Historian | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Fri, 21 Jul 2023 07:11:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Historian | SabrangIndia 32 32 Why academicians need to be more vocal than before https://sabrangindia.in/why-academicians-need-to-be-more-vocal-than-before/ Fri, 21 Jul 2023 05:47:51 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=28574 “How do you think we can contribute?” It is my pleasure to respond to them directly as well as in this article.

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About four years ago, an excellent physicist Parameswaran Ajith had to write an article [2] explaining how Albert Einstein, the world-renowned scientist, used mathematics for his discoveries in physics. However surprising it may seem, the article was actually called for. Being a mathematician, I would like to thank him for writing it and stressing how the theory of relativity is still regarded as the pinnacle of mathematical elegance initiated by the sheer brilliance of one of the best scientists of the world. That physics uses mathematics is almost tautological – even my eleven-year-old can give a short lecture on this topic. Why did, then, P. Ajith write this article on something so obvious? The answer is long and the reason deep-rooted.

On the face of it, P. Ajith’s article would be thought of as a knee-jerk reaction to the remark[1] of a politician, who said people should not be too concerned with GDP maths, since “maths never helped Einstein discover gravity”, a comment that’s scientifically wrong on multiple counts. Neither did Einstein discover gravity (gravity was actually discovered by Issac Newton, not Albert Einstein), nor did he, in any way, refrain from using mathematics, a subject described by the legendary German polymath Carl Friedrich Gauss as the “queen of sciences”. However, in my opinion, articles like these cannot just be regarded as an immediate response to a politician’s loose, unsubstantiated and unscientific comment. They serve their purpose in overall popularization of science and clearing doubts about it among common people, whom we need to reach out as academicians, and explain our daily lives as well as the challenges therein.

Just to stress a bit more on why connecting with masses matters, I would like to share an anecdote. A reasonably rational neighbour of mine had mentioned the name of a premier science institute of India and asked me why nobody from there won a Nobel Prize despite the Government spending so much money on it. Saddened by his question, I requested him to name a few world-renowned institutions which received many Nobel Prizes in science, and he obliged. Then I bombarded him with questions such as, “have you checked the average budget per academic of those institutions in comparison to the one in India?”; “do you know how long it takes for an experimental scientist in India to order an instrument or a reagent in contrast with the time taken by one living abroad?”; “do you know how many exceptional young scientists do not want to come back to India for various reasons, including but not limited to bureaucracy, dearth of funding, lack of academic freedom, etc.?”. He could answer none and went away quickly.

Don’t we need to engage with our friends, relatives, neighbours and tell them about our problems? Don’t we need to discuss how our profession is getting affected due to whimsical decisions taken by an authoritarian regime that neither understands science nor appreciates the scientists? Don’t we need to protest against the forced propagation of pseudoscience? Don’t we, as a community, need to pitch in the fulfilment of Article 51 A(h) of The Constitution of India, which states “[it shall be the duty of every citizen of India] to develop scientific temper, humanism and the spirit of inquiry and reform”. The spirit of inquiry requires “the right to freedom of speech and expression” enjoyed by each and every citizen of our country according to Article 19(1)(a) of the same document. Scientists, or more generally academicians, cannot be an exception to this rule as pointed out in a recent article by another outstanding physicist Suvrat Raju.

Raju’s article [3] was written at the backdrop of a series of unfortunate incidents that, much to our dismay, will have long-term adverse effect on the future on Indian academia. It involves autocratic behaviour of the administrators of two top-notch academic institutions of India. One disallowed a planned event (a talk by human rights activists Devangana Kalita and Natasha Narwal) at the eleventh hour curbing freedom of speech on the campus while the other sent show cause notices to two of their brightest and youngest assistant professors for signing an extremely polite letter [4] written by more than five hundred honest members of Indian academic community. Quelling of dissent has scaled new heights and taken many forms – the academia is not free from it either. Without even investigating the legality of any of these actions, just think how easily they will intimidate young academics from following their conscience in the near future. These actions will also discourage generations of prolific academicians from applying for a job in an Indian institution. Aren’t these damages serious enough for us to speak out? S. Raju’s article is a bold answer to this important question.

