmans but the paintings, all of which are INSPIRED (and of a much much later date, painted not in the Mughal court) by these supposed firmans. I fail to understand what you mean by the words horse and mouth here. Who is horse? Which/where is mouth? Everyone with an ounce of sense knows that there are an incredible number of Au… firmans in Bikaner/Hyderabad/Allahabad/:London/Delhi/Patna. More important is to know what those firmans are about. The link does not say anything about them, and for all I know they could be firmans about sending birthday balloons to Shivaji or Dara.

    And I AM NOT DISPUTING THAT AU RAZED TEMPLES. HE DID. BUT HE BUILT THEM ALSO. There is enough evidence of both. If you do not want to know this then it is up to you. Given that both of these are truths, how do we go about understanding Au. You have no idea and you are not even interested in trying. Maybe you would like to put these temple grants under the carpet. But then it is no longer history. It is selective editing. It was you who wrote

    “The key question is:

    On balance, did he commit more atrocities against Hindus … were his acts of benevolence really exceptions?”

    So I want to ask you again, if things are about being ON THE BALANCE then will I be a good Hindu if I kill 100 thousand Muslims and 90 thousand Hindus? Ok, 200 thousand Muslims and 90 thusand Hindus.

    Hats off to you.

    So let me tell you again that Au… gave money to many temples. Three of those I mentioned above. A fourth one is a farman in the possession of the present pujari of the Balaji Temple at Chitrakut in UP. In fact he gave 330 bighas of land to this one and that too during Ramzaan. It states that Sant Balak Das gets 330 bigha lagaani zameen of eight villages viz. Hinauta, Chitrakot, Devkhari, Raudra, Siria, Madri, Jarwa and Doharia. The firman written in Persian says that apart from this land, the lagaan of Re 1 should be given per day from Kini Paroshtha pargana. Balakdas of Kalinjar Pargana in Allahabad Suba gets this land.’

    ***

    Also there must be many more which I am unaware of, just like Gautier is unaware of the destroyed temples in his list which apparently reaches 5 figures.

  10. B Shantanu says:

    @ Vikas: First of all, thank you for your comment because it forced me to go and do some original research (there is nothing better than that to get the grey cells working again!)

    1. You say: “As far as the FACT exhibition is concerned it is in trouble because it does not show the firmans but the paintings…

    Not quite true. Here is what I found. From: http://www.fact-india.com/Aurangazeb.php

    “…One of the main objectives of Aurangzeb’s policy was to demolish Hindu temples. When he ordered (13th October 1666)removal of the carved railing, which Prince Dara Shukoh had presented to Keshava Rai temple at Mathura, he had observed ‘In the religionof theMusalmans it is improper even to look at a temple’, and that it was totally unbecoming of a Muslim to act like Dara Shukoh (Exhibit No.6, Akhbarat, 13th October 1666). This was followed by destruction of the famous Kalka temple in Delhi (Exhibit No.6, 7, 8, Akhbarat, 3rd and 12th September 1667).

    In 1669, shortly after the death of Mirza Raja Jai Singh of Amber, a general order was issued (9th April 1669) for the demolition of temples and established schools of the Hindus throughout the empire and banning public worship (Exhibit Nos.9 & 10). Soon after this the great temple of Keshava Rai was destroyed (Jan.-Feb. 1670) (Exhibit No.12) and in its place a lofty mosque was erected. The idols, the author of Maasir-i-Alamgiri informs, were carried to Agra and buried under the steps of the mosque built by Begum Sahiba in order to be continually trodden upon, and the name of Mathura was changed to Islamabad.

    This was followed by Aurangzeb’s order to demolish the highly venerated temple of Vishwanath at Banaras (Persian text, Exhibit No.11), Keshava Rai temple (Jan.-Feb. 1670) (Persian Text, exhibit No.12 and Painting, Exhibit No.13), and of Somanatha (Exhibit No.14).To save the idol of Shri Nathji from being desecrated, the Gosain carried it to Rajputana, where Maharana Raj Singh received it formally at Sihad village, assuring the priest that Aurangzeb would have to trample over the bodies of one lakh of his brave Rajputs, before he couldeven touch the idol (Exhibit No.15)

    Aurangzeb’s zeal for temple destruction became much more intense during war conditions. The opportunity to earn religious merit by demolishing hundreds of temples soon came to him in 1679 when, after the death of Maharaja Jaswant Singh of Jodhpur in the Kabul Subah, he tried to eliminate the Rathors of Marwar as a political power in Rajputana. But Maharana Raj Singh of Mewar, in line with the great traditions of his House, came out in open support of the Rathors.. This led to war with both Mewar and Marwar during which the temples built on the bank of Rana’s lake were destroyed by his orders (Exhibit No.23, Akhbarat 23rd December 1679) and also about three hundred other temples in the environs of Udaipur. (Exhibit No.25, Text), including the famous Jagannath Rai temple built at a great cost in front of the Maharana’s palace which was bravely defended by a handful of Rajputs (Exhibit Nos.20, 21).

    Not only this, when Aurangzeb visited Chittor to have a view of the famous fort, he ordered the demolition of 63 temples there which included some of the finest temples of Kumbha’s time (Exhibit No.22). From Marwar (in Western Rajasthan) alone were brought several cart-loads of idols which, as per Aurangzeb’s orders, were cast in the yard of the Court and under the steps of Jama Masjid (Exhibit No.19). Such uncivilized and arrogant conduct of the Mughal Emperor alienated Hindus for ever, though they continued to be tolerant towards his creed.

    In June 1681, orders, in a laconic two-liner, were given for the demolition of the highly venerated Jagannath Temple in Orissa (Exhibit No.24, Akhbarat, 1st June 1681)., Shortly afterwards, in September 1682, the famous Bindu-Madhav temple in Banaras was also demolished as per the Emperor’s orders (Exhibit No.27, Akhbarat, Julus 26, Ramzan 20). On 1st September 1681, while proceeding to the Deccan, where his rebel son Prince Akbar, escorted by Durga Das Rathore, had joined Chhatrapati Shivaji’s son, Shambhaji, thus creating a serious problem for him, Aurangzeb ordered that all the temples on the way should be destroyed. It was a comprehensive order not distinguishing between old and newly built temples (Exhibit No.26, Akhbarat, Julus 25, Ramzan 18). But in the district of Burhanpur, where there were a large number of temples with their doors closed, he preferred to keep them as such, as the Muslims were too few in number in the district. (Exhibit No.28, Akhbarat 13th October 1681). In his religious frenzy, even temples of the loyal and friendly Amber state were not spared, such as the famous temple of Jagdish at Goner near Amber (Exhibit Nos.30, Akhbarat, 28th March and 14th May 1680). In fact, his misguided ardour for temple destruction did not abate almost up to the end of his life, for as late as 1st January 1705 we find him ordering that the temple of Pandharpur be demolished and the butchers of the camp be sent to slaughter cows in the temple precincts (Akhbarat 49-7).

    The number of such ruthless acts of Aurangzeb make a long list but here only a few have been mentioned, supported by evidence, mostly contemporary official records of Aurangzeb’s period and by such credible Persian sources as Maasir-i-Alamgiri.

    I In obedience to the Quranic injunction, he reimposed Jizyah on the Hindus on 2nd April 1679 (Exhibit No.16), which had been abolished by Emperor Akbar in 1564, causing widespread anger and resentment among the Hindus of the country .A massive peaceful demonstration against this tax in Delhi, was ruthlessly crushed (Exhibit No.17), This hated tax involved heavy economic burden on the vast number of the poor Hindus and caused humiliation to each and every Hindu (Exhibit No.18). In the same vein, were his discriminatory measures against Hindus in the form of exemption of the Muslims from the taxes (Exhibit No.31, Akhbarat 16th April 1667) ban on atishbazi and restriction on Diwali (Exhibit No.32), replacement of Hindu officials by Muslims so that the Emperor’s prayers for the welfare of Muslims and glory of Islam, which were proving ineffective, be answered (Exhibit Nos.33, 34). He also imposed a ban on ziyarat and gathering of the Hindus at religious shrines, such as of Shitla Mata and folk Gods like Pir Pabu (Exhibit No.35, Akhbarat 16th September 1667), another ban on their travelling in Palkis, or riding elephants and Arab-Iraqi horses, as Hindus should not carry themselves with the same dignity as the Muslims! (Exhibit No.36). In the same vein came brazen attempts to convert Hindus by inducement, coercion (Exhibit No.41) or by offering Qanungoship (Exhibit No.44, 45, 46) and to honour the converts in the open Court. His personal directions were that a Hindu male be given Rs.4 and a Hindu female Rs.2 on conversion (Exhibit No.43,Akhbarat 7th April 1685). ‘Go on giving them”, Aurangzeb had ordered when it was reported to him that the Faujdar of Bithur, Shaikh Abdul Momin, had converted 150 Hindus and had given them naqd (cash) and saropas (dresses of honour) (Exhibit No.40, Akhbarat, 11th April 1667)….”

    The purpose of quoting this was to show that the exhibition did not only have paintings but also had original firmans of Aurangzeb (I must confess that I have personally not been to the Exhibition – either in Delhi, Pune or Chennai)

    2. Hopefully, it also adds a little bit to your remark: “…More important is to know what those firmans are about.” We at least know what some of them were about.

    3. You say: “…And I AM NOT DISPUTING THAT AU RAZED TEMPLES. HE DID. BUT HE BUILT THEM ALSO. There is enough evidence of both. If you do not want to know this then it is up to you. ..”

