CHAPTER TWO - NEGATIONISM IN INDIA
The negationism regarding the Nazi crimes has been the object of
much public discussion. Turkish negationism about the Armenian
genocide has received some attention. Less well-known is that India
has its own brand of negationism.
Since about 1920 an effort has been going on in India to rewrite
history and to deny the millennium-long attack of Islam on Hinduism.
Today, most politicians and English- writing intellectuals in India
will go out of their way to condemn any public reference to this
long and painful conflict in the strongest terms. They will go to
any length to create the illusion of a history of communal
amity between Hindus and Muslims.
2.1 HINDU VS. MUSLIM
Making people believe in a history of Hindu-Muslim amity is not
an easy task: the number of victims of the persecutions of Hindus by
Muslims is easily of the same order of magnitude as that of the Nazi
extermination policy, though no one has yet made the effort of
tabulating the reported massacres and proposing a reasonable
estimate of how many millions exactly must have died in the course
of the Islamic campaign against Hinduism (such research is taboo).
On top of these there is a similar number of abductions and
deportations to harems and slave-markets, as well as centuries of
political oppression and cultural destruction.
The American historian Will Durant summed it up like this:"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 of order and
freedom, culture and peace, can at any moment be overthrown by
barbarians invading from without or multiplying within."
Only off and on did this persecution have the intensity of a
genocide, but it was sustained much longer and spread out much wider
geographically than the Nazi massacre. Whereas the Germans including
most members of the Nazi party, were horrified at the Nazi crimes
against humanity within a few years, the Muslims, for whom Gott
mit uns (God with us) was not a slogan but a religious
certainty, managed to keep a good conscience for centuries. We will
encounter similarities as well as differences between Nazi and
Islamic crimes against humanity, but the most striking difference is
definitely the persistence with which Islamic persecutions have
continued for 14 centuries. This is because it had more spine, a
more powerful psychological grip on its adherents than Nazism.
The ideological foundation of the Islamic campaign was similar to
the Nazi ideology. The Muslium invaders (as we can read in numerous
documents which they left us, from the Quran and the Hadith onwards)
distinguished between three kinds of people: first of all the
Muslims, the Herrenvolk (master nation) to which Allah had promised
the world; secondly the Jews and Christians, who could live on under
Muslim rule but only as third-class citizens, just like the Slavic
Untermenschen (inferior people) in Hitler's planned new order,
thirdly the species to be eliminated, the real Pagans who had to
disappear from the face of the earth.
Different from Hitler's victims, the non-combatants among the
unbelievers often got a chance to opt for conversion rather
than death. What Mohammed (imitated by his successors) wanted, was
his recognition as God's final prophet, so he preferred people to
live and give him this recognition (by pronouncing the Islamic
creed, i.e. converting), and only those who refused him this
recognition were to be killed. Still, conversion often came too late
to save defeated Pagans from slavery. At this point, Mohammed
deserves comparison with Stalin: unlike Hitler, he killed people not
for their race but for their opinions. But one can hardly say that
the one totalitarianism is better than the other.
The Blitzkrieg of the Muslim armies in the first decades after the
birth of their religion had such enduring results precisely because
the Pagan populations in West- and Central-Asia had no choice
(except death) but to convert. Whatever the converts' own
resentment, their children grew up as Muslims and gradually
identified with this religion. Within a few generations the initial
resistance against these forcible converions was forgotten, and
these areas became heidenfrei (free from Pagans, cfr. judenfrei). In
India it didn't go like that, because the Muslims needed five
centuries of attempts at invasion before they could catch hold of
large parts of India, and even then they encountered endless
resistance, so that they often had to settle for a compromise.
The Muslim conquests, down to the 16th century, were for the Hindus a
pure struggle of life and death. Entire cities were burnt down and the
populations massacred, with hundreds of thousands killed in every
campaign, and similar numbers deported as slaves. Every new invader made
(often literally) his hills of Hindus skulls. Thus, the conquest of
Afghanistan in the year 1000 was followed by the annihilation of the
Hindu population; the region is still called the Hindu Kush, i.e.
Hindu slaughter. The Bahmani sultans (1347-1480) in central India
made it a rule to kill 100,000 captives in a single day, and many more
on other occasions. The conquest of the Vijayanagar empire in 1564 left
the capital plus large areas of Karnataka depopulated. And so on.
As a contribution to research on the quantity of the Islamic crimes
against humanity, we may mention Prof. K.S.Lal's estimates about the
population figures in medieval India (Growth of Muslim Population in
India). According to his calculations, the Indian (subcontinent)
population decreased by 80 million between 1000 (conquest of
Afghanistan) and 1525 (end of Delhi Sultanate). More research is
needed before we can settle for a quantitatively accurate evaluation
of Muslim rule in India, but at least we know for sure that the term
crime against humanity is not exaggerated.