Whenever I talk to my colleagues about these issues, most of them give me a what-can-we-do look and silently walk away. Some, of course, are doing the needful, and I love and respect them from the bottom of my heart. A few (“a few, too few for drums and yells”?!) actually ask, “How do you think we can contribute?” It is my pleasure to respond to them directly as well as in this article. First and foremost, we all can contribute in our own ways, and within our limits and limitations. Once we understand that, half of the job is done. It is also important to realize that, just like P. Ajith and S. Raju, we need to talk about the obvious facts as well as intricate issues. If you are a mathematician like yours truly, just explain how your day is spent – trying to prove a lemma and struggling throughout the day only to discover in the evening that a special case has already been proved, and all we need to do is to extend it in the new setup. This too will be a significant contribution. You know why? It will help because your relative or your neighbour will know you aren’t wasting time using taxpayers’ money – a narrative that we need to refute at any cost.

If you are a biologist or a historian or a physicist but unable to write an article like P. Ajith or S. Raju, the least you can do is to participate in a discourse with your friends over coffee and discuss how your academic contributions matter. We, the academicians, should try our best to take a stand against each and every atrocious event around us. We tend to underestimate the usefulness of such activities but they inspire younger academics, especially students, postdoctoral fellows and even young assistant professors, and assures them they aren’t alone in the fight. We can also inform our friends, relatives and neighbours that the current oppressive regime has done away with most of the prestigious academic awards, fellowships and grants, and how we are suffering because of that. Overall, we need to be more vocal and less shy, and talk about our profession with all and sundry. That’s the only way we can ensure a better environment for our future colleagues in the years to come.

Parthanil Roy is a professor at the Indian Statistical Institute Bangalore Centre. This article is based on the author’s personal experience and opinion.

References:

[1] https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/maths-never-helped-einstein-discover-gravity-piyush-goyal/article61986618.ece

[2] https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/maths-helped-einstein-it-can-help-the-economy-too/article29461603.ece

[3] https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/scientists-need-the-oxygen-of-free-speech/article67076627.ece

[4] https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Oee1bwCWrbOGivqYZzvTpjg8JN6VXQP-3iDwVn9Ud_A/edit

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Mourning the Chronicler of History and passionate advocate of Freedom of Expression: Mushirul Hasan, We will miss You https://sabrangindia.in/mourning-chronicler-history-and-passionate-advocate-freedom-expression-mushirul-hasan-we/ Tue, 11 Dec 2018 10:34:08 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/12/11/mourning-chronicler-history-and-passionate-advocate-freedom-expression-mushirul-hasan-we/ “People are always shouting they want to create a better future. It’s not true. The future is an apathetic void of no interest to anyone. The past is full of life, eager to irritate us, provoke and insult us, tempt us to destroy or repaint it. The only reason people want to be masters of […]

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“People are always shouting they want to create a better future. It’s not true. The future is an apathetic void of no interest to anyone. The past is full of life, eager to irritate us, provoke and insult us, tempt us to destroy or repaint it. The only reason people want to be masters of the future is to change the past.” 

― Milan Kundera

Mushirul Hasan

On Monday, December 10, 2018, we lost the man who changed how society looked at Indian Muslims. Eminent historian, intellectual and academic Mushirul Hasan, passed away in the wee hours of December 10, a day also marked as international Human Rights Day.This is a loss of mammoth proportions for intelligentsia, especially looking to reconstruct secularism in a society increasingly marred with communal conflicts with each passing day. Born merely two years after India’s independence, Mushirul Hasan was the thread that wove together the losses of Partition, the concerns surrounding the essentialist image of Indian Muslims, and the hopes of a truly secular future despite the dark present.
 

Background

Hasan was 71 years old, and is survived by his wife Zoya Hasan, a political scientist and academician. Hasan’s health started declining after he was critically injured in a road accident on his way to Mewat from Delhi in 2014. He was admitted to the hospital on Sunday night. He breathed his last at 4 am on December 10. “He met with a road accident about two years ago and was mostly bed-ridden after that. He was also undergoing dialysis for kidney problems,” former secretary to Jamia Vice chancellor, Zafar Nawaz Hashmi, said in a report by NDTV. His namaz-e-Janaza was performed at 1.00 pm on Monday at Babul Ilm and 2.00 pm at Jamia Mosque, and the burial took place at the Jamia graveyard, according to sources.

