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6. The details
about “Hindu iconoclasm”
A remarkable aspect
of the Ayodhya debate is the complete lack of active involvement by Western
scholars. Their role has been limited to that of loudspeakers for
the secularist-cum-Islamist party-line denying that any temple demolition
had preceded the construction of the Babri Masjid. Even those who
(like Hans Bakker and Peter Van der Veer) had earlier given their innocent
support to the historical account, putting the Ayodhya case in the context
of systematic Islamic iconoclasm, hurried to fall in line once the secularist
campaign of history-rewriting started.
Given the widely
acknowledged importance of the Ayodhya conflict, one would have expected
at least some of the well-funded Western academics to embark on their own
investigation of the issue rather than parroting the slogans emanating
from Delhi’s Jama Masjid and JNU. Their behaviour in the Ayodhya
debate provides an interesting case study in the tendency of establishment
institutions and settled academics to genuflect before ideological authorities
overruling proper scholarly procedure in favour of the political fashion
of the day. This is, I fear, equally true of the one Western academic
who has substantively contributed to the debate, and whose contribution
we will presently discuss.
6.1. Massive evidence of temple
destruction
One Western author
who has become very popular among India’s history-rewriters is the American
scholar Prof. Richard M. Eaton. Unlike his colleagues, he has done
some original research pertinent to the issue of Islamic iconoclasm, though
not of the Ayodhya case specifically. A selective reading of his
work. focusing on his explanations but keeping most of his facts out of
view, is made to serve the negationist position regarding temple destruction
in the name of Islam.
Yet, the numerically
most important body of data presented by him concurs neatly with the classic
(now dubbed “Hindutva”) account. In his oft-quoted paper “Temple
desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, he gives a list of “eighty” cases
of Islamic temple destruction. “Only eighty”, is how the secularist
history-rewriters render it, but Eaton makes no claim that his list is
exhaustive. Moreover, eighty isn’t always eighty.
Thus,
in his list, we find mentioned as one instance: “1994: Benares, Ghurid
army”.1 Did the Ghurid army work one instance
of temple destruction? Eaton provides his source,
and there we read that in Benares, the Ghurid royal army “destroyed nearly
one thousand temples, and raised mosques on their foundations”.2
This way, practically every one of the instances cited by Eaton must be
read as actually ten, or a hundred, or as in this case even a thousand
temples destroyed. Even Eaton’s non-exhaustive
list, presented as part of “the kind of responsible and constructive discussion
that this controversial topic so badly needs”3,
yields the same thousands of temple destructions ascribed to the
Islamic rulers in most relevant pre-1989 histories of Islam and in pro-Hindu
publications.
That part is of
course not highlighted in secularist papers exploiting Eaton’s work.
Far more popular, however, is the spin which Eaton puts on his data: Islam
cannot be blamed for the acts of Muslim idol-breakers, the blame lies elsewhere...
Apparently in
good faith, but nonetheless in exactly the same manner as the worst Indian
history falsifiers, Eaton discusses the record of Islam in India while
keeping the entire history of Islam outside of India out of view.
This history would show unambiguously that what happened in India was merely
a continuation of Prophet Mohammed’s own conduct in Arabia and his successors’
conduct during the conquest of West and Central Asia.
That
the Arabian precedent is ignored is all the more remarkable when you consider
that the stated immediate reason for Eaton’s paper was Sita Ram Goel’s
endeavour to “document a pattern of wholesale temple destruction by Muslims
in the pre-British] period”4 Goel’s elaborately
argued thesis, tellingly left unmentioned here by Eaton, is precisely that
Islamic iconoclasm in India follows a pattern set in the preceding centuries
in West Asia and accepted as normative in Islamic doctrine. Eaton’s
glaring omission of this all-important precedent makes his alternative
explanation of Islamic iconoclasm in India suspect beforehand.
