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Amongst contradicting reports and confusion, US
President George W. Bush did finally visit Rajghat and pay homage to the
Mahatma. Bush’s protocol-handlers had earlier notified South Block
that the American President’s deep belief in his born again faith
precludes his visiting Mahatma Gandhi’s samadhi at Rajghat. Prior to
his India visit, when asked by some reporters, if he will be breaking a
decades-long tradition of foreign dignitaries visiting India paying
respect to the Mahatma, Bush is believed to have said something about
how the Gospel of Jesus Christ viewing cremation as a pagan practice.
In January, Abdullah bin Abdulaziz al-Saud, ruler of the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia, the chief guest at the fifty-seventh Republic Day
celebrations and on a state visit to India, broke the hallowed tradition
of paying homage at Rajghat observed by every foreign leader and offered
an outrageously preposterous reason for doing so. The king is reported
to have indicated that a visit to the Mahatma’s memorial would violate
the principles of his faith.
While the Indian government meekly accepted these insults, the media did
its best to black out the news. The electronic media, which is looking
for the slightest sensation to be blown up as breaking news, probably
found these issues, which concern national pride, of no commercial
worth.
In sharp contrast to their foreign counterparts who were not ashamed to
place their religion above courtesy and diplomatic norms, the Indian
dignitaries have been trying to show off their secular credentials by
paying tributes to persons who were not only the enemies of their faith
but the enemies of their nation too. The year 2005 saw two great enemies
of the Indian soil being honoured by Indians holding constitutional
positions. One event very understandably created furore, which has not
settled even now and promises to remain imprinted in the minds of the
Indian people for long time to come. This was the visit of the Leader of
the Opposition, L.K. Advani, to mausoleum of Jinnah, the man responsible
for vivisection of India and the founder of Pakistan. The other event,
however, surprisingly did not attract much attention of the media,
intelligentsia or the political fraternity. This was the tribute paid by
the Indian Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh at the tomb of Babar, the man
who brought death and destruction to India.
Babar was a foreign invader who killed thousands of Indians, plundered
and looted and desecrated Hindu temples. Descending in the fifth
generation from Timur, he was born on February 14, 1483. In June 1494,
he succeeded his father, Umar Shaik, as ruler of Farghana, whose
revenues supported no more than a few hundred cavalry. With this force
Babar began his career of conquest. He lost Farghana itself and was
ultimately routed from Central Asia by rival Uzbeg chiefs. In 1504, he
made himself master of Kabul and so came in touch with India whose
wealth was a standing temptation. In 1517 and again in 1519, he swept
down the Afghan plateau into the plains of India. He entered Punjab in
1523 on the invitation of Daulat Khan Lodhi, the governor of the
province, and Aalam Khan, an uncle of Ibrahim Lodhi, the Delhi Sultan.
But, wars in his home country, however, compelled Babar to return so
that his final invasion was not begun until November 1525.
In his first invasion, Babar came as far as Peshawar. The following year
he crossed the Indus and, conquering Sialkot without resistance, marched
on Saidpur, now Aminabad in Pakistan. The town was taken by assault, the
garrison put to the sword and the inhabitants carried into captivity.
During his next invasion, Babar ransacked Lahore. His final invasion was
launched during the winter of 1525-26 and he became master of Delhi
after his victory at Panipat on April 21, 1526.
Guru Nanak, the first Sikh Guru, was an eyewitness to the havoc created
during these invasions. Thousands of people were massacred and taken
prisoners. The barbarity and mass bloodshed deeply pained Guru Nanak. In
his famous epic named Babarvani, Guru Nanak Dev describes the atrocities
of Babar and his men in Punjab. Guru Nanak denounced him in no uncertain
terms, giving a vivid account of Babar’s vandalism in Aminabad. Guru
Nanak’s agony is evident when he asks God, “When there was such
suffering, such killing, such shrieking in pain, did not Thou, O God,
feel pity? Creator, Thou are the same for all!”