The son of noted historian Mohibbul Hasan, Hasan completed his masters from the Aligarh Muslim University in 1969 and doctorate (PhD) from the University of Cambridge in 1977. He was associated with Jamia Millia Islamia for over two decades and served at various positions, including:
Pro-Vice-Chancellor of Jamia Millia Islamia from 1992 to 1996
Director of Academy of Third World Studies in Jamia Millia Islamia from July 2000 to January 2010
Vice-Chancellor of Jamia Millia Islamia from 2004 to 2009 
He also served as the Director-General of the National Archives of India in May 2010 and as the President of the Indian History Congress in 2002.

Re-imagining notions and recreating history
In his paper, titled Muslim Intellectuals, Institutions and the Post-Colonial predicament,*Hasan criticised the discourse that shaped how Muslims were treated as subjects in academic work and otherwise. He said, “Much research on the Muslims since Independence is still conducted within the framework bequeathed by the British and some nationalist writers. The categories used to define them have been questioned but not changed. There is still talk of a ‘Muslim mind’, a ‘Muslim outlook’, and an inclination to construct a ‘Muslim identity’ around Islam. A sense of Otherness is conveyed in such images. Muslims are made to appear different in the print media, in some literary works, and in the world cinema.”

Hasan, probably for the first time in contemporary Indian history, elucidated how both supposedly secular and communal perspectives to view citizens with a Muslim identity converged, and in that sense brought to the fore, an approach necessary to re-scrutinise and re-imagine the Muslim identity not merely borne of religion, but by the ways of existing, being, working and more.

He highlighted how “it is also assumed that orthodoxy represents true Islam and the interests of its adherents; and that liberal and modernist currents are secondary or peripheral to the more dominant separatist, communal and neo-fundamentalist paradigms,” and said that it was time to underline along with dominant orthodox paradigms, the heterodox trends that contest the definition of Muslim identity in purely religious terms, and to refute the popular motions that Islamic values and symbols provide a key to the understanding of a so-called ‘Muslim world view’.
His book, ‘India Partition: The Other Face of Freedom’, documents how Partition displaced millions and left behind a legacy of hostility and bitterness between the governments as well as the people from India and Pakistan.

As per Mukul Kesavan, who teaches History at Jamia Milia Islamia, Hasan’s most important contribution was the “way in which he transformed the history of the republic and its most important minority.”

Historian of historians
An Outlook report called Hasan a historian of historians. Not only was he a chronicler of history through extensive access to the Urdu language, he was fascinated by it. Reminiscing on his love for history, Hasan once said in an interview with Syed Mohd Irfan on the show Guftagoo, “My home used to be filled with books. Most among these were History books since my father was a big historian. He had written quite a bit, on Kashmir, Tipu Sultan, Babur”. Hasan also acknowledged the role of Aligarh Muslim University and its scientific temperament in igniting his passion for history.

But Mushirul Hasan was not merely an intellectual and academic of unique sensibilities. He was also a visionary. His initiatives during his tenure at Jamia Milia Islamia helped give it a truly multi-cultural, multi-dimensional and worldly outlook, making it a hub for several new ideas and thought processes.

During Hasan’s term at Jamia, several new departments such as Dalit Studies, Comparative Religion, and the Nelson Mandela Centre for Peace & Conflict Resolution were founded. It is even said that he outsmarted the University Grants Commission (UGC) as he opened these centres because he “realised a dramatic expansion cannot take place by following conventional UGC rules.”

During the Balta House encounters, his role was especially memorable as a person who supported the students and criticised the extra-judicial killing of students.

Hasn was a passionate and fierce advocate of the freedom of expression, evident by the fact that he defended Salman Rushdie’s “Satanic Verses” despite the fact that he did not like it very much, at the cost of getting attacked physically.
 
Awards:
Received the highest French Civilian Award – ‘Officer dans I’Ordre des Palmes Academiques’ (Officer of the Order of Academic Palms) by the Prime Minister of France
Awarded Padma Shri by the Hon’ble President of India, A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, 2007
Awarded DLit (Honoris Causa) by Uttar Pradesh Rajarshi Tandon Open University (UPRTOU), Allahabad, 2006
Awarded Professor Sukumar Sen Memorial Gold Medal by The Asiatic Society, Kolkata, 2006
Awarded the Ford Foundation (SARC) Fellowship by the Institute of Islamic Studies, University of Oxford, 2002-3
Awarded DP Singhal Scholarship, University of Queensland, Brisbane, 2003
Awarded the Ramkrishna Jaidayal Harmony Award for English writing in 1999.
 
