Jain/Buddhist Temples destroyed to build Hindu Temples? – UPDATED

Dear All: This is a *lazy* post. As long-time readers of this blog know, a *lazy* post is one comprising entirely of comments and/or passing remarks. In this case, it comprises tweets. It was prompted by a tweet by Salil Tripathi that I stumbled on quite by chance yesterday. In his tweet, Salil wrote (emphasis mine throughout):

but many temples were destroyed to build temples, jain/buddhist temples destroyed to build hindu temples. Reopen all?

I responded by asking him:

Re. “..many..jain/buddhist temples destroyed to build hindu temples”, can you please name three? Thanks

He wrote back:

1. chola destruction of buddhist temples in what’s now tamil nadu; 2. jayavarman at angkor 1/2

and added..

… there’s more – please look it up yourself. Thanks.

I responded with a 4-part tweet (aggregated below):

I asked u 2 name 3 jain/buddhist temples destroyed to build hindu temples. You mention Chola destruction..any specific names?

You also mntion Angkor but I tht we’re talkin ‘abt India? “Can u pl name 3 jain/buddhist temples destroyed to build..”2/4

“..hindu temples?” Thanks. Keen to learn. Thanks also for the advice re. “… there’s more – please look it up yourself”. 3/4

I’ve looked up a bit http://bit.ly/ctNAQ1 http://bit.ly/7BgKQM but failed to find much evidence. Keen to stand corrected 4/4

Now, waiting…fingers crossed. In the meantime, if any of you have more information, names, records etc etc of Jain/ Buddhist temples being destroyed to build Hindu temples, please leave a comment below. I shall be grateful. Thank you.

Those who forget History

UPDATE I

Salil has responded:

jain impalement see http://bit.ly/cZvjOp Rest look up yourself. Point: all religious conquerors behave badly.

Chola sacking of Anuradhapura; Kukuthonga Chola vs Shaivites; http://bit.ly/a1EfnZ for lingayats vs jains 1/2

My counter:

Neither Jain impalement nor Chola sacking/”Kukuthonga Chola” r abt Jain/Buddhist temples destroyed 2 bld Hindu temples

Last time: Pl name 3 Jain/Buddhist temples destroyed to build Hindu temples. Thx/ I am tryng 2 look up http://bit.ly/bbwa8F

UPDATE II

Salil’s final response:

tks. Also look at chalukya storeies, kashmir’s harsha

My tweet:

I certainly will…& shall let you know whatevr I unearth. Thanks

So there we are. I am still missing “three names” (let alone “many” examples), but I have some serious digging and reseacrch to do…In case any of you have time to help me with this, please let me know. Will keep you all posted. Thanks

Related Posts: Dear Vir, Leave these kids alone…

Dear Vir, This is why Buddhism declined in India…

Taj Mahal: The Biggest Whitewash in Indian History?

On Aurangzeb, Kashi Vishwanath, Lies and Half-Truths

Lies and Half Truths in the name of National Integration

and finally, please have a look at Part II of this post

B Shantanu

Political Activist, Blogger, Advisor to start-ups, Seed investor. One time VC and ex-Diplomat. Failed mushroom farmer; ex Radio Jockey. Currently involved in Reclaiming India - One Step at a Time.

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28 Responses

  1. Sameer says:

    I just want MR. Salil Tripathi to know, Jain n Buddhist ppl are hindus only… its better he doesnt dig up much… Who was Mahaveera or Gowthama Budha?

  2. flawsophy says:

    oh come on !!! Are we repairing centuries of history through the moral standards of the day ? It’s history because it’s replete with mistakes … else we wouldn’t have learnt from it.

    Which is why I am torn between the alacrity of having Ram Janma Bhoomi finally and this troublesome thought that we settled scores on a deed 500 years old.

  3. froginthewell says:

    Dear Shantanu, Salil Tripathy is a person who says that Wendy Doniger goes “as far as facts take” her. Wendy Doniger’s work is just a collection of conspiracy theories (as opposed to, say, Romila Thapar’s work – although Romila Thapar has her biases, she does put into use methods of serious academic history). Doniger’s clarity of thought is very much represented by her comment “Her (Sarah Palin’s) greatest hypocrisy is that she is a woman”).