Babar’s generals forced people to get converted to Islam; his
zamindars and other influential people bestowed lands and property on
the newly converted Muslims. Babar himself became a ghazi, which in
Islamic terminology is a positive epitaph and it means “a Muslim who
has killed a non-Muslim”, such a person is guaranteed heaven with
“beautiful women, wine and rivers of honey”.
According to local traditions and literary sources, Babar desecrated
Hindu and Jain temples and replaced them with mosques. Among many such
Babri Masjids are the mosques of Palam. Materials of Hindu temple can be
found in the mosque of Sambhal. The contemporary Tarikh-i-Babari records
that Babar’s troops “demolished many Hindu temples at Chanderi”.
But the best known of all such mosques is the Babri Masjid at Ayodhya
built at the most sacred site of the Hindus, Sri Ramjanmabhoomi. An
inscription on the mosque recording his name shows that the mosque was
built by Babar. It was commonly believed that the mosque stood on an
ancient Hindu temple, but since the early 1990s some leftist historians,
in their ‘secular’ zeal to appease the Muslims, have started
disputing this belief, without sufficient historical or archaeological
evidence to prove their point. Though the case is now with the court of
law, sufficient evidence has been found during the excavation of the
site to support the long-standing conviction that the mosque had been
built on the ruins of a temple. The Encyclopedia Britannica of 1989
still reported that the Babri mosque stood on an earlier temple
dedicated to Rama’s birthplace.
Even an order passed on March 19, 1886, by Col. F.E.A. Chamier, the
Faizabad District Judge, read that “the masjid built by Emperor Babar
stands on the border of Ayodhya, that is to say, to the west and
south” and that “it is most unfortunate that a masjid should have
been built on land specially held sacred by the Hindus”.
The so-called Indian secularists were shocked when Hindu nationalists
demolished the mosque that was a symbol of oppression of the foreign
invaders. Nehru and his brand of secularists have always practised
minorityism in the name of secularism, while, in fact, the two concepts
are mutually opposed and conflicting. They have always perceived the
Indian Muslims as a vote-bank, treating them as Muslims first and then
Indians and promoted Muslim fundamentalists for electoral gains. It is
their political compulsion to distort history and portray Islamic
invaders as great heroes who were broad-minded and secular. Jawaharlal
Nehru, himself wrote, “Babar was one of the most cultured and
delightful person one could meet. There was no sectarianism in him, no
religious bigotry, and he did not destroy as his ancestors used to.”
Babar’s own writings however do not reflect the same, as can be seen
from an extract taken from the Babarnamah:
“For Islam’s sake, I wandered the wilds, prepared for war with
pagans and Hindus, resolved myself to meet the martyr’s death. Thanks
be to God! A ghazi I became.”
Following the footsteps of his pseudo-secularist predecessors, Indian
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh felt no shame in bowing his head at
Babar’s tomb and paying tribute to the man who was an enemy of the
Indian soil. For this unfortunate Sikh, political correctness had to
prevail over his Guru’s views and nation’s pride. There are
definitely costs attached to every coveted job, especially when one is
tightly reined by another power centre.
In an interview with Dilip Padgaonkar for The Times of India, when asked
how he reacted to the demolition of Babri Masjid, Nobel laureate V.S.
Naipaul answered: “Not as badly, as the others did, I am afraid. The
people who say that there was no temple are missing the point. Babar,
you must understand, had contempt for the country (that) he had
conquered. And his building of that mosque was an act of contempt for
the country.”
Be it Jinnah or Babar, independent India does not owe
any show of respect to either of these men. Whatever might have been
their personal qualities or political achievements, both were definitely
not friends of India. Both can by no means be perceived as
‘secular’, both brought death, destruction and misery to thousands
of Indians and there should be no hesitation in branding them as enemies
of the Indian soil. At the same time disrespect to the Mahatma by any
guest of the Indian state cannot be accepted. But how do we explain this
to a class of people to whom the terms national honour and shame appear
meaningless in the light of personal gains and vote-bank politics?
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