    Please provide references and/or links. I do want to know about them and I will be happy for you to post them here. Let everyone make their own judgement.

    4. You mention: “…how do we go about understanding Au. You have no idea and you are not even interested in trying.

    I will be the first to confess my ignorance. I am a curious student of history not a professional historian. Yes, I have no idea…but I hope my attempt at this discussion will make you re-consider whether I am “interested in trying” or not.

    5. Again, quoting you: So I want to ask you again, if things are about being ON THE BALANCE then will I be a good Hindu if I kill 100 thousand Muslims and 90 thousand Hindus? Ok, 200 thousand Muslims and 90 thusand Hindus.

    Where did I say anything about being a good Hindu or a bad Hindu (or a good Muslim or a bad Muslim)? I really do not get your point.

    My question was straigtforward and I will repeat:
    “On balance, did he commit more atrocities against Hindus … were his acts of benevolence really exceptions?”

    The answer can be a simple “yes” or a “no” – or it can be a “we don’t know”.

    6. You refer to: “…A fourth one is a farman in the possession of the present pujari of the Balaji Temple at Chitrakut in UP…”

    Please provide a suitable reference and/or link.

    7. Finally and I hope you will agree with this point at least: History should be about facts but facts are often lost in the mists of time and/or not recorded…So History becomes as much about interpretation as it should be about facts…and interpretations vary, depending on the prevailing ideology, biases and prejudices. Also, History is frequently written by the victors and/or the domiant elites…and that induces its own bias in historical records and “evidences”.

    I am curious to hear what you think.

    P.S. Many of you will find this link about Aurangzeb interesting, from which this excerpt:

    His reign was an era of happiness and peace through the empire. He never committed the slightest injustice during his reign. He was overall the best Mughal emperor in its history.

    I wonder which/what kind of “history” is being taught here.

    P.P.S. For the benefit of those who may have not read Prof Eaton, here is a two-part essay by him on Temple Desecration etc:
    Part 1: http://www.frontlineonnet.com/fl1725/17250620.htm and
    Part 2: http://www.flonnet.com/fl1726/17260700.htm

  11. Indian says:

    On first place he should not have destructed the temple, whatever the reason may be. And what he did after that for revival doesnot matter . What he gave back to temple was already what he looted, he did not do any favour by giving all these bigas and money. Moguls only knew how to destruct and loot and than to give back. Their history is not that golrious to talk about. Hats off to F. Gautier! Atlesast we knew how mogul destructed our history and religiuous places.

    Jai Hind!

  12. Vikas says:

    *** COMMENT COMBINED ***

    My friend,

    As i said we will find a mountain of evidence for both the sides of the argument.

    Get hold of this book Islam and Indian Culture, by B N Pande (it was reprinted in 1994 by Anmol Publications, Delhi with a new author’s name- Md Shujaat !) and it has a chapter on distortions of Aurangzeb, Tipu and company. This guy was some mayor or something of Allahabad and friend of Tej Bahadur Sapru. On page 54 and 55 he tells of the UP High Court using documents to settle property disputes amongst the pandas of Jangam Bari Mahadev, Benaras and Someshvar Nath Mahadev, Ilahabad. Surprisingly these documents were nothing else but firmans granted by Aurangzeb for the upkeep of the deities in these temples. Amongst other HIndu temples which proudly possess the firmans of AUrangzeb and which he has listed are Mahakaleshvar, Ujjain; Balaji, Chitrakut; Shatrunjai Jain temple, and the author then adds that one can find many other such temples and gurudwaras if one was to look further. You just need to go to books.google.com and type some keywords and it will show all this to you. Or order this book. If you trust the internet then you could type these keywords and there would be results. One being http://www.newsindia-times.com/ArticleText.aspx?article=28_03_2008_015_001&mode=1
    And if you want the real firmans then I am sorry I cannot provide them to you for they are in these temples, but someday I will god willing if i become a published historian:) There is apparently an inscription at the Chitrakut temple saying that they got the grant from Au ….

    But that is not my point. And I also agree that this was a period of communal polarisation, but all I want to say is that like the current Indian govt he had to take both the sides. He was a politician first and foremost. I certainly do not believe that the British ‘divided’ us. My point is that he did both the things and we are being stupid by just piling up evidence for both the sides. We need to ask new questions to this evidence and no one is doing that. Its just black or white. And at least I am unconvinced by this approach.

    Maybe we need to look closely at the reasons given behind these acts (both destruction/grants). Maybe we need to look at the role of local/larger politics. Maybe we need to know what being a Hindu or a Muslim means and how it is changing. If it was about being a Muslim then how do we explain Afghan hostility to him through out India and in NWFP? Why did he conquer the Sultanate of Golconda and other Muslim petty kings in the Deccan? A lot of the Jats who rebelled against him were Muslim as well. I have no answers but at least people can try.

    ***

    Also just to remind you Au … had more Hindus as his mansabdars (both in absolute numbers and also by proportion) than any other previous Mughal emperor. Check this in

    M Athar Ali, Apparatus of Empire.

    http://www.albalagh.net/general/0093.shtml says
    “A stone inscription in the historic Balaji or Vishnu Temple, located north of Chitrakut Balaghat, still shows that it was commissioned by the Emperor himself.”

    ***

    This is from Eaton’s second essay —

    Such ideas continued in force into the reign of Aurangzeb (1658-1707), whose orders to local officials in Banaras in 1659 clearly indicate that Brahmin temple functionaries there, together with the temples at which they officiated, merited state protecti on. “In these days,” he wrote in February of that year,

    information has reached our court that several people have, out of spite and rancour, harassed the Hindu residents of Banaras and nearby places, including a group of Brahmins who are in charge of ancient temples there. These people want to remove those B rahmins from their charge of temple-keeping, which has caused them considerable distress. Therefore, upon receiving this order, you must see that nobody unlawfully disturbs the Brahmins or other Hindus of that region, so that they might remain in their t raditional place and pray for the continuance of the Empire.9

    By way of justifying this order, the emperor noted: “According to the Holy Law (shari`at) and the exalted creed, it has been established that ancient temples should not be torn down.” On this point, Aurangzeb aligned himself with the theory and th e practice of Indo-Muslim ruling precedent. But then he added, “nor should new temples be built” – a view that broke decisively from Akbar’s policy of permitting his Rajput officers to build their own temple complexes in Mughal territory. Although this o rder appears to have applied only to Banaras – many new temples were built elsewhere in Mughal India during Aurangzeb’s reign – one might wonder what prompted the emperor’s anxiety in this matter.

    ***
    Also, I hope these people are right (in your quotes above). I have reason not to trust them coz –
    1) their paintings were ‘inspired’ and there is no reason to add them to the exhibition beyond the firmans.
    2) how did they get hold of these firmans coz they are not allowed to be taken out of whatever archive they are in. I believe they are talking about the text/translations of the firmans.
    3)i am unclear as to what they mean by ‘exhibits’.

    But even if they have 10 firmans it is at least good archive work. However, I am sure some secularist will do the same exercise soon for grants and they will come up with some firmans(coz there is no dearth of Au’s firmans in archives and i am sure at least 5-10 will be about grants) , which will yet again prove the uselessness of piling up evidence.

  13. Patriot says:

    Very interesting and absorbing discussion so far.

    I have a different and lateral question – If Aurangzeb was indeed so tolerant, how is it that Shivaji and his marathas rebelled during this time? Keep in mind that his father used to be an official of the Mughal empire, through one of its vassals before the rule of Aurangzeb. And, the marathas were loyal soldiers of the empire, prior to Aurangzeb.

    If indeed, he was a tolerant ruler, like his forefathers, how is that a non-entity like Shivaji managed to generate so much ground level support to establish an independent maratha kingdom, to the extent that Aurangzeb felt compelled to finally come down personally to crush the Marathas.

    The ironic part is that not only did Aurangzeb fail (and he died a broken man near modern day Aurangabad) in crushing the marathas despite capturing Shambhaji, but he also laid the seeds for the eventual fall of the mughal empire. To the extent that 100 years later, the mughal emperor ruled “delhi” under the protection of the Peshwas.

    Makes you think?

  14. Bharat says:

    Read the following online free books (thoroughly researched books with facts), you will become an authority on Muslim invasions, barbarism, destructions, and rule in Bharat (India)

    1. Heroic Hindu Resistance to Muslim Invaders
    (636 AD to 1206 AD)
    by SITA RAM GOEL
    Voice of India, New Delhi
    http://www.voiceofdharma.com/books/hhrmi/

    2. THE STORY OF ISLAMIC IMPERIALISM IN INDIA
    by SITA RAM GOEL
    Voice of India, New Delhi
    http://www.voiceofdharma.com/books/siii/

    3. The Legacy of Muslim Rule in India
    by K.S. Lal
    Voice of India, New Delhi
    http://www.voiceofdharma.com/books/tlmr/

    4. Muslim Slave System in Medieval India
    by K.S. Lal
    Aditya Prakashan, New Delhi
    http://www.voiceofdharma.com/books/mssmi/

    5. THE STORY OF ISLAMIC IMPERIALISM IN INDIA
    by SITA RAM GOEL
    Voice of India, New Delhi
    http://www.voiceofdharma.com/books/siii/

    6. Indian Muslims Who Are They
    by K.S. Lal
    Voice of India, New Delhi
    http://voiceofdharma.org/books/imwat/

    7. Muslim Separatism Causes and Consequences
    by Sita Ram Goel
    Voice of India, New Delhi
    http://www.voiceofdharma.com/books/muslimsep/

    8. Theory and Practice of Muslim State in India
    by K. S. Lal
    Aditya Prakashan, New Delhi
    http://www.voiceofdharma.com/books/tpmsi/

    9. JIZYAH AND THE SPREAD OF ISLAM
    by HARSH NARAIN
    Voice of India, New Delhi
    http://www.voiceofdharma.com/books/jtsi/index.htm

    10. JIHÃD THE ISLAMIC DOCTRINE OF PERMANENT WAR
    by Suhas Majumdar
    Voice of India, New Delhi
    http://voiceofdharma.org/books/jihad/

    11. Understanding Islam through Hadis Religious Faith or Fanaticism?
    Ram Swarup
    Exposition Press, Smithtown, New York
    http://www.voiceofdharma.com/books/uith/

    Please share and forward to others, for the greater cause of our nation and dharma.