Books published
Wit and Humour in Colonial North India, 2007
Partners in Freedom: Jamia Millia Islamia, 2006
The Nehrus: Personal Histories, 2006
A Moral Reckoning: Muslim Intellectuals in Nineteenth-Century Delhi, 2005
From Pluralism to Separatism: Qasbas in Colonial Awadh, 2004
John Company to the Republic: A Story of Modern India, 2001
Islam in the Subcontinent: Muslims in a Plural Society 2002
Making Sense of History: Society, Culture and Politics, 2003
The Legacy of A Divided Nation: India’s Muslims since Independence, 2002
Nationalism and Communal Politics in India, 1885-1930 (Delhi: Manohar, 1991). Paperback edn. published in 1994. Reprinted in 2000.
A Nationalist Conscience: M.A. Ansari, the Congress and the Raj, (Delhi: Manohar, 1987)
Apart from writing, Mushirul Hasan had also edited a number of books on the subject of Islam in India and communal problems in India post-independence.
 
 
*Muslim Intellectuals, Institutions and the Post-Colonial Predicament
 

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After ABVP protests, Historian Ramachandra Guha to not teach at Ahmedabad Uni https://sabrangindia.in/after-abvp-protests-historian-ramachandra-guha-not-teach-ahmedabad-uni/ Fri, 02 Nov 2018 11:00:56 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/11/02/after-abvp-protests-historian-ramachandra-guha-not-teach-ahmedabad-uni/ On Thursday, Guha tweeted he will not be joining the University as a professor due to “circumstances beyond my control.” ABVP submitted a memorandum to AU claiming that Guha was a “communist” and if he is invited to Gujarat, it would cause a “JNU-kind anti-national sentiment.   Ahmedabad: “A biographer of Gandhi cannot teach a […]

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On Thursday, Guha tweeted he will not be joining the University as a professor due to “circumstances beyond my control.” ABVP submitted a memorandum to AU claiming that Guha was a “communist” and if he is invited to Gujarat, it would cause a “JNU-kind anti-national sentiment.
 
Ahmedabad: “A biographer of Gandhi cannot teach a course on Gandhi in Gandhi’s own city,” said renowned historian and biographer Ramachandra Guha, after it was reported that he will not be joining Ahmedabad University (AU) as a professor. The decision to rescind his offer came from AU when ABVP protested his appointment and called him anti-national.
 

 
On October 16, it was reported that Guha will join as the Shrenik Lalbhai Chair Professor of Humanities and Director of the Gandhi Winter School at the Ahmedabad University’s School of Arts and Sciences. He was to join the institute on January 1, 2019.
 
“I am absolutely delighted to be joining the faculty of Ahmedabad University. I am impressed by the University’s interdisciplinary approach, its mix of sagacious older and superb younger faculty, and its visionary leadership… I have known and loved Ahmedabad ever since my first visit there 40 years ago; to now return, to teach and work in the city where Mahatma Gandhi made his home and nurtured the freedom movement, excites me beyond measure,” Guha had then said.
 
On Thursday he tweeted he will not be joining the University as a professor due to “circumstances beyond my control.”
 

 
Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), the student wing of the RSS, staged protests against his appointment and demanded that the University rescind the offer. Three days after the University made the announcement, the ABVP submitted a memorandum to the registrar of the University claiming that Guha was a “communist” and if he is invited to Gujarat, it would cause a “JNU-kind anti-national sentiment,” the Indian Express report said.
 
A letter by ABVP was accessed by Scroll and it said that days after AU made Ramachandra Guha’s appointment public on October 16, ABVP threatened the institution with a “radical movement” if the historian continued with “anti-national activities” after joining.
 
The ABVP’s letter to the university’s vice chancellor was written on October 19.
 
“The letter sought the cancellation of Guha’s appointment with immediate effect “in the interest of education and the nation”. The outfit’s city secretary, Pravin Desai, described Guha as a “so-called historian” and a “directionless person”, and claimed that his books and articles “have proven to be destroying Hindu culture and disintegrating the nation”. The writings had “strengthened the activities of national disintegration, reckless behaviour in the name of personal freedom, freeing of terrorists, [and] freedom of Jammu and Kashmir” on campuses such as Jawaharlal Nehru University and Hyderabad Central University, Desai said. “To appoint someone controversial like Dr Ramchandra Guha, who has dislike or contempt for our ancient great nation, our best democratic system, best Indian culture accepted by the world…what lessons of humanity will he teach to students is a grave question,” he wrote,” the report said.
 