But the Indian Pagans were far too numerous and never fully
surrendered. What some call the Muslim period in Indian
history, was in reality a continuous war of occupiers against
resisters, in which the Muslim rulers were finally defeated in the
18th century. Against these rebellious Pagans the Muslim rulers
preferred to avoid total confrontation, and to accept the compromise
which the (in India dominant) Hanifite school of Islamic law made
possible. Alone among the four Islamic law schools, the school of
Hanifa gave Muslim rulers the right not to offer the Pagans the sole
choice between death and conversion, but to allow them toleration as
zimmis (protected ones) living under 20 humiliating conditions, and
to collect the jizya (toleration tax) from them. Normally the zimmi
status was only open to Jews and Christians (and even that
concession was condemned by jurists of the Hanbalite school like lbn
Taymiya), which explains why these communities have survived in
Muslim countries while most other religions have not. On these
conditions some of the higher Hindu castes could be found willing to
collaborate, so that a more or less stable polity could be set up.
Even then, the collaboration of the Rajputs with the Moghul rulers,
or of the Kayasthas with the Nawab dynasty, one became a smooth
arrangement when enlightened rulers like Akbar (whom orthodox
Muslims consider an apostate) cancelled these humiliating conditions
and the jizya tax.
It is because of Hanifite law that many Muslim rulers in India
considered themselves exempted from the duty to continue the
genocide on the Hindus (self-exemption for which they were
persistently reprimanded by their mullahs). Moreover, the Turkish
and Afghan invaders also fought each other, so they often had to
ally themselves with accursed unbelievers against fellow Muslims.
After the conquests, Islamic occupation gradually lost its character
of a total campaign to destroy the Pagans. Many Muslim rulers
preferred to enjoy the revenue from stable and prosperous kingdoms,
and were content to extract the jizya tax, and to limit their
conversion effort to material incentives and support to the
missionary campaigns of sufis and mullahs (in fact, for less zealous
rulers, the jizya was an incentive to discourage conversions, as
these would mean a loss of revenue). The Moghul dynasty (from 1526
onwards) in effect limited its ambition to enjoying the zimma
system, similar to the treatment of Jews and Christians in the
Ottoman empire. Muslim violence would thenceforth be limited to some
slave-taking, crushing the numerous rebellions, destruction of
temples and killing or humiliation of Brahmins, and occasional acts
of terror by small bands of raiders. A left-over from this period is
the North-Indian custom of celebrating weddings at midnight: this
was a safety measure against the Islamic sport of bride-catching.
The last jihad against the Hindus before the full establishment of
British rule was waged by Tipu Sultan at the end of the 18th
century. In the rebellion of 1857, the near-defunct Muslim dynasties
(Moghuls, Nawabs) tried to curry favour with their Hindu subjects
and neighbours, in order to launch a joint effort to re-establish
their rule. For instance, the Nawab promised to give the Hindus the
Ram Janmabhoomi/Babri Masjid site back, in an effort to quench their
anti-Muslim animosity and redirect their attention towards the new
common enemy from Britain. This is the only instance in modern
history when Muslims offered concessions to the Hindus; after that,
all the concessions made for the sake of communal harmony were a
one-way traffic from Hindu to Muslim.
After the British had crushed the rebellion of 1857, the Indian
Muslims fell into a state of depression, increasing backwardness due
to their refusal of British education, and nostalgia for the past.
While the Hindu elites took to Western notions like secular
nationalism, the Muslims remained locked up in their communal
separateness. As soon as the British drew them into the political
process (founding of Muslim League in 1906) in order to use them as
a counter-weight against the Indian National Congress, they
immediately made heavy and hurtful demands on the Hindus, such as
the unlimited right to slaughter cows, and they started working for
political separation. First they obtained separate electorates where
Muslim candidates would only have to please Muslim voters, and later
they would succeed in separating a Muslim state from India.
By the twenties, they took to the unscrupled use of muscle power in
a big way, creating street riots and outright pogroms. If Hindus
retaliated in kind, it was a welcome help in instilling the separate
communal identity into the ordinary Muslim, who would have preferred
to coexist with his Hindu neighbours in peace. By creating riots and
provoking relatiatory violence, the Muslim League managed to swing
the vast majority of the Muslim electorate towards supporting its
demand for the partition of India. The roughly 600,000 victims of
the violence accompanying the Partition were the price which the
Muslim League was willing to pay for its Islamic state of Pakistan.
While every Hindu and Muslim who took part in the violence is
responsible for his own excesses, the over-all responsibility for
this mass- slaughter lies squarely with the Muslim leadership.
After independence, the Islamic persecution of Hindus has continued
in different degrees of intensity, in Pakistan, Bangla Desh and
Kashmir (as well as heavy discrimination in Malaysia). This is not
the place for detailing these facts, which the international media
have been ignoring completely. What may cut short all denials of
this continued pestering of Hindus in Muslim states, are the
resulting migration figures: in 1948, Hindus formed 23% of the
population of Bangla Desh (then East Pakistan), in 1971 the figure
was down to 15%, and today it stands at about 8%. No journalist or
human rights body goes in to ask the minority Hindus for their
opinion about the treatment they get from the Muslim authorities and
populations; but they vote with their feet.