    Bharat
    =====

  15. B Shantanu says:

    @ Patriot and Bharat: Thank you for your comments and links.

    ***

    @Vikas: Thanks for your response but you appear to have ignored my questions/points raised in #3, #5, #6 and #7.

    On to some other points:

    1. B N Pande’s book: In the light of what I have mentioned in my post (above) and the analysis by Dr Koenraad Elst, I would seriously doubt the quality of research that has gone into the book. Also is it not strange that it is being reprinted under a “new” author’s name?
    What about copyright issues? What about royalties? and who is Md Shujaat?

    2. “…all I want to say is that like the current Indian govt he had to take both the sides…
    Bad comparison. The current Indian government (and I am no supporter) for all its faults is a democratically elected government. To compare Sonia Gandhi and/or Manmohan Singh to Aurangzeb is a stretch – don’t you think?

    3. “He was a politician first and foremost.
    Really? Is it that simple? That does not explain the numerous atrocities he committed. It does not explain the cruelties he inflicted. It does not explain his divisive policies and his strong antipathy towards Hindus.

    4. “I certainly do not believe that the British ‘divided’ us…”
    Off topic…thats not being discussed here. I did not say that.

    5. “…My point is that he did both the things and we are being stupid by just piling up evidence for both the sides…”
    What precisely do you mean by saying “both the things”? Did he *build* temples as well as demolished them? You made the same statement in your comment before and I requested you to provide links or references (see my point #3 in the earlier comment). You have not done that yet. In any case, why is it “stupid to pile up evidence”? and where is the “pile of evidence” of his building temples? Please enlighten us.

    6. “…We need to ask new questions to this evidence and no one is doing that…
    No one is stopping you (or anyone else) from doing that.

    7. “…Maybe we need to look closely at the reasons given behind these acts…I have no answers but at least people can try.
    Again, neither me, nor anyone here nor Koenraad Elst nor Francois Gautier is asking people to just shut up and agree…If you think things are not what they seem to be, show us the evidence and make the case.

    8.”…Also just to remind you Au … had more Hindus as his mansabdars (both in absolute numbers and also by proportion) than any other previous Mughal emperor.
    Please don’t repeat your points. You already mentioned this in your comment dated April 7th and I responded to it in my comment dated the same day.

    9. I find it interesting that you are relying on sites like http://www.albalagh.net/general/0093.shtml as your primary evidence. See the extract from this site in the post script to my comment made earlier today (above).

    10. The extract from Prof Eaton’s essay does not disprove that Aurangzeb ordered the demolition of numerous temples. As an example of the other side of the picture, have a look at the epigraphic evidence presented here: http://www.voiceofdharma.com/books/htemples2/ch6.htm

    11. “….I hope these people are right (in your quotes above). I have reason not to trust them…
    The “people” in the quote above is Francois Gautier – a journalist and writer of repute. If you don’t “trust” him, please challenge the evidence publicly – with counter evidence – not poor arguments around “trust”. By the way, please share with us your reason for not to trust him.

    12. “…I am sure some secularist will do the same exercise soon for grants and they will come up with some firmans…
    We will wait for the day.

    13.”…which will yet again prove the uselessness of piling up evidence.”
    Great! So that stops the discussion then!

  16. B Shantanu says:

    Many of you might enjoy reading this article by Arun Shourie (although it was written about 10 years ago): The Litmus Test of Whether Your History is Secular

    Its conclusion is worth reproducing:

    “And this is the point : the litmus test of secularist writing is whether you are prepared to stand up for Aurangzeb or not.”

    See also: If You Let Facts Interfere You Lack Party Spirit which has some entries from the Akhbarat of Aurangzeb regarding demolition of temples.

    Finally, have a look at a review of Arun Shourie’s book, “EMINENT HISTORIANS: Their Technology, Their Line, Their Fraud” by C. J. S. Wallia at http://www.indiastar.com/wallia19.html

  17. Vikas says:

    *** COMMENT COMBINED ***

    I still repeat that all the temples mentioned above have the firmans of AU … with them. And if you want me to show them to you then I ask you to show all the firmans you have mentioned to me. Thats a fair deal. You trust Pande, I will trust your Gautier.
    No I dont think it is a stretch to compare Au and Sonia/Vajpayee . Any state or any organisation in which more than one community invests is bound to be of this nature.
    And I will talk about the British if I want to.
    Evidence as I said, has been produced in the UP High Court. Read Pande’s book. What you are saying is Elst’s criticism applies for only one case.
    AND WHY DONT YOU TRY TO EXPLAIN TO ME WHY AU… HAD MORE HINDUS AS MANSABDARS THAN HIS PREDECESSORS? IS NOT THAT INCONSISTENT WITH HIS TEMPLE DESTRUCTION.

    Also, I have no respect for Arun Shourie as a human being or as an intellectual. I am an OBC. He doesnt like us. I will not respond to his nonsense.

    Anyways. You are taking this too personally. Thanks for engaging with me. You win. I concede defeat.

    ***
    You win my friend. Best of luck.

  18. v.c.krishnan says:

    Dear Shantanu,
    Outstanding reply and excellent links. Let us hope the world awakens to the truth.
    THANK YOU SHRI: GAUTIER and SHRI: SHANTANU for removing one more cobweb from my mind and awakening me.
    Really Sir, SATYAMEVA JAYATE!!
    Regards,
    vck

  19. B Shantanu says:

    @ Vikas: Please don’t thank me…we are fellow travellers on the journey to discover the “truth”…and I have not “won” and you have not “lost”.

    There are no losers and winners in this quest…

    And no, I have not taken this personally. You will always be welcome on this blog to share your thoughts and views – as long as they are within the parameters of a reasoned conversation (although I may not agree with them!).
    Anyways, lets call time-out on this.

    From your comments, I am assuming that you have a deep interest in History.

    If that is true, there is one particular post on my blog on which I would really like your opinion and views. The link is here: Taj Mahal: The Biggest Whitewash in Indian History?

    Whenever you have some time, could you please have a look and share your thoughts?

    Thanks.

    ***

    @ vck: Thanks for your kind words…

  20. *** COMMENT COMBINED ***

    Whether Aurangzeb was right or wrong – can be a matter of debate, but there is no doubt that he was doing exactly what a good muslim should do as laid down in Koran and examples set by Prophet Mohammed himself. No wonder muslims hold him in high esteem.

    ***
    Aurangzeb also buried alive the two sons of Guru Gobind Singh when they refused to embrace islam

  21. B Shantanu says:

    On a related note, please have a look at The myth of history – an excellent article on History as “taught” in Pakistan by Prof Shaida Kazi, Mar 2005 (in particular, Myth # 4)

    Also have a look at this wikipedia entry on Pakistan Studies which mentions how, “...under Aurangzeb the ‘Pakistan spirit gathered in strength’ (and) his death ‘weakened the Pakistan spirit’…

  22. s.srinivas says:

    Jagmohan Singh Khurmi is absolutely right.

    JL Mehta, Reader in History, Punjab University, Chandigarh, in his book- Advanced Study in the History of Medieval India, published by Sterling Publishers Private Limited, Bangalore.( Reprint of Second revised and enlarged edition in 1989). writes-“ It is now a part of history that during the very lifetime of the prophet, the Jews and Christians of Medina, who had in all humility accepted their inferior status as zimmis and begun to pay jaziya to the first Muslim state proved irksome to the true believers and the prophet was constrained to turn them out of medina. Umar I (634-44 A.D.), the famous of the pious caliphs, following in the footprints of the prophet, expelled the Jews and Christians from the whole of Arabia, thus converting the homeland of the Arabs into a true dar ul lslam. The prophet and the pious caliphs had thereby set the example of religious intolerance towards their non-Muslim subjects which was treated as an ideal by the orthodox Muslim rulers.