6.2. Hindu iconoclasm?
Instead
of seeking the motives of the Islamic idol-breakers in Islam, Eaton seeks
it elsewhere: in Hinduism. He admits that during the Hindu reconquest
of Muslim-occupied territories: “Examples of mosque desecrations are strikingly
few in number.”5 Yet, in his opinion, Hindus
had been practising 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 a defeated king’s state-deity
and its abduction to the victor’s capital as a trophy of war.”6
One
of the examples cited is this: “When Firuz Tughluq invaded Orissa in 1359
and learned that the region’s most important temple was that of Jagannath
located inside the raja’s fortress in Puri, he carried off the stone image
of the god and installed it in Delhi ‘in an ignominious position’.”7
And likewise, there are numerous instances of idols built into footpaths,
lavatories and other profane positions. This is not disputed, but
can any Hindu precedent be cited for it?
The work for which
Indian secularists are most grateful to Eaton, is his digging up of a few
cases of what superficially seems to be Hindu iconoclasm: “For,
while it is true that contemporary Persian sources routinely condemn idolatry
(but-parastî) on religious grounds, it is also true that attacks
on images patronized by enemy kings had been, from about the sixth century
A.D. on, thoroughly integrated into Indian political behavior.”8
Because a state deity’s idol was deemed to resonate with the state’s fortunes
(so that its accidental breaking apart was deemed an evil omen for the
state itself), the generalization of idol worship
in temples in the first millennium A.D. oddly implied that “early medieval
history abounds in instances of temple desecration that occurred amidst
inter-dynastic conflicts”.9
If the “eighty”
(meaning thousands of) cases of Islamic iconoclasm are only a trifle, the
“abounding” instances of Hindu iconoclasm, “thoroughly integrated” in Hindu
political culture, can reasonably be expected to number tens of thousands. Yet,
Eaton’s list, given without reference to primary sources, contains, even
in a maximalist reading (i.e. counting “two” when one king takes away two
idols from one enemy’s royal temple), only 18 individual cases.10
This even includes the case of “probably Buddhist” idols installed in a
Shiva temple by Govinda III, the Rashtrakuta conqueror of Kanchipuram,
not after seizing them but after accepting them as a pre-emptive tribute
offered by the fearful king of Sri Lanka.
In
this list, cases of actual destruction amount to exactly two: “Bengali
troops sought revenge on king Lalitaditya by destroying what they thought
was the image of Vishnu Vaikuntha, the state deity of Lalitaditya’s kingdom
in Kashmir”11, and: “In
the early tenth century, the Rashtrakuta monarch Indra III not only destroyed
the temple of Kalapriya (at Kalpa near the Jamuna river), patronized by
the Rashtrakutas’ deadly enemies the Pratiharas, but they took special
delight in recording the fact.”12
The latter is
the only instance of temple destruction in the list, eventhough
rhetorical sleight-of-hand introduces it as representative of a larger
phenomenon: “While the dominant pattern here was
one of looting royal temples and carrying off images of state deities,
we also hear of Hindu kings engaging in the destruction of royal temples
of their adversaries.”13
So, what is the
“dominant pattern” in the sixteen remaining cases? As we saw in the
case of the Lankan idols in Kanchipuram, the looted (or otherwise acquired)
idols were respectfully installed in a temple in the conqueror’s seat of
power, e.g. a solid gold image of Vishnu Vaikuntha,
seized earlier by the Pratihara king Herambapala, “was seized from the
Pratiharas by the Candella king Yasovarman and installed in the Lakshmana
temple of Khajuraho.”14 So, the worship of
the image continued, albeit in a new location; and the worship in the old
location was equally allowed to continue, albeit with a new idol as the
old and prestigious one had been taken away. In both places, the
existing system of worship was left intact.
This is in radical
contrast with Islamic iconoclasm, which was meant to disrupt Hindu worship
and symbolize or announce its definitive and complete annihilation.
There is no case of an Islamic conqueror seizing a Hindu idol and taking
it to his capital for purposes of continuing its worship there. Hindu
conquerors did not want to destroy or even humiliate or disrupt the religion
of the defeated state. On the contrary, in most cases, the winning
and the defeated party shared the same religion and were in no mood to
dishonour it in any way. The situation with Islamic conquerors is
quite the opposite.
That is why Eaton
fails to come up with the key evidence for his thesis of a native Hindu
origin of Muslim iconoclasm. He can show us not a single document
testifying that a Muslim conqueror committed acts of iconoclasm in imitation
of an existing local Hindu tradition. On the contrary, when Islamic
iconoclasts cared to justify their acts in writing, it was invariably with
reference to the Islamic doctrine and the Prophet’s precedents of idol-breaking
and of the war of extermination against idolatry.
