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While delivering the 12th Lal Bahadur Shastri Memorial Lecture, External
Affairs Minister Natwar Singh said, “Recollection of ancient wrongs of Muslim
rulers is both fallacious and pernicious: there is no evidence to suggest the
sustained persecution of Hindus by Muslim rulers''. Mr. Singh said that in
support of these assertions there are frequent references to Indian history
based on selective readings of old events and episodes and that indeed, the
picture is quite the opposite.
Such an irresponsible statement made about the history of the country
without any factual backing leaves us with too many questions. Does Mr. Singh
believe that sustained persecution did not take place because there is no “evidence”
to support the same? Or does he believe that there was persecution but it was
not “sustained”? Or does he believe that the wrongs of Muslim rulers
did not qualify to be termed as “persecution”?
What
qualifies to be the “evidence” of historical facts or acts? Are not the
writings of the contemporary historians and travelleres, the ruins of dismantled
temples, the damaged statues of deities, the prints of palms of young women who
threw themselves into burning pyre, evidence of the sustained persecution of the
Hindus? Or do we need to excavate the entire country on the lines of Ayodhya to
prove the obvious? Or do we need video tapes of the likes showing the Iraqi
prisoners being abused by American army to prove that there was
“persecution”? Unfortunately we didn’t have Tehelka in those days which
could have provided us with video tapes which would be acceptable “evidence”
for Mr. Singh.
After the invasion of Sind by Mohammed-bin-Qasim in the seventh century,
the saga of large-scale bloodshed and violence continued with a
series of terrible invasions by Muhammad
of Ghazni in the 11th century. He
was followed by Mohammed Ghori
who ravaged India and left it to his Turkish generals. Then
followed the incursions of the Moghul
hordes of Chenghiz Khan. One of the most terrible invasions was under
Timur in 1398. Then came on the scene a new invader in the person of Babar
who invaded India in 1526 and established the Mughal rule. In
1738 Nadir Shah’s invaded
Punjab. He was followed by Ahmad Shah
Abdali who invaded India in 1761, crushed the forces of the Marathas at
Panipat. Is not a period of more than eight centuries of Islamic
rule long enough to be termed as “sustained”? Every successive Muslim ruler
or invader, starting from Mohammed-bin-Qasim, engaged in atrocities over Hindus
– only the degree or scale of the cruelty varied.
Or is it that
the atrocities committed by the Muslim rulers do not qualify to be termed as
“persecution”? Thousands of people fell off the Islamic sword, thousands of
women and children threw themselves into burning pyre to save themselves from
dishonor, many more were raped or taken as concubines, slaves or as one of the
thousands of wives in the kings’ harem. Men and women were sold off at mandis
in Persia and Arabia. The poet Amir Khusrau testified that "the Turks,
whenever they please, can seize, buy or sell any Hindu”. Hindu temples and
places of worship were demolished and replaced with mosques and dargahs. Firuz
Shah Tughlak personally confirms that the destruction
of Pagan temples was done out of piety and writes:
"on the day of a Hindu festival, I went there myself, ordered the
executions of all the leaders and practitioners of his abomination; I destroyed
their idols temples and built mosques in their places". Discriminatory
tax called Jaziya was levied on the Hindus.
Ibn Battutah, the medieval Berber
traveler, said that the name “Hindu Kush” meant 'Hindu Killer,' a meaning
still given by Afghan mountain dwellers. Afghanistan was a part of the Hindu
civilization. Millions of Hindus here were killed and the remaining forcibly
converted to Islam. To the Hindus this mountain range was known as Paariyaatra
Parvat, but when the last Hindu king of Kabul was killed Muslims ruled this land and then called these
mountains the Hindu Kush.
Guru Nanak Dev himself was an eye-witness to the havoc created during the invasions
of Babar. The large-scale massacre, barbarous treatment of prisoners including
women broke the heart of Guru Nanak. Guru Nanak in his famous epic named "Babarvani"
describes the atrocities of Babar and his men in Punjab. In the hymn he asks God
that when there was such suffering, killing, such shrieking in pain, did not He
feel pity?
There are many more writings that give evidence of barbarous atrocities of Muslim rulers. Does
all this not amount to persecution? If not, then Mr. Singh needs to revamp his
vocabulary of English language.