    I don’t think it is possible to argue with such a person. People like him evaluate truth solely based on subscription to fashionable ideology. I strongly advise you to avoid him like plague.

  4. seadog4227 says:

    You are correct.
    There is no record. The voiceofdharma.org website is a treasure-trove of books.
    A corollary:
    Similar points were raised by some misguided sikhs during the early 80s. When pressed, even basic substantiation could not be provided.

  5. nila says:

    Ankorwat in Cambodia was a Vishnu temple originally and became a buddhist temple.This shows the lake of knowledege of Mr.Salil.

  6. B Shantanu says:

    Thanks all for the comments and the links…
    Pl see latest “Update” above…
    Salil mentions “Also look at chalukya storeies, kashmir’s harsha”
    …I have some serious digging and reseacrch to do…In case any of you have time to help me with this, please let me know. Thanks a lot.

  7. salil says:

    Dear Shantanu

    I am travelling and away from my books. But please also see this:

    http://www.india-seminar.com/2003/521/521%20romila%20thapar.htm

    In particular, this paragraph:

    “Another aspect of the relations between Hindus and Muslims in the ideology of Hindutva focuses on the Muslim destruction of temples in the past. This is not denied by historians but attempts are made to try and place such actions in historical perspective. This was not the only activity of Muslim rulers and temple destruction has to be juxtaposed with other undertakings that were not destructive. This is also related to the question of what we chose to recall from the past and reiterate, and what we chose to forget. Destroying a temple was a demonstration of power on the part of invaders, irrespective of whether they were Muslim or Hindu. We chose to forget that there were Hindu kings who destroyed temples, either wilfuly as did Harshadeva of Kashmir to acquire the wealth of the temples, or as part of a campaign as in the case of the victorious Paramara raja destroying temples built by the defeated Chaulukya”

    To clarify: I’m not suggesting – here, or in my tweets – that there was one-to-one reciprocity in temple destruction. Nor am I suggesting that one wrong equals another wrong. Finally, I’ve not said the Hindu kings destroyed Muslim mosques. My point is that conquering armies routinely loot and destroy whatever they may get their hands on. Holding a succeeding generation accountable for “crimes” committed by one hundreds or thousands of years ago, is neither fair, nor just. Equating one community – Hindu or Muslim – with crimes committed by others is not right either. There should of course be individual accountability. But when time has passed, societies should move on. I’d be as appalled if Jains today were to demand that a temple be razed to make way for a Jain temple. Specific kings and rulers can be great and terrible at the same time. No one can deny the beauty of temple art and sculpture of the Chola bronzes. By the same token, no one should condone what certain Chola kings did in certain parts of what’s now Tamil Nadu, in Anuradhapura in Sri Lanka, etc. That’s all.

    Thanks for this discussion, my best wishes to you.

    Salil

  8. froginthewell says:

    Salil is repeating the fabrication about Kashmir’s Harsha, so let me quote from this article by Koenraad Elst that illustrates how less than scholarly was Romila Thapar’s reading of Rajatarangini :
    Harsha was a fellow-traveller: not yet a full convert to Islam (he still ate pork, as per Rajatarangini 7:1149), but quite adapted to the Islamic ways, for “he ever fostered with money the Turks, who were his centurions” (7:1149). There was nothing Hindu about his iconoclasm, which targeted Hindu temples, as if a Muslim king were to demolish mosques rather than temples. All temples in his kingdom except four (enumerated in 7:1096-1098, two of them Buddhist) were damaged. This behaviour was so un-Hindu and so characteristically Islamic that Kalhana reports: “In the village, the town or in Srinagara there was not one temple which was not despoiled by the Turk king Harsha.” (7:1095)

    So there you have it: “the Turk king Harsha”. Far from representing a separate Hindu tradition of iconoclasm, Harsha of Kashmir was a somewhat peculiar (viz. fellow-traveller) representative of the Islamic tradition of iconoclasm.

    Similarly, read this article, where Koenraad Elst takes on Professor Richard Eaton from University of Arizona, says (about Eaton, who was supporting the Thapar gang) :
    He admits that during the Hindu re-conquest of Muslim-occupied territories: “Examples of mosque desecrations are strikingly few in number.” Yet, in his opinion, Hindus had been practicing their own very specific form of iconoclasm in earlier centuries. Though they themselves seem to have lost the habit by Shivaji’s time, it was this Hindu tradition which the Muslim invaders copied: “The form of desecration that showed the greatest continuity with pre-Turkish practice was the seizure of the image of the defeated king’s state deity and its abudction to the victor’s capital as a trophy of war.”