“We came to know of Guha’s decision only through his tweet,” Ahmedabad University registrar BM Shah told Mirror. “Our vice-chancellor Pankaj Chandra is currently travelling”, he said. University sources confirmed that Guha had already started designing a multi-disciplinary curriculum also. At least six academicians Mirror spoke to say that Guha’s assignment was following ‘pressure from Right Wing,’” reported Ahmedabad Mirror.
 
“If such persons will co-operate with anti-national activities and activities for the disintegration of India with the help of your institution, Vidyarthi Parishad will lead radical movement against your institution and you will be solely responsible for it,” Desai told the vice chancellor.
 
“We made a representation before AU Registrar B M Shah. We said that we want intellectuals in our educational institutes and not anti-nationals, who can also be termed as ‘urban Naxals’. We had quoted anti-national content from his (Guha’s) books to the Registrar. We told him, the person you are calling is a ‘Communist’. If he is invited to Gujarat, there would be a JNU-kind anti-national sentiment,” he said in the report by Indian Express.
 
The memorandum is addressed to the Vice-Chancellor and demands cancellation of Guha’s appointment. It describes his work as “critical of India’s Hindu culture”. “His such writings have encouraged divisive tendencies, alienation in the name of independence of the individual, freeing terrorists in the name of independence of the individual, and separating Jammu and Kashmir from the Indian union, in well known universities like Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) and Central University, Hyderabad,” the memorandum states as reported by IE.
 
On October 16, announcing Guha’s appointment, VC Chandra had said in a statement: “With the interest in liberal education gaining impetus in India, Dr Guha will bring his interpretation of history including environmental, political, contemporary and even cricket history to develop interesting and powerful programmes and research that stand at the confluence of various disciplines. Equally important, his presence will help the University build our own dialogue around (Mahatma) Gandhi.”

“Guha’s announcement that he will not be able to take up the teaching assignment in Ahmedabad comes hours after he had tweeted that with his megalomaniac ambitions, Prime Minister Narendra Modi was closer to Emperor Bokassa. Bokassa was a self-proclaimed emperor of Central Africa known for his brutality, outrageous extravaganza, human rights violation and megalomania. Emperor Bokassa, who died in 1996, had special economic relationship with France which was alleged to have struck friendship with the poor Central African regime’s dictatorial emperor for its diamonds and uranium,” Mirror reported.
 


 
Ahmedabad University offers undergraduate, graduate and doctoral programmes in areas including engineering, business management, science and the humanities. The university was set up in 2009 by the 83-year-old Ahmedabad Education Society.

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Historians too should share the blame for the rise of religious radicalism: Devdutt Pattanaik https://sabrangindia.in/historians-too-should-share-blame-rise-religious-radicalism-devdutt-pattanaik/ Sun, 07 May 2017 07:01:23 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/05/07/historians-too-should-share-blame-rise-religious-radicalism-devdutt-pattanaik/ It is easy to blame radical politicians and religious leaders for igniting the spark. But let’s not forget those who fuel the fire. Matthew Fearnley [Licensed under CC BY 2.0]   As a child, when I visited Jagannath temple of Puri in Odisha, my mother told me how Kalapahada, a Muslim king, had attacked and […]

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It is easy to blame radical politicians and religious leaders for igniting the spark. But let’s not forget those who fuel the fire.


Matthew Fearnley [Licensed under CC BY 2.0]
 

As a child, when I visited Jagannath temple of Puri in Odisha, my mother told me how Kalapahada, a Muslim king, had attacked and destroyed much of the temple. She added how Ma Mangala, the local Thakurani (village goddess), protected the shrine, and forced Kalapahada to retreat. Eight such Thakuranis guard the temple, she told me. I was filled with awe at the image of warrior-goddesses riding lions and tigers, protecting the grand temple complex that was at the heart of my cultural inheritance.

Years later, during a tour of South Indian temples, I heard a similar tale, of a Muslim warlord called Malik Kafur who attacked and desecrated the shrines of Madurai and Srirangam. The narration had details of a fascinating adventure embarked upon by local priests who went all the way to Delhi, disguised as singers and dancers, impressed the Muslim ruler there, and convinced him to return their sacred icons. In some stories, a Muslim princess follows them and ends up deified as the Muslim consort of a Hindu deity. Were these pre-modern attempts to reconcile communal rivalry?