Are we engaged in selective readings of old events and episodes as
suggested by Mr. Singh? Are Ayodhya, Mathura and Kashi isolated events? There is
evidence to show that at least thirty thousand temples were demolished all over
India. According to Dr. B.R.Ambedkar the Muslim invaders razed to the
ground Buddhist monasteries with which the country was studded. Was Padmini
the only woman who had to jump into sacrificial fire choosing death over
dishonour? The print of the palms on the walls of forts and palaces are the
reminders of thousands of Hindu women and children sacrificing their lives in
the pyre for the sake of their honour. Was Guru Tegh Bahadur the only religious
saint to be martyred by the Muslim rulers? Dr. B.R.Ambedkar writes that a
very large number of Buddhist monks were killed outright by the Muslim
commanders while many more fled to neighbouring countries. Thousands of Hindu
and Jain priests were massacred as their temples were desecrated. Were
Ghazni, Ghori, Timur, Aurangzeb the only cruel Muslim tyrants? The fact is that
all Muslim rulers including Alaudin Khilji, Firuz
Shah Tughlak,Babur, Humayun, Jehangir, Shah Jahan and invaders like
Mahmud Ghazni, Mohammed Ghori, Chenghiz Khan, Ahmed Shah Abdali, Nadir Shah
practiced atrocities on the Hindus. Historical writings are replete with the
accounts of the cruelties of Muslim rulers. Even, the so called Akbar, the Great
- whose rule is said to have been secular and tolerant of the Hindu faith - had
a victory tower erected with the heads of the captured and surrendered army of
Hemu after the second battle of Panipat. Later, Akbar again slaughtered more
than 30,000 unarmed captive Hindu peasants after the fall of Chittod on February
24, 1568, a number confirmed by Abul Fazl, Akbar's court historian. The writing of Fra Barthoelomeo,
a renowned Portuguese traveller and historian, who was present in Tipu's war
zone in early 1790 and records of contemporary churches show that Tipu Sultan,
who is portrayed as a hero of Hindu -Muslim amity and a staunch freedom fighter
against the British, committed atrocities on Hindus and brutally converted
Hindus to Islam.
Will Durant, the well-known American historian writes in the book “The Story
of Civilization: Our Oriental Heritage” that the
Islamic conquest of India is probably the bloodiest story in history. It
is a discouraging tale, for its evident moral is that civilization is a precious
good, whose delicate complex order and freedom can at any moment be overthrown
by barbarians invading from without and multiplying from within. Almost all the
Muslims of South Asia are descendants of weaker elements of the population who
had succumbed to forcible Islamic conversion. The
Islamic historians and scholars have recorded with great glee and pride of the
slaughters of Hindus, forced conversions, abduction of Hindu women and
children to slave markets and the destruction of temples carried out by the
warriors of Islam during 800 AD to 1700 AD. Millions of Hindus were
converted to Islam by sword during this period.
Saying that there was no evidence to suggest that Muslim rulers had
persecuted Hindus and that instead, the
picture was quite the opposite is propagating myth to serve selfish vested
interests. It is misleading an entire generation which amounts to cheating of
the highest order. Not only is it disrespect shown to the memories of thousands
of innocent Hindus who were the victims of one of the bloodiest holocausts of
world history, but also disrespect shown to the Muslims of Indian sub-continent
most of whose predecessors were forcefully converted to Islam. We cannot change
a fact of history, however painful it might have been, by not acknowledging it.
Pretending that a problem did not exist is not the solution to the problem. The
only way to solve a problem is to face it. Turning a blind eye to it will only
allow the situation to further deteriorate.
Selective readings of old events and episodes of history is done by the
secularists and leftists to believe and make believe the myth propagated by them
for their selfish motives that the Islamic rulers were just and benevolent to
the Hindus. A few examples of the generosity of Akbar and Tipu Sultan cannot
form the basis to give a clean chit to the entire Muslim rule in India. In their
hunger for minority votes the secularists and leftists indulge in minority
appeasement through distortion of history. What appears to be politically
correct to them is in fact factually or historically wrong. Just as the
sustained persecution of Hindus by Muslim rulers is a fact of Indian history,
another fact of Indian history is the oppression of the so-called dalits by the
upper castes. Will Mr. Singh or his secular bogey dare to deny this fact of
history? Of course not! Because this distortion will not suit them politically.
On the contrary he and his scribes will manipulate this fact to blow it out of
proportion to play the dalit card and lure the dalit vote bank. The upper caste
Hindu society is fractured and does not form a consolidated, powerful vote bank,
so they can be always put into a position of disadvantage while writing history.
Facts of history can go for a toss. Vote bank politics is the name of the game
and distorting history is one of the crucial cards played in the game.
Playing around with history is a luxury which no nation can afford to
indulge in. History is above vote bank politics. It is a means to connect a
nation with its roots. A nation developing on the foundation of falsehood is
bound to grow in the wrong direction. Swami Vivekananda had said, “It
is out of this past that the future has to be moulded.” In order to mould the future correctly, the past needs to be
studied and comprehended in the correct perspective. History can neither be
saffron or red, right or left, communal or secular. Facts of history as found in
contemporary writings, archaeological evidences, ancient architecture and
buildings must be acknowledged and accepted as it is without any manipulations
or modifications. Every generation in every nation has the right to know its
past correctly, as it was, and no power in the world has the right to tamper
with these facts of history. Any kind of tampering with history is an
unpardonable crime against the nation and humanity.
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