    Then Koenraad Elst goes on to demolish this last statement, and as regards that I refer you to his article, since secular Eaton’s admission is enough to kick Salil’s comments into the trash can. So there goes crashing down (and thanks to his own secular fellow-traveler at that) Salil’s unfounded just-for-political-correctness assertion that that kind of destruction was something that conquering armies those days routinely indulged in.

    The latter part of Salil’s comment is COMPLETE STRAWMAN. Shantanu (and quite likely most/all commenters here too) NEVER sought to justify victimizing today’s Muslim community for what marauding Muslim invaders during medieval times did. These are all cheap diversionary tactics, and perhaps nefarious too, for they try to implicitly portray those who disagree with Salil as Islamophobics.

  9. B K CHOWLA says:

    I am relatively more knowledgeable after reading this post.

  10. Kaffir says:

    Salil wrote:
    “My point is that conquering armies routinely loot and destroy whatever they may get their hands on.”
    __

    Salil:

    But we’re not discussing “whatever they may get their hands on.” The discussion is specific to temples (Hindu, Jain, Buddhist) or mosques, which undeniably have a greater significance to many, than money or other loot.

    Besides, you’ve only given 2 or 3 examples – and those too inconclusive – whereas the destruction of Bamiyan Buddhas not so long ago is proof enough as to which ideology routinely destroyed other people’s temples and sacred places, and finds them intolerable to this day.

  11. AnilAarush says:

    Sometimes unvarnished verbatim representation of thought exchange does better justice than an original article.
    Sail so far has thrown innuendos not corroborate his claim. While in this debate I stumbled upon other people claiming Asoka destroying Hindu temples on behalf of Hinduism. On closer scrutiny I found even that claim was nothing but over-zealous reading of history. No-one could produce anything beyond the fact that Asoka ruled with iron fist.

    Let us say Shall eventually finds some such forgotten temple of one denomination that came on the ruins of another denomination. Mind you they are temples belonging to same larger pantheon of Hinduism Leftist ideologue have tried hard but yet have not been able to sell the concept that somehow Hinduism was at loggerhead with Buddhism/Jainism. As Hindus see it Buddhism/Hinduism is nothing but an internal attempt purging of some edicts that might have been detrimental to concept of dharma at that time in history. These enunciation aside; the very fact that there exists no such dispute over any temple anywhere in India where followers of one temple denomination lay claim on temples of others underlines the fact that there is no need of any redressal exercise.
    On the other hand Ayodhya dispute has survived 500 long years uninterrupted. At no point in time Hindu reconciled with it whenever they could by force or litigation tried to undo this injustice.
    Hence any attempt at drawing parity between this dispute and a purely theoretical construct of Buddhist & Hindu temple coming at each others ruins remains hypothetical and essentially divorced from reality.

  12. Sid says:

    This topic is under debate for few years in various forums and typically, I have seen such debates being turned into polemics by the devotees of R Thapar and her gangs of “secular” historians. Following are the supposed examples of HIndu persecution by Buddhism:
    1. Pushyamitra Sunga and his supposed violence upon Buddhists
    2. Shashanka and supposed destruction of Bodhi tree
    3. Harsha in Kashmir
    4. Brahminic smartness in adopting Buddhism thereby making it a part of Hinduism – namely Gita having a Buddhist origin, adopting Buddha as an avatara, the concept of non-violence, vegetarianism etc.

    On these topics, the responses are:

    1. “froginthewell” already placed a link to Elst’s article on this topic.
    2. Both Goyal and Est wrote pretty long articles examining claims about Shashanka. Due to lack of time, I am only posting the link that discusses relevant details from another forum:
    http://www.indiadivine.org/audarya/hinduism-forum/184703-did-shaivite-king-persecute-buddhists.html
    3. “froginthewell” already placed a link to Elst’s article on this topic.
    4. Brahmin adoption of Buddhist practices are really mere speculations. As far as speculations go, I can speculate that Buddhist adopeted the practice of building monastery and universities (Nalanda/Taxilla) based on Ashrams of the Hindu sages.