    Muhammed bin Qasim who laid the foundation of the Muslim rule in Sind and Multan (711-12), secured the status of zimmis for his Hindu subjects from the caliph and accorded protection to their lives and property on the receipt of jaziya. Obviously this step was necessitated as a matter of political expediency because in spite of the loss of independence, the Hindu masses in general offered dogged resistance to forced conversions. It was physically impossible for Qasim and handful of his Arab followers to compel the vanquished multitude ‘to choose between Islam and death’, particularly when they were armed to teeth. Recognition of Hindu idolaters as zimmis by Qasim proved to be a momentous decision because such a concession had earlier been denied to the ‘idolaters of Arabia. His example was followed by the turko-afghan rulers of Delhi in their dealing with the Hindus. (Page 296-97)

    In his book The Sultanate of Delhi (Publishers-Shiva Lal Agarwala & Co, Agra, 1995 edition), Dr. Ashirbadi Lal Srivastava, writes about Ala-ud din Khilji, “He consulted the famous qazi, Mughis-ud-din of Bayana about the position which the Hindus should be allowed to enjoy in his kingdom. The qazi replied: “The Hindus are designated in the Law as payers of tribute (kharaj guzar), and when the revenue officer demands silver from them, they should without question and with all humility and respect, tender gold. If the officer throws dirt into their mouth, they must without reluctance, open their mouth wide to receive it. By these acts of degradation are shown the extreme obedience of the zimmis, the glorification of the true faith. God himself orders them to be humiliated (as He says, till they pay the jizya) with the hands and are humbled………the prophet has commanded us to slay them, plunder them and to make them captive…….no other authority except the great Imam (Abu Hanifa), whose faith we follow, has sanctioned the imposition of the jizya on the Hindus.” According to all other theologians, the rule for the Hindu was “either death or Islam.” (Page number 150-51). Hence as a true Muslim Aurangzeb followed the footsteps of his prophet and the shariat.

  23. Naresh says:

    Hi All,

    I am starting on a project to create a documentary on how the TMMK leader is spreading lies about Kashi Vishwanath temple.
    I also want to bust the myth of an alleged rape held in Kashi Vishwanath which was the reason Aurangzeb demolished the temple.

    As the first step, I want the following if you can help me with it.

    – Video clips of the TMMK minister talking about this issue.
    – Newspaper clips
    – Any audio/visual/written clippings about anybody talking on this issue.

    Thank you all very much for your help. I need help from people in Varanasi who can help me with video clippings of the temple, the adjacent masjid and the ghats. I am writing the script for the documentary. I need all the help I can.

    Naresh

    Pl. send an email to: wolverine2k AT indiatimes.com OR wolverine2k AT rediffmail.com

  24. prince of angels says:

    …hi all..

    ….the blatant myths against muslim rulers in india is not something new….this false concept as a result of jealousy and hatred had always been there in right wing hindu minds from the very begining of medieval period but could not vent out as the rulers were muslims….now they got the chance so they are engaged in writing as much falsehood as possible against pious muslim rulers….they will always give references from books written by right wing political historians or some ill informed and unfamous westerners……why not give references from muslim writers and books of world history….if there is any mughal who is world famous it is aurangzeb….he was a great ruler and a powerful emperor….

    …if he could had been so much against non muslims….why there were marathas , rajputs and even sikhs in his military….think over it…

    ….if he was so much against non muslims….why did jaisingh rejected the offer and advise of shivaji, when shivaji tried to bribe him…..and thus shivaji had to suffer a crushing defeat from the aurangzebs force under the commandership of diler khan and jaisingh….as obvoious, coz it was the first battle when shivaji fought face to face like a man….otherwise he was helpless against his insticnt of being a “mountainous rat”…

    ….its just “one more” cheap and shameless attempt to present aurangzeb-shivaji conflict as a hindu-muslim conflict….giving rise to communal sentiments…vryone should remember that as aurangzeb had non muslim ppl in his army….even shivaji had some muslims in his army….

    …the greatest obstacle coming in the way of advancement of india is the wrong notion being tried to spread far and wide by right wing fundamentalists to gain power, name and fame….matters are distorted , fabricated and presented in a concocted manner to divide the country….never had been hatred was the reason of a great civilisation….nations always rise on the foundation of understanding , brotherhood , love , womens respect and discipline. Hating and alienating certain section of society on communal lines will serve no purpouse of any constructive task…

  25. Well ! Prince of Angels, you say ……why not give references from muslim writers and books of world history….

    For your kind information all the records for Hindu-persecution, their mass executions, their rapes and temple demolitions have come from histories written by Muslim conquerors and invaders themselves ! Today most sensible muslims (like you) are worried about these things, but back then when (your) jihad against kufr was at its full swing these ‘heroic exploits’ were put on paper by the officials scribes of muslims themselves with great glee and pride !

    Muslim apologetics far more clever than you have already lost the battle against this pain-in-their-ass evidence ! First they tried first to hide these records, but failed, then they tried to misinterpret them to water them down but failed again. These days the standard trick they have brought out at last is :

    …Caution must be exercised in accepting the narratives provided by medieval writers about the exploits of kings, including their feats of temple destruction. Most historians were employees of the royal courts, and they tended to exaggerate the exploits of the kings in order to present them as great champions of Islam

    Need I say anything more ?

    Clearly you are not in touch with what is going on around you.

    And as far as non-muslims serving under Aurangzeb are concerned that is a fact. But then even Hitler had a number of jews recruited in both his military and non-military staff ! Now can we argue that the presence of these jews should be accepted as a proof of Hitler’s love for jews and his wide-spread genocide of jews be overlooked merely due to this? In fact there is evidence that even Akbar, who is projected as a most generous and ‘secularist’ ruler, used hindu soldiers merely as cannon-fodder. Once, in a battlefield, when one of Akbar’s subordinates asked him that during the attack how should they distinguish the hindu mercenaries form the regular muslim soldiers, the great moughal replied “ Don’t worry they are infidels after-all ! Both ways you will be dispatching the infidels to hell !”

    And who wants to divide the country ? Hindu right-wing ?

    Who wanted a separate nation and snatched it in such a horrible manner back in 1947 ? Hindu right-wing ?

  26. prince of angels says:

    …..hello khurmi…

    …ur comments contain a typical hatred against minorities ….as is obvious seems hurt and jealous over the past events of indians medieval histroy which may be unfortunately a nighmare for persons like you and difficult to overcome the false egos and prejudices…

    1. …as far as chronicles of history are concerned….you are totally misinformed if you say it is recorded by muslim writers….(except a few that too of foreign origin like alberuni)…but for the sake of argument even if i agree with you….try to understand that India was an islamic country at that time….so Indian Govt. was just trying to enforce the countries law and order on the people….like any educated Govt. will do for the welfare of the country…

    2….india was an islamic state at that time….but today india is a secular country…so dont make wrong comparisons…you cant extend the facts of past and try to decorate the events of that age with todays age…
    just imagine the residents of orissa today asking for revenge from the people of delhi or bihar….coz once upon a time somwhere around 250BC the ruler of magadh (asoka)…plundered and destroyed their state….it sounds utter gibberish….so if at all some muslim rulers once upon a time caused chaos in india….does that mean today the same should be done on minorities or instead of learning some lesson, India would once again experience the same fate…. if at all some muslim rulers did wrong why todays educated indian wanna repeat the same on a particular section…isnt this hypocrisy?

    3….comparing hitler with Aurangzeb is misjudgement….Hitler was a racist , and fascist…Aurangzeb was neither of the two but a pious personality….Hitler was against jews….Aurangzeb just tried to put law and order in the country and crushed down rebels who opposed him as any ruler will do then be it muslim or nonmuslim…. He just tried to implement the then countries laws…and he didnt carried any holocaust against any section of the society…..dont try to shade the past with communal colours…

    4. …as far as plunder and loot are concerned…are these terms so alien to non muslim rulers…..Asoka , Shivaji ( he looted caravans and his expedition to surat is famous) etc….this was but a strategy of war of kings and monarchs of imperialistic age of histroy…

    5. who wanted to divide the country…ofcourse hindu right wing….not from 1947 but since ancient ages of indian history….making a kshatriya fight with another….inviting one king to defeat other king….raising one king to defeat other…dividing the society in groups and castes…why always foreign rulers could make it so easy when it came to india…from time immemorial…how a separate nation came into existence???…coz of the division policy of right wing fundamentalists….who assasinated apostle of peace (Gandhi)???…it was just the result of hatred…reason was just HATRED….the policy of divide and rule was not something started by britishers but was learnt by britishers by the indigenous …hindu fundamentalists are often notorious of causing assasinations in disguise…sometimes in the garb of muslims sometimes sikh…this type of shrewd and treacherous
    policy was never adopted by muslims…

    6. …remember HATRED is the cause of only destruction and no one benefits from this emotion…turn the pages of histroy you will come to know ….nations professing hatred always crumbled to dust…

  27. *** COMMENT COMBINED ***

    I am not against the contemporary muslims, only against Aurangzeb, it is you who is associating Aurangzeb with them by making his reputation a matter of honour for the ordinary muslims.

    And it’s high time you step out of his majority-against-minority alibi. There are other minorities like Parsi and jews but they never complain, it’s only religion of peace that demands to be handled with kid-gloves. As far as myself baiting the minority accusation – I myself belong to a minority ( I am Sikh )

    Of course Aurangzeb deserves to be compared with Hitler. Where as Hitler was following a cruel and inhuman ideology called Nazism, Aurangzeb was following an equally inhuman ideology called islam. Both made imperial demands. Both have left claw marks so deep that it will take centuries to heal.

    No one is trying to prove that Ashoka was not a blood thirsty tyrant but you are trying to prove that Aurangzeb was as innocent as a choir-boy. Ashoka was an isolated and rare case, but Aurangzeb is just one of the long line of criminals. By killing and destroying life and property Ashoka was not fulfilling any religious canons of Hindu or Buddhist religions, but Aurangzeb was fulfilling the requirements as laid down in Koran and following the examples set by Mohammed. Ashoka is not dangerous because no one is trying to defend his crimes, but Aurangzeb is dangerous because there are people ( like you ) who, knowing all about his cold-blooded, inhuman and brutal doings, are still on his side !

    That is why Aurangzeb is dangerous.