Over time I encountered similar tales in Ujjain, Mathura, Kashi, Ayodhya, Kolhapur, Somnath and Kashmir. Most of these stories had many self-evident internal inaccuracies and contradictions. Such is the nature of orally transmitted lore. What was interesting is not what was said, but how it was said.

There was never any rage or bitterness in my mother’s voice, or any sense of victimhood, when she narrated the story. She did not want me to hate Kalapahada, or Muslims. In fact, she almost seemed to justify Kalapahada’s action by telling me how he was actually Hindu who was stopped by orthodox priests from entering the temple as he had either married a Muslim girl he loved, or had been forced to convert to Islam by his captors. This made him angry, because he loved Jagannath too much, and that is what made him a monster. The point of the narration, for my mother, was to impress upon me, how the glory of Jagannath survives despite all attacks and misfortunes, which is why we must have faith in him, cling to him as a raft in tempestuous waters. In other words, the narration was rooted in the paradigm of karma.
 

Image credit: Bernard Gagnon [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Image credit: Bernard Gagnon [CC BY-SA 3.0]
 

Justice for the gods

Karma, however, is often mocked in educated circles. In lecture after lecture, for the past 20 years, I have encountered young students, presenting common understanding of karma rooted in colonial and missionary discourse. Reduced to fatalism and determinism, karma is seen as a cultural excuse for maintaining caste hegemony and social stagnation, one that must be abandoned. It is never seen as a key factor for Hindu tolerance, the ability to reconcile with change and diversity.

Students of modern education are trained to be scientific and rational in their thinking. This demands rejecting the paradigm of karma and embracing the paradigm of justice, equality and revolution. We are told the latter is the rational way, the right way. No one points to the underlying Abrahamic “saviour” complex.

Revolution is seen as anti-determinism, anti-fatalism, anti-karma – as something that determines progress, and grants freedom. This makes it “the good fight”. This paradigm fuelled national building as we rose up against imperial powers, and did not just accept them. It led the founding fathers of our country, many of them lawyers trained in England, to challenge what was claimed to be old traditional (karmic? regressive?) modes of thinking and establish a constitution that would create the Idea of India. Sadly, it had unintended consequences.

What was embraced by the Left was also embraced by the Right. If the Left saw the immediate past as oppressive, the Right saw the medieval past as oppressive. If the Left sought justice and equality for the poor and the marginalised, the Right sought justice and equality for Hindu gods whose houses, they believed, had been torn down by Muslim kings and whose doctrines, they argued, had been mutilated by colonial scholars. Those who demanded an end to Brahminical privileges on grounds that they had enslaved the Dalits for centuries started being challenged by those who demanded an end to what they called state-sponsored appeasement for Muslims who, they argued, had enslaved India for a thousand years, and who had, they pointed out, wiped out all trace of Hinduism, and Buddhism, in Afghanistan, and Pakistan, and now Kashmir.

Educated members of the Right saw temple lore not in terms of karma and devotion, but as memories of social injustice. They started demanding equal treatment for Ram, and Krishna. Temple discourse was systematically changed. It was no longer about the glory of stoic and wise gods, who patiently watched the rise and fall and rise of their temples, but of devotees who wanted the glory of their gods to be restored. Hindu religious leaders who during the Freedom Struggle focussed on rediscovering and popularising Hindu philosophy were recruited to speak of the lost glory of Hinduism to evoke a sense of victimhood in their disciples and followers in India and abroad. For the Right knows, like the Left, there can be no revolutions unless there is a festering wound, and a villain.
 

 Jannat al-Baqi in Medina Saudi Arabia. Image credit: Mardetanha [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Jannat al-Baqi in Medina Saudi Arabia. Image credit: Mardetanha [CC BY-SA 3.0]
 

Truth of the historians

Then came the historians. Armed with data, they claimed the Right was spreading lies, and all these temple lore, retold over generations, were myths. By myth they meant fiction. A few sensible historians prefer the use of the word imaginary, over fiction, or myth, for they realised that not a single religious “fact” however profound, from resurrection to prophethood, is based on measurable, verifiable, facts. Where one locates matters of faith, still remains a question. Rational extremists insist that all religious doctrine is essentially “fake news”. And you see this in the writings of many modern young, rather combative, historians, who want to prove that all Hindu temple lore are nothing but fabricated propaganda serving Right Wing radicals.