    According to Buddhist doctrines, Buddha originated the practices. He was trying to popularise a way of life based on his philosophy, not a theology (according to Buddhist lore, His disciple asked Him if God exists or not, His answer was that the question itself was insignificant). It is his followers who tried to push an organised religion after His death and made Him into a deity. The moment an organised structure comes in place, a group does not have any choice but need money to handle expenses and need royal protection from hostility. Therefore Buddhism began to depend on state sponsorships forever. So whenever this state sponsorship was stopped, as some stories in Avadana (Buddhist purana) state, Buddhism declined in terms of it’s popularity. This is a weakness every organised religion share; the rapid decline of Christian doctrine in secular Europe is a living proof (or destruction of Christianity in sixteenth century Japan or current status of Islam in Commie China and Buddhist Burma). It is also this lack of organisation in our Dharma that helped us to sustain the period of extreme hostility from political powers that assumed that destroying temples would destroy our Dharma.

    It was sometimes speculated that faced with organised structure of Buddhist monastery, Hindu elites began to construct bigger temples to attract younger generations thereby giving rise to temple based religious practices. The fact that basic structure of Dharma does not lend itself well to an imposed organised structure forced the elites to change direction of Hinduism towards more hierarchical structures based on Varna and Jati. Mere speculations yes, but Thapar clan did not do any better than this.

    Note: In the past, I have seen mentioning Elst (and Goyal) sometimes made our “secular” friends nervous because they claim that these are Hindutva propaganda. Please remember that Prof. Thapar and most of the intellectuals of her clan are Marxist according to their own declaration and therefore all of their articles can be a good candidate for propaganda as well. Instead of terming each other’s references as propaganda, if we compare relative merits of the arguments at both sides, we can enrich ourselves.

  13. Anonymous says:

    Hi,

    Another theory recently I have started hearing is that many temples belonging to Shaivites were destroyed by Vaishnavites and vice versa. Could you throw some light on this too ?

  14. Prashanth K.P. says:

    That Hindus too did desecrate Jain and Buddhist Temples caught my interest and was worthy to be looked upon. I scurried to get information to this effect but did not succeed in finding any valuable references. Gooogle and Wiki were the next options, and after having gone through hundreds of data available on the net, I could not find anywhere a relationship of a menacing act coming from ancient Hindu Kings. The last line from a detailed article by Nikhat Kazmi, the para of which is quoted below, is interesting. Please read……

    QUOTE:
    JAIN TEMPLE IN FATEHPUR SIKRI
    By Nikhat Kazmi

    ASI had any policy on“ripping apart” ancient monuments which were part of the national heritage. “We all know that India is a rich and ancient country, built on layers and layers of civilisation. There could be a temple beneath the Taj Mahal too. Will the ASI dig that up too?” he queried.

    Sharma however insisted, the effort was not to destroy the present heritage but only to find out the truth. “We are here to correct the interpretation of palaces and monuments, not to rip apart monuments,” he elucidated. But the fact thet the matter had already become politicised was evident, when the Chairman of the Indian Archaeological Society, S P Gupta, circulated a paper on the excavations which concludes: “There is ample proof of (a) the destruction of the Jain temple, (b) the sculptures being vandalised without exception. There is no evidence of Hindu vandalism at the site. What is the other language of this destruction if not`demolishing temples’ by the Muslims.”

    UNQUOTE:

    Hence, there appears no direct references to either any vandalism or desecration of Jain Temples by Hindus over the centuries. This is after extensive research. I too would be happy to be educated if at all there has occurred a dark chapter in Hinduism reflecting a hitherto unknown violent side of intolerance.

  15. B Shantanu says:

    Sameer, flawsophy, froginthewell, seadog, nila, Salil, Kaffir, Anil, Sid, Prashanth: Thanks all for sharing your thoughts and links…

    I intend to go through them carefully.

    As you may have noticed my *main objection* was to the use of the word “many” Buddhist/Jain temples were destroyed to build Hindu temples.
    There may have been one or two instances of temple destruction – but there also needs to be evidence that a Hindu temple was then built on the ruins. Otherwise the assertion is false and misleading.