    Do you really believe that
    “who wanted to divide the country…ofcourse hindu right wing….not from 1947 but since ancient ages of indian history… “ and “…hindu fundamentalists are often notorious of causing assasinations in disguise… “

    I used to think that islam is just an errant ideology, and critics like Ali Sina are stepping out of line by calling it ‘a disease of mind’ or a ‘defect of human mind’ but after reading your ‘views’ I think they might be very much right !

    ***

    Of course, hatred is the cause of destruction : I am glad to learn that you are aware of such subtle realities of life ! Don’t you think you should pass on this discovery of yours to your co-religionists in Pakistan and Bangladesh ! They may not know it !

  28. B Shantanu says:

    @prince: You seem to have completely ignored my earlier advice to you to READ before you write.

    I am referring to your comment dt. Apr 16, which you start with:

    “…….the blatant myths against muslim rulers in india is not something new…”

    If you would have spent even a minute reading the post before chipping in, you would have realised that the “blatant myth” that I had exposed was *actually* a myth and Aurangzeb had indeed demolished the Kashi Vishwanath temple..

    The *new* thing was the expose not the earlier cover-up.

    “…this false concept as a result of jealousy and hatred had always been there in right wing hindu minds…”

    What “false concept” are you talking about?

    “…if there is any mughal who is world famous it is aurangzeb….he was a great ruler and a powerful emperor…”

    Great…where did you study your history, I wonder?

    “…if he could had been so much against non muslims….why there were marathas , rajputs and even sikhs in his military….think over it…”

    READ my comments (and those of others) before jumping into any discussion…

    “…it was the first battle when shivaji fought face to face like a man….otherwise he was helpless against his insticnt of being a “mountainous rat”…”

    Again, I would love to know the source of your “knowledge” of history..

    “..ts just “one more” cheap and shameless attempt to present aurangzeb-shivaji conflict as a hindu-muslim conflict…”

    What are you talkinkg about? Where did Shivaji come in the picture?

    “…the greatest obstacle coming in the way of advancement of india is the wrong notion being tried to spread far and wide by right wing fundamentalists…”

    Stick to the topic.

    “…who wanted to divide the country…ofcourse hindu right wing….not from 1947 but since ancient ages of indian history…..making a kshatriya fight with another….inviting one king to defeat other king….raising one king to defeat other…dividing the society in groups and castes…

    What does Hindu right-wing have to do with this?

    “…why always foreign rulers could make it so easy when it came to india…from time immemorial…”

    Again, READ a little bit about India’s history…It will make you a wiser person.

    “how a separate nation came into existence???…coz of the division policy of right wing fundamentalists…who assasinated apostle of peace (Gandhi)???…”

    Stick to the topic and be careful about what you write.

    Avoid commenting on things you dont know about…your ignorance shines through.

    ***

    Here is my response to some of the points made in comment dt Apr 19th:

    “…India was an islamic country at that time….so Indian Govt. was just trying to enforce the countries law and order on the people….like any educated Govt. will do for the welfare of the country…

    ” Indian government? you cannot be serious…and you mean to say whayt Aurangzeb was doing was for the welfare of the country?…how can atrocities on the majority community be in the interest of the country and for the welfare of India?

    Jagmohan has already pointed out the fallacy of comparing Ashok with Aurangzeb…please read a little bit of history before you get into arguments like these

    “… or instead of learning some lesson, India would once again experience the same fate…”

    Is that a threat?

    Finally, as regards point #5, next time you make wild statements/points like this, I will delete it without even bothering to explain

    ***

    You appear to be back to your old ways of making statements without justification and/or evidence…mostly to provoke a discussion.

    While I strive to keep this platform open (in the spirit of freedom of expression, such freedom cuts both ways ( as I am sure you realise) and it comes with accountability and responsibility.

    If you cannot exercise common sense and restraint, you really should not be wasting your time here..

    So please be warned (again) that I will be forced to summarily delete your comments if you continue in the same vein..

    P.S. I find it amazing that you can sympathise with someone like Aurangzeb

    ***

    Many of you will find these two links interesting:

    Excellent article on History as “taught” in Pakistan by Prof Shaida Kazi, Mar 2005

    and this wikipedia entry on Pakistan Studies

  29. prince of angels says:

    *** COMMENT DELETED ***

    *** NOTE by MODERATOR ***

    @ prince: I am deleting your comment as it essentially comprises remarkably naive statements, unsubstantiated claims and is seriously off topic.

    The only one line that was relevant to this discussion was (point #8):

    …The demonising part (of Aurangzeb) are only fabricated “myths” and “fairy tales” which carry no basis as you know hindus are well known in creating myths and fairy tales…

    That sentence is a give away. It tells me that you thrive on making outrageous statements (classic troll behaviour) and it reveals that you have no respect or regard for other people’s time, ideas or thoughts. If you had, at the very least, you would have bothered to read my post before jumping into the discussion here. If you DID read my post, please tell us why you believe that what I (and others) have written above re. the demolition of Kashi Vishwanath is a “myth”.

    You have also chosen to completely IGNORE my questions and comments above (dt Apr 22). That suggests a callous disregard for other people’s views.

    And I can see that instead of engaging in a reasonable, sane discussion backed by evidence and facts, you persist in pushing across your “point of view” completely oblivious to what is being discussed.

    Frankly, you are now beginning to annoy me with your “clever” comments and remarks and I have reached the limit of my patience with you.

    I am putting a ban (once again – and this time for longer) on your comments/remarks. Pl. do not bother to post anything here for the next several weeks because I am going to delete it without any explanation and/or cause.

    This ban on your comments will remain in force until I decide to revoke it and/or I may decide to keep it in force indefinitely.

    Good luck in your quest for truth…and if you are really concerned for India and our future, I hope at least you will continue to read my other posts and discussions.

    Jai Hind, Jai Bharat.

  30. Saurav Basu says:

    *** COMMENT COMBINED ***

    Dear Friends

    I wish you had come across my reasonably well researched articles regarding Aurangzeb……

    Within a month i will be coming out with a short paper on Aurangzeb and the rape of Indian History with more citations and references

    http://azygos.sulekha.com/blog/post/2007/07/aurangzeb-allah-s-chosen-warrior.htm
    http://azygos.sulekha.com/blog/post/2007/07/aurangzeb-allah-s-chosen-warrior-part-2.htm
    http://azygos.sulekha.com/blog/post/2007/07/aurangzeb-allah-s-chosen-warrior-2.htm

    If you are interested to link up any of my articles to this site, do let me know:

    Regards,
    Saurav Basu [nick: Azygos]

    ***

    @moderator

    It is true that Aurangzeb issued a few firmans for building new temples…But that was in 1659 when he actually required the support of Hindu nobles in the war of succession against Dara Shikoh.

    Of course, Richard Eaton even denies that Aurangzeb issued a firman for destruction of temples….according to him, it meant they were “subejct to demolition”

    Too much of text torturing……..

  31. B Shantanu says:

    Dear Saurav: Thanks very much for your comment and links.

    Would be very happy to put your paper up here when it is ready.

    Agree wholeheartedly with your comment re. “text torturing”!

  32. Kalyan Vishwanathan says:

    This is important work – the nailing of the lies told by Secularist and Marxist Historians, who it appears, do not care for any original research – Instead, settle for re-writing what the British wrote, which in turn is a re-write of other lies made up in prior times.

    I hope a new culture of refuting this body work, is begun in earnest in India, and cleanses our soil and atmosphere of the trash that has overcome it.

  33. Palaniappan says:

    Excellent article. I remember reading this ridiculous story even in an article in the Dawn, a respected newspaper in Pakistan. I’ve noticed this morbid (pseudo)secular slant to sanitise history and attempts to declare barbarians like Aurangzeb is a champion of the Hindus.

    These kinds of things are happening because of low quality historians aka ‘distorians’. They attempted the Aryan Invasion Theory which fell on their face. This story if unchecked will go
    into the next historical blunderbook called ‘Saint Aurangzeb – Champion of Women’s Rights’.

  34. Ramesh N says:

    Aurangzeb, as he was according to Mughal Records (based on Historical Research and Documents provided by the Bikaner Museum Archives)

    View online exhibition at http://according-to-mughal-records.blogspot.com/

    He was a tyrant in the truest sense… and even today, there are towns and roads named after him in India like the posh Aurangzeb Road in New Delhi.

  35. vinay says:

    Good discussion, thanks for the research effort put in by all folks. If I have to speak my heart out, “Aurangazeb Is Guilty”.

  36. Banwari Lal Sharma says:

    Sriyut,
    You are a great hindu and your ideas are also grat. In the secular constitution and secular ruling political parties the future of hindu is not safe. All the benefits and plannes for Muslims only. Muslim is not a minor community as per costitution. Muslim terrarism is on very high level they make blast on every maga city of india. The secular parties are not with Hindu community. We can not get one Inch land at kashmir but muslim captured all the kashmir.

    Banwari Lal Sharma

  37. rahul mukherjee says:

    your article is a good piece and a well researched one ,thanks for shunning such false story with logic and study,good work.

    *** Note by Shantanu ***

    Thanks for your kind words Rahul but they should be directed to Dr Koenraad Elst whose work I quoted above.


  38. Jodha Akbar shown on 15th August on television…. I hope they are not potraying Akbar an Indian National Hero

    The released fictional fairy tale movie, “Jodha Akbar” has stirred the hornet’s nest by depicting a period in Indian History when Mughals ruled India. It has started many debates, and has led to many protests across India. The debates and protests pertained to the supposedly misrepresented history, as one cannot tell for sure whether Akbar did or did not marry a rajput princess named Jodhabai. But these protests and debates missed another important point, perhaps which is more important than any other debatable issues about this movie, the portrayal of Akbar as India’s emporer and for that matter the mughal rule itself.