First, these modern historians argue that Muslim kings broke temples because temples were centres of wealth and power, and there was no religious motivation whatsoever. It had nothing to do with the Islamic contempt for shirk, or idolatry, and polytheism. These Muslim kings were actually mimicking their local Hindu counterparts, these historians argue, who were also breaking temples of rival Hindu rulers. It had all to do with wealth and power, not Ram or Allah. In other words, these historians separate the political from the religious.

Second, they point to the relative paucity of archaeological evidence of temple desecration, disproportionately low compared to the perception whipped up by temple lore. They provide evidence of how many temples were given grants by Muslim kings, how many Hindu officers worked for Muslim kings, and Muslim officers worked for Hindu kings, almost indicating the total absence of bigotry – or, at best, prevalence of cynical secularism that uses religion as a lever to secure rules, breaking and building temples and mosques as per convenience.
Third, they argue that biographers of Muslim kings, not wanting their masters to appear greedy, draped the political action with a religious cloak, and went on to highly exaggerate the extent of the plunder, describing in gory details how Hindus were killed or enslaved or converted for the glory of Islam. Writing of such hagiographies began 800 years ago, and continued for nearly 500 years.

Finally, these historians show how, during the British Raj, colonial historians who were the first to apply scientific methods in the study of history, had prejudices of their own. Their uncritical examination of the hagiographies of Indo-Muslim rulers helped them to establish the idea that India was plundered and enslaved by Muslims. This was to discredit the local kings and to establish the East India Company as saviours. Later, this became a lever in their divide-and-rule policy. This discourse contributed greatly to the demands for Pakistan, the partition of India, and the clamour for Hindu Rashtra, cherished by those who subscribe to the Hindutva doctrine.

This separation of the religious from the political by historians is an interesting exercise. It almost grants legitimacy to temple breaking. It does not distinguish the difference between breaking of Hindu temples by Hindu rulers, who would move the images to their own private temples (not as trophies, but as deities), and Hindu temples by Muslim rulers, who would not do the same. For example, in Puri Jagannath temple complex, the guides point to images placed in minor temples, with full fledged rituals and priests of their own, that were as per temple lore brought by kings of Puri from Kanchi in the South after a great battle. Did Sikandar Butshikan, who 500 years ago broke the Martand temple (dedicated to the sun-god) in Kashmir, do the same?
 

Babri masjid being demolished on December 6, 1992. Image credit: Vimeo
Babri masjid being demolished on December 6, 1992. Image credit: Vimeo
 

Not bigots but cynics

If non-religious but merely political breaking of Hindu temples is not such a big deal, could it be argued that the breaking of Babri Masjid, had it happened in medieval times, would have been fine as long as it was a Hindutva, hence political, exercise, and not a Hindu, hence religious, one?

Right now, holy and historical monuments around Kaaba in the holy city of Mecca, in Saudi Arabia, are being torn down to make way for five-star hotels. This is being done by the local government, and the royal family, who are guardians of the shrine. Protests by Shia Muslims and historians of Islam are falling on deaf ears.

Are these religious actions of the Wahabi theocracy, or simply economic activity to cater to the vast number of pilgrims entering the holy city, as is being claimed? Will these historians declare mosque-breaking in Mecca legitimate if inspired by economic ambition, may be even political, but illegitimate if inspired by religious sentiments? If it is alright for Muslims to break mosques, can Hindus break mosques too? Or will such thoughts be dismissed as false equivalence, and reckless whataboutery?

Many have argued that Islam is being treated with kid gloves in academic circles, almost the same way as so-called “cow protectors” seem to be treated by the current government. While it is perfectly fine for educated liberals of the West to mock Christianity or even (pagan?) Hinduism, the very same people take pains not to appear Islamophobic, going to the extent of arguing that hijab is empowering. Why, Saudi Arabia has even been included by United Nations Women’s Rights Commission.

I wonder if this has something to do with collective Euro-American guilt at turning a blind eye to the Holocaust or to the role the West played in establishing the Jewish state of Israel in Muslim-controlled regions thus triggering the Palestinian tragedy that haunts us to this day. Or does it have to do with American military interests in West Asia – what they call the Middle East. After all, only in the United States, are educational institutes mapped on geographical grounds, mirroring military divisions. Thus we have Departments for South Asian, or for African, studies, for example.
 