No advanced education
and specialistic knowledge is required to see the radical difference between
the handful of cases of alleged Hindu iconoclasm and the thousands of certified
Islamic cases of proudly self-described iconoclasm. It is like the difference
between an avid reader stealing a book from the library and a barbarian
burning the library down. In one case, an idol is taken away from
a temple, with respectful greetings to the officiating priest, in order
to re-install it in another temple and restart its worship. in the other
case, an idol is taken away from the ruins of a temple, with a final kick
against the priest’s severed head, in order to install it in a lavatory
for continuous profanation and mockery. Of the last two sentences,
a secularist only retains the part that “an idol is taken away from a temple”,
and decides that it’s all the same.
For Prof. Eaton’s
information, it may be recalled that an extreme and willful superficiality
regarding all matters religious is a key premise of Nehruvian secularism.
While such an anti-scholarly attitude may be understandable in the case
of political activists parachuted into academic positions in Delhi, there
is no decent reason why an American scholar working in the relative quiet
of Tucson, Arizona, should play their game.
6.3. Temples and mosques as political
centres
Prof.
Eaton develops at some length the secularist theory that temple destruction
came about, not as the result of an “essentialized ‘theology of iconoclasm’
felt to be intrinsic to the Islamic religion”15,
but as an added symbolic dimension of the suppression of rebellions.
In some cases this has an initial semblance of credibility, e.g.: “Before
marching to confront Shivaji himself, however, the Bijapur general [Afzal
Khan] first proceeded to Tuljapur and desecrated a temple dedicated to
the goddess Bhavani, to which Shivaji and his family had been personally
devoted.”16
Yet, the theory
breaks down when the fate of mosques associated with rebellion are considered.
Eaton himself mentions cases which ought to have alerted him to the undeniably
religious discrimination in the decision of which places of worship to
desecrate, e.g. Aurangzeb destroyed “temples in
jodhpur patronized by a former supporter of Dara Shikoh, the emperor’s
brother and arch-rival”.17 But Dara Shikoh
surely also had Muslim supporters who did their devotions and perhaps even
their intrigue-plotting in mosques? Indeed, as a votary of Hindu-Muslim
syncretism, he certainly also frequented mosques himself. So why
did Aurangzeb not bother to demolish those mosques, if his motive was merely
to punish rebels?
Eaton describes
how a Sufi dissident, Shaikh Muhammadi, was persecuted by Aurangzeb for
teaching deviant religious doctrines, and sought refuge in a mosque.
Aurangzeb managed to arrest him, but did not demolish the mosque.
This incident plainly contradicts the secularist claim that if any temple
destructions took place at all, the reason was nonreligious, viz. the suppression
of rebellion located in the temples affected. As per Eaton’s own
data, we find that intrigues and rebellions involving mosques never led
to the destruction of the mosque.
He even admits
in so many words: “No evidence, however, suggests that ruling authorities
attacked public monuments like mosques or Sufi shrines that had been patronized
by disloyal or rebellious officers. Nor were
such monuments desecrated when one Indo-Muslim kingdom conquered another
and annexed its territories.”18
Eaton tries to
get around this as follows: “This incident suggests that mosques in Mughal
India, though religiously potent, were considered detached from both sovereign
terrain and dynastic authority, and hence politically inactive. As
such, their desecration could have had no relevance to the business of
disestablishing a regime that had patronized them.”19
One wonders on
what planet Eaton has been living lately. In the present age, we
frequently hear of mosques as centres of Islamic political activism, not
just in Delhi or Lahore or Cairo but even in New York. Sectarian
warfare, as between Shias and Sunnis, always emanated from mosques almost
by definition, and inter-Muslim clan or dynastic rivalries likewise crystallized
around centres of preaching. The Friday prayers always include a
prayer for the Islamic ruler, and Islamic doctrine never separates political
from religious concerns. If Muslim rulers chose to respect the mosques,
it was definitely not because these were unconnected to politics.