    The following paragraph appears in the Indian History article on wikipedia.

    ” Liberal Muslim kings are also a part of Indian pride. Akbar was a powerful Mughal emperor who admired Hinduism, forged familial and political bonds with Hindu Rajput kings, and developed for the first time in medieval India an environment of religious freedom. Akbar undid most forms of religious discrimination, and invited the participation of wise Hindu ministers and kings, and even religious scholars in his court. In his reign, India was politically powerful, prosperous and its common people secure.”

    Akbar was not just an Indian Muslim King. In fact, he was not Indian at all. I do not understand why our history books eulogize him as a great Indian ruler.In the movie Jodha akbar(which is a mediocre movie, to say the least),the director Ashutosh Gowarikar has made miserable attempts to show him as an “Indian” and in the process has twisted history.

    Akbar’s grandfather, Babur, a ruler of a small central asian state, brought the Mughal tribe to India as a mercenary army. His father, Humayun, hardly stayed in India, as he was exiled initially, and died shortly after he finally managed to recapture power.Akbar, who was incidently born on Indian soil, was brought up in Afghanistan.It is very difficult to comprehend how he can be described as an Indian.

    By that standard, even Rudyard Kipling would be a better Indian than Akbar, or for that matter any british who was born and brought up India at the fag end of the British Raj, with 3-4 generations of his family living in India, taking 150 years of British presence in India into account. There could be many examples of such British families.

    I am not sure how Akbar could have developed love and affection for India as his motherland. His feelings at the best can be described as being similar to that of an owner towards his/her property, which should not be mistaken with feelings of genuine affection.

    His grandfather, Babur, has written the following in Baburnama,

    “Hindustan is a place of little charm. There is no beauty in its people, no graceful social intercourse, no poetic talent or understanding, no etiquette, nobility or manliness. The arts and crafts have no harmony or symmetry. There are no good horses, meat, grapes, melons or other fruit. There is no ice, cold water, good food or bread in the markets. There are no baths and no madrasas. There are no candles, torches or candlesticks.”

    While , the following inscription has been carved on his tomb in Kabul,

    “If there is a paradise on earth, it is this, it is this, it is this!”

    One cannot blame him for this, as India was not his motherland, central asia was. How can we expect a dramatic transition in just two generations? Babur, Akbar and all the mughals were foreign aggressors who conquered and ruled our land, but they never belonged here.
    It would be like calling Mountbatten, a great “Indian” governer general.

    The myths of the benevolence of Akbar as a ruler, or how great ruler he proved to be, and how liberal he was with hindus or other Indian communal denominations need to be analysed in historical context. True, he had abolished jiziya, and had hindu ministers and generals in his court.

    Even Aurangzeb had Hindu generals like Mirza Raja Jaisingh, who commanded mighty armies. (Mirza Raje Jaisingh was dispatched to eliminate Shivaji maharaj and swarajya in Maharashtra. He was killed by aurangzeb by treachery.)
    But that doesn’t make him a tolerant ruler, does it?(Assuming all agree that he was not. One must not wonder, if tommorrow some movie or book glorifies him as a tolerant and great “Indian” ruler.)

    Lord Bentinck abolished the Sati by law and introduced reform.Queen Victoria’s proclamation, after the 1857 uprising, promised all goodies to Indians like non-interference in religious matters, no further usurption of princely states, and lots more. And there was no violation of Queen Victoria’s proclamation by the british, in subsequent years.

    But that doesn’t translate into ” Queen Victoria and the British Raj: The tolerant, just, great “Indian” empress and her Indian empire”. Does it?

    Akbar did try very much to destroy all native opposition the Mughals, notably from the rajputs. Some wavered, and sided with him, and they managed to survive, which is no glory. Many great fighters like Rana Pratap refused to surrender their independance and honour to foriegners and fought to martrydom. Akbar, after many conquests had ordered mass executions, a fact little represented.

    So how do we describe Akbar? May be a shade better that despots like Aurangzeb. But Great Indian Emporer, never.

    Alternative analysis of his so called tolerant and liberal nature can be had as follows. Humayun had just managed to wrest back the control of Delhi, when he died. Mughal power in India at that point of time was new, weak and vulnerable. Continuation of the agenda of his holy fighter or Ghazi(fighters of Islam, and destroyers of pagan idol worshippers) lineage of Chengiz khan and Taimurlang was not going to be easy. It is reasonable to beleive that he was proud of his ancestry, beleived to be of Chengiz khan and Taimur lang, all of whom were champions of militant Islam and destroyers of non-believers, and aspired to as “great” as all of them.

    But Mughal rule in India was in no shape to allow that. Hence , clever and cunning as he was,Akbar managed to sow divide between the Indian ranks, mainly composed of rajput princes, converted some of them to his side. Those who didn’t join him, were brutally destroyed. To keep those Rajput pillars of the Mughal establishment intact, he had to be seen as a liberal. The rest is history. In case of aurangzeb, he had no need to be liberal, as he had inherited a strong and well entrenched Mughal empire.

    So Akbar, portrayed as a great and liberal emporer, has been acting as a counterweight to other fanatics like Babur, Jehangir and Aurangzeb , so as to manage a “balanced” picture of the Mughal era. This plain and simple twisting and manipulation of history. But it has been done so for years together in this regard, and now we tend to take these things as granted.

    In fact it was no better than the British rule, in fact far worse.

    So now, the important question remains, what was the motive behind such tampering with history, negationism and concealment?

    May be some elements in India still identify themselves with the Mughal rulers. They have a subconscious conviction that they are the rightful owners of the subcontinent and they captured it in the form of Mughal empire.

    Pakistan is the manifestation of the extremist fringe of these elements.

    Just have a look at the website of pakistan government. We all wondered what history is taught in pakistani schools, since it did not exist before 1947. They teach the history of Mughal rule in India. And of Mahmud of Ghazani, mahamud ghori and all those foreign aggressors. They tell their children that their forefathers won India in war. The british took it away, and then Quaid-e- Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah restored some of the glory by creation of pakistan. They teach the philosophy of “Hak se liya pakistan, cheen ke lenge hindustan”( pakistan was earned by right, hindustan would be earned by might) which was their war cry at the time of partition.

    We all would agree that these elements exist in some form or the other, in varying concentration and ideological fervour, in present day India.

    And to appease them, it is imperative that the history of Mughals be presented in positive light, that they be shown as rightful rulers of India. This perverse logic has led to blatant twisting and misrepresentation of history.

    But we nationalists have to stand by Indian honour and treat aggressors as they were. Any glorification of an aggressor would be direct insult to our national honour.

  39. Rama Krishnan says:

    Namaskar
    I thank Lord Rama, for having people like yourself Sir, dedending our age old Santana dharma. God bless you
    Jai Hind
    Dr Rama Krishnan

  40. B Shantanu says:

    Thought-provoking post (an extract from Aavarana) by Sandeep:

    Promoting amity and brotherhood between Hindus and Muslims is as noble as it is urgent. However, it is impossible to build a solid society on a foundation of falsehood. Over 25 Lakh pilgrims visit Varanasi every year. Varanasi is that ultimate and dateless spiritual harbour for every Hindu, the earthly berth of an entire way of life symbolized by the most holy Vishwanath temple. These pilgrims filled with such fervour and longing, each have their own mental image of the Vishwanath temple. However, when they arrive, they are singularly aghast that the object of their devotion doesn’t exist. Once the cynosure of all of Kashi, a huge Mosque towers over not just the temple-site it invasively occupies, but the entire sight of the holy city. Now, these pilgrims return home comprehensively disillusioned, and obviously spread this illusion-shattering news to family, cousins, relatives, neighbours, and friends. With this is the bitter, everyday reality, on what basis do we hope to promote Hindu-Muslim amity?

    – Raziya, a.k.a Lakshmi, in Aavarana (Translation: Mine)

  41. tarique says:

    nikhil pujari , u need to correct ur history lessons . changhez khan was a staunch follower of the shamaist sect of buddhism , and not a muslim.infact , the biggest manslaughter on muslims was caused by him during his invasion of iraq .

  42. Jithendra says:

    All the biography and all the books written by the sardars and other officials of that time clearly mentions that they destroyed the temple not only kashi also many temples including mathura. How can all the sardars and officials lie at the same time. Also everybody knows Aurangzeb is fundamentalist muslim. Prof pandey must and sholuld read those biography and writtings of those officials rather than reading the document. Everybody including a 8 year child which one to trust the “document” or the writtings. Really its tragady of history and cleary shows the unwillingness of prof.Pandey to know the truth.

  43. Seema says:

    “…In the second screen shot from English site, I have again marked two places. First is in the address bar, if you please notice that the webpage is under folder called “Myth” and page it self is called “history.aspx”. An oxymoron. Second one is just to point out colonial hangover where the Mandir itself is calling Holy River Ganga as Ganges.

    There are many Upanishad (which are Shruti), I think at least 15 which talk about God Shiv, notably being Rudra-Hridya upnishad, Rudraksh Jabala Upnishad, etc. which they could have pointed out as reference. Here are some good sources on the same and

    But they chose to quote from Puran, I guess because they are easy to understand. I think in the end looking at the fact the website admins and content creators are using the words Itihaas, Myth and History so interchangeably that it represents the perplexed state of mind of Hindus today, as also pointed out by Mr. Rajiv Malhotra in his talk with Dr. Subramanian Swamy on World Peace and also Hindu Identity. But I never expected it from such a highly respectable and holy institution like Shri Kashi Vishwanath Mandir.