Balustrade entrance to ornate open mantapa at Vittala temple, Hampi. Image credit: Dineshkannambadi [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Balustrade entrance to ornate open mantapa at Vittala temple, Hampi. Image credit: Dineshkannambadi [CC BY-SA 3.0]
 

If these modern historian commentaries on pre-modern history is to be believed, then religion played no role in the fall of the Vijayanagar empire in the 16th century at the hands of the Deccani sultans. Likewise, the rise of the Maratha Empire spearheaded by Shivaji in the 17th century was recast as religious only during the freedom struggle, not before. And kings like Tipu Sultan were just complex politicians, destroying some temples, supporting others, and cynically using Islam only to make alliances with the Ottoman Empire, never letting their private faith interfere with their public policies.

It almost seems these historians are trying to tell us that modern secularism is a re-discovery of medieval secularism, and that religious fanaticism is a recent invention. Medieval Muslim – or Hindu – kings, were not bigots. Religion played no role in their decisions. That is like saying that religion played no role in the migration of Protestants to America, or in the rise of England as a nation-state. Or that Evangelical Christianity plays no role in the political decisions of Singapore and South Korea. Or that religion was not the core issue for the Crusades, that horrific war between Christians and Muslims that lasted for centuries.

This character-certificate-giving approach of some modern historians, who it would seem, like to see themselves as warriors against fake news, makes me wonder how scientific these historians are in attitude. Why do they seem to function with an agenda in mind? Why do their writings appear to presuppose a villain over whom they are trying to intellectually triumph? Does that not make them activists, rather than social scientists?

Scholarship in the humanities has today become about identifying privilege and exploitation. It is about reframing the past in terms of injustice and inequality. It is driven by the demand for social justice. There is an increasingly evangelical tone in historical writing, as if to assert relevance, and guarantee research grants.

Recently, there was news of local Indian historians who traced vast metal bells taken from Portuguese churches and placed in Hindu temples by Maratha warlords. From all accounts in the public domain, these historians have neither tried to give their scholarship a communal twist as the Right tends to do, nor have they pretended to to call this a secular exercise, as the Left tends to do. There is an acknowledgment of the intense Maratha-Portuguese rivalry along the Konkan coast 300 years ago, but there is no attempt to define the battles as political, economic, or religious – or to declare them legitimate or illegitimate. It is simply acknowledging a historical fact, and letting the readers wonder about motivation and drive. There is no defendant or prosecution here, just a tone of mature scholarship, aware of contemporary political realities.
 

Naro Shankar Ghanta on Banks of River Godavari. Image credit: IANS Photo
Naro Shankar Ghanta on Banks of River Godavari. Image credit: IANS Photo
 

History, myth and memory

Culture is not shaped only by history. It is also shaped by memory of people. And their myths, their truths, their notions of God and pollution, which inform their identity. In the quest for what they define as truth, smug historians remain clueless about emotions that cannot be captured in epigraphy or archaeology, which carry forward over generations in complex ways. Will those historians eager to see Ashoka’s edicts as truth, not royal propaganda, also see Modi’s ‘mann ki baat’ as the material on the basis of which he has to be understood by future generations?
As I write this essay, I am well aware that the Left will slot me as a Hindu sympathiser (which is true) hence Hindu fanatic (which is false). But it is important to spotlight the deep and dark and insidious prejudice of many scholars in the humanities, who have reduced science into religion and rationality into activism. Let us not forget that words like “developed”, “progress” and “privilege” are not factual, but emotive adjectives, designed to manipulate the mind, enforce a value judgement and evoke a particular kind of reaction. Political correctness is an obstacle to systematic thought. It stops us from understanding the root cause of crisis in contemporary times. Missionary zeal of historians often mimics the missionary zeal of Christian Evangelists. Both want to save the world with truth. They just differ on what truth is.

To dismiss emotions of a people, to reduce what my mother told me as “fake news”, or seen as no different from Right Wing propaganda, can be very annoying. Mocking a community’s cherished truths as disingenuous and inauthentic can irritate the most mature and sensible of people of that community who understand the complex nature of inherited communication. When this irritation dips into rage, rationality evaporates. And that is when the politician sweeps in and argues for a “post-truth” world, where the traditional is respected in the most grotesque way.
As the world hurtles towards rage and violence, a sense of misunderstanding prevails. It is easy to blame radical politicians and religious leaders for igniting the spark. But let these truth-seeking academicians who create a storm over memory and myth in the name of objectivity also take responsibility for collecting the fuel.

Courtesy: Scroll.in

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