Eaton continues:
“Not surprisingly, then, when Hindu rulers established their authority
over territories of defeated Muslim rulers, they did not as a rule desecrate
mosques or shrines, as, for example, when Shivaji established a Maratha
kingdom on the ashes of Bijapur’s former dominions in Maharashtra, or when
Vijayanagara annexed the former territories of the Bahmanis or their successors.”20
Once people have
interiorized a certain framework of interpretation, they become capable
of disregarding obvious facts which don’t fit their schemes. In this
case, when explaining Hindu non-iconoclasm, Eaton insists on the contrived
and demonstrably false theory of the political irrelevance of mosques,
even though a far simpler and well documented explanation is staring him
in the face: unlike Muslims, Hindus disapproved of iconoclasm and preferred
a universal respect for people’s religious sensibilities.
6.4. Raja Bhoja’s temple
Contrary to the
impression created in the secularist media, Prof. Eaton has not even begun
to refute Sita Ram Goel’s thesis. He manages to leave all the arguments
for Goel’s main thesis of an Islamic theology of iconoclasm undiscussed.
Of Goel’s basic data in the fabled list of mosques standing on the ruins
of temples, only a single one is mentioned: “an inscription dated 1455,
found over the doorway of a tomb-shrine in Dhar, Madhya Pradesh” which
mentions “the destruction of a Hindu temple by one
Abdullah Shah Changal during the reign of Raja Bhoja, a renowned Paramara
king who had ruled over the region from 1010 to 1053”.21
In the main text,
Eaton seems to be saying that Goel is an uncritical amateur who “accepts
the inscription’s reference to temple destruction more or less at face
value, as though it were a contemporary newspaper account reporting an
objective fact”. But in footnote, he has to admit that Goel is entirely
aware of the chronological problems surrounding old inscriptions: “Goel
does, however, consider it more likely that the event took place during
the reign of Raja Bhoja II in the late thirteenth century rather than during
that of Raja Bhoja I in the eleventh century.”22
Either way, the
inscription is considerably younger than the events recorded in it.
In history, it is of course very common that strictly contemporary records
of an event are missing, yet the event is known through secondary younger
records. These have to be treated with caution (just like the strictly
contemporary sources, written from a more lively knowledge of the event,
but also often in a more distortive partisan involvement in it), yet they
cannot be ignored. Eaton makes the most of this time distance, arguing
that the inscription is “hardly contemporary” and “presents a richly textured
legend elaborated over many generations of oral transmission until 1455”. Therefore,
“we cannot know with certainty” whether the described temple destruction
ever took place.23
So, at the time
of my writing it has been twelve years since Goel published his list, and
exactly one scholar has come forward to challenge exactly one item in the
list; who, instead of proving it wrong, settles for the ever-safe suggestion
that it could do with some extra research. Given the eagerness
of a large and well-funded crowd of academics and intellectuals to prove
Goel wrong, I would say that that meagre result amounts to a mighty vindication.
And the fact remains that the one inscription that we do have on the early
history of the Islamic shrine under discussion, does posit a temple destruction.
So far, the balance of evidence is on the side of the temple destruction
scenario, and if the evidence for it is merely non-contemporary, the evidence
for the nondemolition scenario is simply non-existent.
For argument’s
sake, we may imagine that Eaton is right, and that the inscription merely
invented the temple destruction. That would only mean Eaton is right
on this point of detail, but also that the very same inscription proves
his main thesis wrong. For, suppose no temple was destroyed, yet
the Islamic inscription claims the opposite. In
Eaton’s own words: “Central to the story are themes of conversion, martyrdom,
redemption, and the patronage of sacred sites by indo-Muslim royalty, as
well as, of course, the destruction of a temple.”24
Temple destruction is thus deemed central to Indo-Muslim identity, even
to the point where local histories free of real temple destruction would
be supplied with imaginary temple destructions, - so as to fit the pattern
deemed genuinely Islamic. This would illustrate
how the Muslims themselves believed in (and were consequently susceptible
to further motivation by) “an essentialized ‘theology of iconoclasm’ felt
to be intrinsic to the Islamic religion” - what Eaton dismisses elsewhere
as a “wrong” explanations.25
For
the rest, all that Eaton has to show against Goel’s thesis is that it is
based on “selective translations of premodem Persian chronicles, together
with a selective use of epigraphic data”26
However, the larger a body of evidence, the harder it becomes to credibly
dismiss it as “selective”. Goel’s hundreds of convergent testimonies
cannot be expelled from the discussion so lightly. But improvement
is always possible, and we are ready to learn from scholars with higher
standards, drawing their conclusions from a wider and less “selective”
body of evidence. Unfortunately, Prof.Eaton has failed to cite us
any paper or book on Indo-Muslim iconoclasm which is less “selective”.