    Everyone is so confused about what is our true history and what is not…Also because of our own ignorance of not saving/preserving the scriptures and of not trying to learn it ourself…”

    *** NOTE by MODERATOR ***

    These are excerpts from an email from Seema.

  44. kumar says:

    Thanks for the research.
    Even a practicing brahmin of varanasi told me the same story. C how ppl r made to believe lies.
    The natives of kasi do not the real story.
    the natives of ahamadabad even rss full timers, do not kno that the jama masjid there was a kali temple.

    The lakhs of pilgrims that visit kasi, come there a bhikaris, to beg from viswanth, they dont bother whether thir god is in a bowdi or in a small pit of a temporary shelter, on the road or in shandas. They only pray him to fulfil their desires, frm where ever he is.
    they never bother for his getting his palace back!

  45. K. Harapriya says:

    Very few nations continue to harbor the statue and monuments erected by their conquerors long after the conquerors depart. Even in the U.S. they pulled down King George’s statue to show their independence from the British even though most of the whites and the predominant culture of the Americans including the language is borrowed from the British.

    What is really funny in India is the hoops we jump through to prove that the muslim conquerors were in any way a civilized, wonderful people, instead of facing up to the fact that Indians were being subject to a holocaust over a period of 800 years.

    There is a saying that those who don’t know their history are condemned to repeat it. Well, that is what we are doing with our accepting a falsified history and allowing our leaders to pander to minorities to our detriment.

  46. Jayadevan says:

    Does it really matter if Aurangazeb or Akbar were tolerant/Hindu-loving? They were kings, and their function was to prey upon the common people. How does it really matter if their tax officials asked us your religion before they looted us? Or their soldiers had a slightly smaller sword for the Muslims? They were parasites who ruled the country primarily for themselves and we bicker about the size of the crumbs that they threw to us dogs? The basic reason of kings’ animosity towards temples was the wealth they had. If the Hindu temples had no idols, I am sure they would have found out some other “reason” for destroying (and looting) them. After all, even the worst despot thinks of posterity.

    The prime factor in all aggression is greed. All glorious conquerors went for the loot. They dreamed up all sorts of excuses, sick jokes like liberating the Holy Land, Lebensraum for the Ubermensch, Ashwamedha, destruction of infidels, the White Man’s burden and so on, ad nauseam. The one common thread was and is – wealth at the destination. Gold, minerals, oil – these are the real gods and that is why we see the great People’s Republic and the greatest democracy in the world sucking up to the murderers in Sudan. Or the Leader of the Free World invading Iraq on the basis of fictitious WMDs.

    So what do we do about this? Call up Aurangazeb’s ghost and ask him why he demolished the temple? Now the dastardly deed is in the past, and we will never be able to trace the bloodlines and find out the great-great grandson of the mason and tell him, “tere dadaji ne mandir toda tha” before we mete out the punishment.

    Any other solution? A healthy compromise? We know the bind the proponents on both sides are. They are like two dogs who have come up much ahead of their packs, and stand snarling at each other, each unable to retreat because the first step backward might encourage the opponent to attack. Now they can only stand snarling at each other, hoping that the rest of the pack comes up to attack. Can they ever dream of compromising?

    Between people who have trust and respect for each other, any sort of compromise and understanding or sacrifice is possible. Unfortunately, we are burdened with professional hate-mongers who will not allow the smallest seedling of understanding to grow in the no man’s land they have created between the communities. I do not really know if these people will be successful in totally eradicating Hindus or Muslims, but they seem to be quite successful at eradication of human(e) beings.

  47. Kaffir says:

    Jayadevan,

    Take your gripe to the “liberal/progressive” Marxist Indian historians who were all-too-eager to whitewash history and brush past misdeeds under the carpet (why?) instead of fostering debate; and even to this day, are uncomfortable discussing these questions about past rulers, and effectively, giving ammunition to the right-wing. If there hasn’t been an open and honest debate on these issues, truth has been whitewashed and any attempts to address such issues result in ad hominem attacks and telling the other party to shut up, then is it any surprise that we are where we are? Have these historians taken any steps to admit their mistakes as they still prop up the dead horse of Aryan Invasion theory, and their careers and “reputation” on top of it? Maybe you should address your concerns to them regarding what they’re doing to promote trust and peace among people, and whether they care more about truth or ideology.

    Armenians even today simmer about Turkish genocide from around 1915, and Turkey does its best to deny it. You seem to have a very lofty view of us humans, a view that’s not supported by facts on ground. Even the book “Nine Hours to Rama” was banned in India and AFAIK is still banned. That tells you all you need to know about the current state of “open debate” in India over history and who controls that debate.

    As an aside, are we humans really that humane? Isn’t that hubris and conceit of the worst kind?

  48. Nanda says:

    Sorry for being off-topic, but I think the truth about Tipu Sultan should also come out. Other than the local people in Mysore and Mandya district, everyone in India seem to think he was a very ‘secular’ ruler. I have the Mysore Gazatteer which describes his ‘sickular’ credentials clearly.

    @Sahadevan,
    Lets say how about banning history as a subject for study in India? It would have been a great move if it had been done before Mr.Abdul Kalam Azad had become India’s first education minister, from whose time marxist’s version of fictitious history came into the Indian system.

  49. KSV SUBRAMANIAN says:

    Dear Jayadevan,

    Will you please explain why India was divided ? Why, even after the Liaquat-Nehru Pact what happened to the minorities in Pakistan. In the present day Pakistan at the time of partition the hindu population was about 24% and Bangladesh it was around 30% but now reduced to about 1.5% and 9% respectively.

    Why Kashmiri Pandits were driven out from Kashmir valley and forced to remain in tents at Jammu and Delhi in refugee camps. You can, if you want, view the short film titled “…And the world remained silent” by Ashok Pandit. What were their crimes….

    And even Amarnath pilgrims were denied land for putting up temporary shelters for the spacious reason of demographic change.

    History disproves your statement.

  50. kumar says:

    HELP – ANY PAINTING OF THE OLD TEMPLE ?

    In the independent nation, the natives cannot even have a glimpse of the remains of the ancient temple at kasi.

    There r some painings of ghats and other templs by whites who came after the looter.

    Has any one compared the scultpure of the remains with that of any other temple to guess the sikhara etc, to have a mental or imaginary picture to be hanged by all those loving lord shiva ?

  51. Reena Singh says:

    @Nanda,

    Here’s an online book written on H.H. Tipu Sultan…..Let the readers figure out if he was secular or Jehadi”

    [b]
    “TIPU SULTAN – Villain Or Hero”

    http://voiceofdharma.org/books/tipu/
    [/b]

  52. Nanda says:

    @Reena,
    Thanks. I have seen that. Most of their quotes are correct, but not all. Though its crystal clear that he was a jehadi, they have referred to Mysore Gazateer for destroying 8000 temples in malabar, but I couldn’t find that in the gazateer. just Fyi, i know i’m off topic, so will not continue discussion on this jehadi under this topic.

  53. Mobeen says:

    Hello Sir,

    I read your article. It is nice.

    Lekin aajkal Indian School Ki Text Book mein aadha such bataya ja raha hai jo National Integrity ko damage kar raha hai

  54. Salil says:

    Is the “late historian Bishma Narain Pande” even a real person? I cant find anything online about him or his “original” work. Even the story about this historian seems to be made up!

  55. Suman says:

    ” How can people believe that Aurengzeb be secular and he built temple. He is notorious for destroying Hindu Temple and Hindu Population. In history it was mentioned that he has a target of killing 1,000 hindus per day and You people are saying he was secular.
    It is funny “.

  56. Sid says:

    Vikas,
    Now I can not give proofs.
    Now if you have faith in internet
    ... which I havent read but I am presuming would detail more such instances.
    But I can bet my life that he was not lying.
    This is a funny way to argue against Shantanu’s much-documented post. You were assuming and betting a lot. I do not know you but I can assume that you assume a lot without doing any proper research. Would you agree to that assumption? How about some quotes for a change or few links that actually works? How can you give a reference to a book which you have not read at all?
    On the ohter hand, I would give you a book that I have read before:
    English translation of AHKAM-I-ALAMGIRI or otherwise known as
    Anecdotes Of Aurangzeb
    Look at section IV for his dealing with Hindus.
    Here is a link (along with JN Sarcar’s very rigorous “A life of Aurangzib and Historical Notes”):

    http://www.scribd.com/doc/420268/Anecdotes-of-Aurangzeb

  57. Mo says:

    Thank you for the article.

    I’ve seen the falsehood story propaganda for Aurangzeb. This hogwash is so ridiculous that it is funny that anyone believes the mulla’s fake version.
    It is plain and simple. Aurangzeb was a wretched bigot of highest order.

    History should be taught as is, and not fabricated and colored for p-secularist pleasure.

    Mo

  58. B Shantanu says:

    Placing this here for the record.
    A brief excerpt from Sandeep’s take on the destruction of temples, “Girish Shahane Gets it Mostly Wrong”:

    So here’s a certain Girish Shahane criticizing Lonely Planet’s guide to India. He calls it “The Lonely Planet Misguidebook” but when he sets out to “prove” that it is indeed a “misguidebook,” he runs into several problems: history and reasoning being two prominent ones. The reason he embarks on this exercise because he finds its “misguided take on India’s history and culture deeply troubling.”