    I had therefore requested Salil to name just three such instances. So far I have not got any names but links to various articles and peripheral information. As promised, I will go through each link carefully.

    At the very least I intend to get educated. At best, we would have nailed down this myth.

    Thanks all and watch this space for more.

  16. Sid says:

    @Anonymous (#15),
    I do not know of any Shaivite or Vaishnavite temples destroyed by Vaishnavite or Shavite community respectively. But there was a time both the communities were hostile to each other in various parts of northern India. It is this hostility that prompted Tulsidas to highlight the fact that Shri Rama worshiped Shiva for strength (in Ramcharitmanas). The hostility died later, but, like caste, it weakened Hindu society in North India.

  17. Gopi says:

    As I said at the beginning of this debate with him, they are very good in “shoot & scoot” tactic. When faced with facts, either they go silent and / or use diversionary tactics and bring irrelevant issues to table (“can not blame current generations”). He has gone silent and will not reply. Sitaramji asked Ms Thapar all those questions 19 years ago and we are still waiting for a proper reply to his query. But, it is clear that the AHC verdict has really unsettled this jamat like nothing else and if our side stays the course – solid arguments backed by facts, no abusive langauge, TOTAL avoidance of violence – we can finally consign all of our “eminent” fakes to where they actually and properly belong – history’s dustbin. They know this; hence, so much hysteria by them and their fellow travelers in media etc.

  18. Gopi says:

    I also want to use this opportunity to make an appeal to readers here. Please do support Voice of India and people like Koenraad Elst. I have been personally involved with both and it breaks my heart every time I see him go around asking for help. So, even small contributions of $50 or $100 by hundreds will go a long way in sustaining these very few and brave “intellectual” warriors and true defenders of Sanatana Dharma.
    Sadly, I did not find more than a handful willing to give any financial help to him over 10 years. A sorry state of affairs in Hindu Samaj and pro-Hindu circles.

  19. Jayant says:

    @Gopi,
    Please let us know how to contribute to the activities of Voice of India.

  20. Sid says:

    @Jayant,
    go to voi.org and find the link for donation on the right hand side.

  21. Dirt Digger says:

    Every Hindu temple was built on top of destroyed Jain/Buddhist temple unless proved otherwise (acceptable proof include authentic signed signature of Hindu deity or Archeological survey certificate by Chinese or European or Pakistani Archeological survey).

  22. Gopi says:

    Jayant,
    They can also be contact point to offer any help to K Elst as well.
    Thanks a lot.

  23. Dear Friends

    Please find real history of Ayodya in time of Buddha, Vishaka has build Vihara at Sakket Ayodhya Original Name was Sakket. Ayodya disputed land it is Pancham Mahal means Vihar which was build by Vishala and Vishaka daughter of Dhananjay.

    In Dhamma
    Satyajit

  24. Shaan says:

    I would like to respond to the point raised by Salil on the ‘destruction’ of Buddhist places of worship by Cholas in Anuradhapura. Buddhist places of worship in Anuradhapura were not destroyed by the Cholas. They fell into disuse and became ruined over time as the Cholas did not patronize Buddhism as much as the Sinhalese rulers used to. Please refer this book on the history of Sri Lanka. It says “Vijayabahu I concentrated on rebuilding the Buddhist temples and monasteries that had been neglected during Chola rule.” It must be noted that though Cholas did not patronize Buddhism they still built the Vihara at Nagapattinam for the use of traders from the Sri Vijaya kingdom.

    There is plenty of material in Tamil literature that shows the level of enmity between Saivites, Jains and Buddhists. Works like Periya Puranam and Thevaram suggest that there were heated debates between the religions. But none suggest that Buddhist or Jain temples/viharas were destroyed to build Hindu temples.

  25. Thirumugam V P says:

    Dear Sir,

    First the present Indian history is not the real one. Actually the real history is concealed by historians willfully due to casteism and distort the truth according to their wish. Actually there is no religion in the name of Hindu.The Tamil religion of Saivitism and Perumalism has hijacked by the infiltrated Aryans and made the new religion as Hindu. Is any name of Hindu existed in our ancient temples (Not built by Aryans)? For further clarification please read the books of Iyya Devaasirvatham of Tamil Nadu for your all doubts and questions.

    V.P.Thirumugam.