His own studied silence on each one of the testimonies cited by Goel amounts
to a selective favouritism towards the data seemingly supporting the secularist
theory.
It is of course
true that there are cases (and Eaton delights the secularists by
citing some new ones) where Muslim rulers allowed Hindu temples to function,
to be repaired, even to be built anew. This was never disputed by
Goel, for these cases of tolerance firstly do not nullify the cases of
iconoclasm, and secondly they do not nullify the link between iconoclasm
and Islamic theology. Muslim rulers were human beings, and all manner
of circumstances determined to what extent they implemented Islamic injunctions.
Many were rulers first and Muslims second. Often they had to find
a modus vivendi with the Hindu majority in order to keep fellow
Muslim sectarian or dynastic rivals off their own backs, and in order to
avoid Hindu rebellion. But that is no merit of Islam itself, merely
a testimony to the strength which Hindu society retained even at its lowest
ebb. To the extent that Muslim rulers took their Islam seriously,
a world free of Paganism and idol-temples remained their stated Quranic
ideal, but political and military power equations often kept them from
actively pursuing it.
Richard Eaton’s
paper is the best attempt by far to defend the secularist alternative to
the properly historical explanation of Islamic iconoclasm as being based
on Islamic doctrine. Yet he fails to offer any data which are incompatible
with the latter explanation. There is no reason to doubt his good
faith, but like many people with strong convictions, he somehow slips into
a selective use of data, contrived interpretations and special pleading,
all converging on a single aim: exculpating Islam itself from its own record
of iconoclasm.
According to the
cover text on his book, Eaton is professor of History at the University
of Arizona and “a leading historian of Islam”. Had he defended the
thesis that iconoclasm is rooted in Islam itself, he would have done justice
to the evidence from Islamic sources, yet he would have found it very hard
to get published by Oxford University Press or reach the status of leading
Islam scholar that he now enjoys. One can easily become an acclaimed
scholar of Hinduism by lambasting and vilifying that religion, but Islam
is somehow more demanding of respect.
Footnotes:
1Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, OUP, Delhi 2000, p. 128.
2Hasan
Nizami: Taju’l Maasir, in H.M. Elliott and J. Dowson: The History
of India as Told by Its Own Historians, vol.2, p.223; emphasis added.
Note that unlike Sita Ram Goel, Richard Eaton is not chided by the likes
of Sanjay Subramaniam for using Elliott and Dowson’s “colonialist” translation.
3Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p.128.
4Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p.94. This misrepresents the thrust of Goel’s book
as being merely a morbid piling up of gruesome Muslim crimes rather than
an insightful tracing of this behaviour pattern to its ideological roots.
Goel’s long and unchallenged list of temple destruction data is explicitly
offered as “a preliminary survey” in the smaller first volume before developing
the book’s main thesis in the bigger second volume, viz. the explicit justification
of iconoclasm by Islamic theology and the normative precedent set Prophet
Mohammed.
5Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 123 n.
6Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 112.
7Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 113.
8Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”. Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 105.
9Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 106.
10Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 106-107. Most cases are cited from Richard
H. Davis: Lives of Indian Images, Princeton University Press, 1997.
11Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 106.
12Sic,
Richard Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on
Islam and Indian History, p. 107.
13Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 107.
14Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 106.
15Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim stares”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 105.
16Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 1 18.
17Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p.120.
18Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 122.
19Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p. 123.
20Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p.123. He adds that the Vijayanagara kings built
mosques themselves, “evidently to accommodate the sizable number of Muslims
employed in their armed forces”, - a reliance on Muslim mercenaries which
would become Vijayanagara’s undoing, as they proved disloyal during the
crucial battle of Talikota in 1565.
21Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p.96.
22Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p.96.
23Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p.97-98.
24Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p.98.
25Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p.105.
26Richard
Eaton: “Temple desecration and Indo-Muslim states”, Essays on Islam
and Indian History, p.96.

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