    Now when someone talks about the history and culture of a country, one expects the author to give at least a bird’s eye view of the entire history and culture from the time the country was, so to say, founded. With a country like India, that means going back roughly, to 5000 years. But Girish picks and chooses the parts he finds objectionable.

    …let’s see what bothers him more. In his own words,

    “… than the constant highlighting of atrocities, often fictional ones, by Muslim rulers.”

    Do read and share…

  59. B Shantanu says:

    Anil Dharker in ToI: ..Aurangzeb’s depredations were extensive and go far beyond the Shivnath temple: when you think that Ahilyabai Holkar rebuilt as many as 350 temples in and near Varanasi, you realize how far-reaching the damage was.
    This is a rather jumbled, and hurried look at our history, but it makes the point that in spite of the enlightened rule of emperors like Akbar (notably), Jehangir and Shahjahan, a great deal of the nation’s heritage was wilfully destroyed by Afghan, Turk, Central Asian and Mughal invaders and rulers.

  60. Proud Atheist says:

    Well someone was asking for accounts written by Muslims about temple destruction. Well here it is & you will find many muslim rulers mentioned in the act including dear Mr. Aurangzeb:

    http://www.stephen-knapp.com/islamic_destruction_of_hindu_temples.htm

  61. Syed Muzaffar says:

    It is unfortunate to destroy places of worship Irrespective of any religion. I don’t know why they did it, which religion doesn’t teach. However, our country wasn’t republic nor democratic at that time. And, neither any witnesses are alive to give evidence of nor we have any culprits alive to punish. All we knew is from historian and which is always debatable. My question is should we be judging a monarch rule on his doing and should we be learning from it. Well, What we know is Babri Masjid was demolished when our country is democratic and when we all are alive. Majority of minority citizen see and believe Hinduism as peace loving people and was enriched with their Veda’s and Yoga’s. But still it doesn’t mean that those who had destroyed mosque would represent of all Hindu sentiments. What I learnt whoever try to represent any community or Religion with evil intentions had let down their society and community at large. The fame, ego and power had always overtaken them and lead to disasters. Now even today, in the name of any religion people just find the ways to benefit politically and later they dictate their terms.

  62. B Shantanu says:

    Syed: I don’t think I have seen you here before..so “Welcome”!
    Your comment is a bit all over the place…
    Note that we are not discussing any community here – and I do not understand the relevance of bringing in the Babri structure into this discussion..
    The point I was trying to make was more about the systematic (not to mention clumsy) attempt at distorting the truth/narrative…I hope you will agree with that?
    thanks

  63. Anand D. says:

    Hello Shantanu,
    Thanks for a good summary on Kashi Vishwanath and also Koenraad Elst’s article. I have also read Maasir Alamgiri translation by Jadunath Sarkar and I agree with Dr. Elst on his analysis.

    On your comment however “and one more thing. Au� had the maximum number of Hindu mansabdars under him. More than even the �secular� Akbar. How might you explain that ?

    Reference

    M Athar Ali, The Mughal Nobility Under Aurangzeb.”

    Have referred to the book “Religious policy of Mughal emperors” by on Shri Ram Sharma, Asia publishing house, first edition 1940 and second edition 1962? In that he has quantitatively compared the number of Hindu mansabdars in each Mughal emperor office:

    Akbar: 14 out of 137 (1000 and above)
    Jahangir: 6 out of 47 (3000 and above)
    Shah Jahan: 51 out of 241 (1000 and above)
    Aurangzeb: Exact numbers are difficult to say because apparently Kazim was allowed to write only first 10 years of his reign and Alamgiri does not have concrete data. Sharma goes through lot of data analysis but the conclusion seems to be that the number of Hindus mansabdars went to 50% of that of Shah Jahan by 1690.

    Anand

  64. B Shantanu says:

    Do read: Harsh Gupta destroys some “evidence” here. Some excerpts below:

    A friend forwarded me this piece http://scroll.in/article/752358/was-aurangzeb-the-most-evil-ruler-india-has-ever-had … (which I had read earlier) by @ShoaibDaniyal also a friend. 3/n So I re-read.
    ..
    The very first point in that piece in defense of Aurangzeb is that he apparently built more temples than he destroyed. I was skeptical. 4/n

    5. Shoaib writes “As Katherine Butler Schofield from King’s College London points out, “Aurangzeb built far more temples than he destroyed””

    6. This is what the article links to http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=573340 … Behind paywall. Pdf is http://www.scribd.com/doc/81299631/Did-Aurangzeb-Ban-Music#scribd … here, other places online also.

    7. But Katherine Butler did not say that about temples. She actually quoted (ref 173) Barbara Metcalf on temple creation > destruction. OK..

    8. So I actually opened the piece of Metcalf “Too Little Too Much” http://www.eastwestcenter.org/fileadmin/resources/education/asdp_pdfs/Metcalf_-_Too_Little_Too_Much_1_.pdf … and it turns out even she did not say that….

    9. In pg 958 of above (reference 10), she (Metcalf, not Brown) in turn quotes Lloyd Rudolph in a footnote on temple creation > destruction.

    10. Rudolph in a “lively” 1994 Boston meeting noted-not published far less peer reviewed that Aurangzeb created more temples than destroyed!

    11. Now, Lloyd Rudoph is a political scientist and educationist – not exactly a historian, though he has dabbled in some work on Rajputana.

    12. I am still looking for anything that Lloyd Rudolph may have published on Aurangzeb w.r.t. the temple creation-destruction claim. Help?:)

    13. This maybe a one-off (though this is the first link I opened), but this is the level of “honest” scholarship there is on Indian history.

  65. B Shantanu says:

    Soem excerpts from a recent article re. Kashi Vishwanath
    Gyanvapi Kashi Vishwanath Temple must be reconstructed by Sh Subramanian Swamy, published on September 13, 2020:


    The original Gyanvapi Kashi Vishwanath temple was destroyed by the army despatched by Mohammed Ghori in 1194 AD, when it had defeated the Raja of Kannauj. In 1192 AD, Ghori had been crowned as Emperor in Delhi after defeating Prithviraj Chauhan.

    The temple was rebuilt by a Gujarati merchant during the reign of Delhi’s Sultan (1211-1266AD). It was demolished again during the rule of either Hussain Shah Sharqi (1447-1458) or Sikandar Lodhi (1489-1517).

    Raja Man Singh of Jaipur thereafter built the temple during Mughal Emperor Akbar’s rule, but some Hindus boycotted it. Raja Todar Mal further renovated the temple with Akbar’s funding at its original site in 1585.

    In 1669 AD, the Gyanvapi Temple was again destroyed because of a firman issued by Emperor Aurangzeb and to ensure it was not rebuilt, as it was on earlier occasions, he got constructed the present “Gyanvapi” Mosque in its place thereby, in, according to Syed Shahabuddin, violation of Islamic law as stated in the Hadith, which states it is haram to build on usurped sites [such as of religious sites of other faiths].

    The remains of the erstwhile temple were used for mosque construction which can be seen in the foundation of the mosque, the columns, and a chamber at the rear part of the mosque visible as part of the temple.

    The Hon’ble Supreme Court foresaw this in Farooqui vs Union of India on the religious character of mosque [(1994) 6 SCC 360 at para 139], which also holds that a mosque is ordinarily not an essential part of the practice of the religion of Islam because namaz (prayer) by Muslims can be offered anywhere, e.g., even in an open maidan or on a road/highway.

    The Constitutional Bench of five judges thus held, by majority, that Muslims do not have a fundamental right to recite namaz at any mosque unless a particular mosque has special significance for Islamic religion as does for example, the Al Aqsa mosque.

    There is a serious Constitutional issue arising from enactment of the Place of Worship (Special Provisions) Act of 1991 (hereinafter “Act of 1991”) which Act does not permit if held constitutional, for the Courts to restore any religious institution including the Gyanvapi Mosque to be demolished if it stood on August 15, 1947.

    The Act of 1991 is thus retrospective in nature by declaring the 15th day of August 1947 as the date to determine the religious character of a place of worship.

    Section 4 (1) of the Act declares that religious character of a place of worship existing on the 15th day of August, 1947 shall continue to be the same as it existed on that day. The logical sequitur of this is that in effect, the religious character of the place of worship existing as at 15 August 1947 is frozen and cannot be altered. This naturally bars by law passed by Parliament in July 1991, to restore the Gyanvapi Temple after removing the existing mosque.

    However, the said Act of 1991 is in my legal understanding, unconstitutional. Therefore I have filed a Writ Petition on this issue in the Supreme Court, and would seek either striking down the Act as unconstitutional, or seek the Court to declare Kashi Vishwanath Temple as another exception to the Act. In the Act, Ram Janmabhoomi was declared as the only exception. The ball is back in the Supreme Court. With the blessing of Lord Shiva, I expect to win the case. After this, one temple of special significance for Hindus then remains for restoration: Mathura’s Krishna Janmabhoomi Temple.

  66. B Shantanu says:

    Link to a searing take-down of Audrey Truschke by the indomitable Koenraad Elst Open Letter to Audrey Truschke , July 24, 2022

  67. B Shantanu says:

    Another link on Audrey Truschke
    The curious case of controversial historian Audrey Truschke
    and why her “…work is problematic not for its elisions and omissions but for the implications it holds for Western scholarship on India” by Vikram Zutshi, MARCH 12, 2021