In the first months of 1990, the entire Hindu population (about 2
lakhs) was forcibly driven from the Kashmir Valley, which used to be
advertised as a showpiece of communal harmony. Muslim newspapers and
mosque loudspeakers had warned the Hindus to leave the valley or
face bullets. After the Islamic conquest of Kabul in April 1992,
50,000 Hindus had to flee Afghanistan (with the Indian government
unwilling to extend help, and Inder Kumar Gujral denying that the
expulsion of Indians had a communal motive). The pogroms in
Pakistan and Bangladesh after the demolition of the Babri Masjid
left 50,000 Hindus homeless in Bangladesh and triggered another wave
of refugees from both countries towards India. In Pakistan, 245
Hindu temples were demolished, in Bangladesh a similar number was
attacked, and even in England some temples were set on fire by
Muslim mobs. And then we haven't even mentioned the recurrent
attacks on Hindu processions and on police stations.
It will now be evident that the Hindu psyche has very little
sympathy for Islam. Doing something about this was the chief motive
for negationism.
2.2 NEGATIONISM AND THE INDIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS
The political context of the frist attempts at negationism was
chiefly the attempt of the independence movement, led by the
Indian National Congress, to eliminate all factors of disunity
between Hindus and Muslims. It was the time of the Khilafat
movement (1919-23), the agitation of Indian Muslims against the
British take-over of the Islamic sacred places from the deceased
Ottoman empire. The khilafatists demanded the restoration of the
Ottoman caliph's authority over the sacred places. Congress saw
in this the occasion to enlist the Muslims in the national
freedom struggle against the same British imperialists.
This was a miscalculation: the khilafat movement intensified the
Islamic sense of communal identity (therefore the rejection of
Indian nationalism), and added considerably to Muslim separatism and
the Pakistan ideology. But before 1923, when the Turks themselves
abolished the caliphate so that the movement lost its raison d'etre
(and got transmuted into pogroms against the Hindus), there was
great expectation in Congress circles. Therefore, Congress people
were willing to go to any length to iron out the differences between
Hindus and Muslims, including the invention of centuries of
communal amity.
At that time, the Congress leders were not yet actively involved in the
rewriting of history. They were satisfied to quietly ignore the true
history of Hindu-Muslim relations. After the communal riots of Kanpur in
1931, a Congress report advised the elimination of the mutual enemy-
image by changing the contents of the history-books.
The next generation of political leaders, especially the left-wing
that was to gain control of Congress in the thirties, and complete
control in the fifties, would profess negationism very explicitly.
The radical humanist (i.e. bourgeois Marxist) M.N. Roy
wrote that Islam had fulfilled a historic mission of equality and
abolition of discrimination, and that for this, Islam had been
welcomed into India by the lower castes. If at all any violence had
occurred, it was as a matter of justified class struggle by the
progressive forces against the reactionary forces,
meaning the fedual Hindu upper castes.
This is a modern myth springing from an incorrect and much too grim
picture of the caste system, a back-projection of modern ideas of
class struggle, and an uncritical swallowing of contemporary Islamic
apologetics, which has incorporated some voguish socialist values.
There is no record anywhere of low-caste people welcoming the
Muslims as liberators. Just like in their homeland, the Muslim
generals had nothing but contempt for the common people, and all the
more so because these were idolaters. They made no distinction
between rich Pagans and poor Pagans: in the Quran, Allah had
promised the same fate to all idolaters.
By contrast, there is plenty of testimony that these common people
rose in revolt, not against their high-caste co-religionists, but
against the Muslim rulers. And not only against heavy new taxes (50%
of the land revenue for Alauddin Khilji, whom the negationists hail
as the
precursor of socialism) and land expropriations, but especially
against the rape and abduction of women and children and the
destruction of their idols, acts which have been recorded with so
much glee by the Muslim chroniclers, without anywhere mentioning a
separate treatment of Hindu rich and Hindu poor, upper-caste Kafir
or low-caste Kafir. Even when some of the high-caste people started
collaborating, the common people gave the invaders no rest,
attacking them from hiding-places in the forests. The conversion of
low-caste people only began when Muslim rulers were safely in power
and in a position to reward and encourage conversion by means of tax
discrimination, legal discrimination (win the dispute with your
neighbour if you convert), handing out posts to converts, and simple
coercion. Nevertheless, the myth which M.N. Roy spread, has gained
wide currency.
The best-known propounder of negationism was certainly Jawarharlal
Nehru. He was rather illiterate concerning Indian culture and
history, so his admirers may invoke for him the benefit of doubt. At
any rate, his writings contain some crude cases of glorification of
Muslim tyrants and concealment or denial of their crimes. Witness
his assessment of Mahmud Ghaznavi, who, according to his chronicler
Utbi, sang the praise of the temple complex at Mathura and then
immediately proceeded to destroy it. Nehru writes: "Building
interested Mahmud, and he was much impressed by the city of Mathura
near Delhi". About this he wrote: "There are here a
thousand edifices as firm as the faith of the faithful; nor is it
likely that this city has attained its present condition but at the
expense of many millions of dinars, nor could such another be
constructed under a period of 200 years." And that is all:
Nehru described the destroyer of Mathura as an admirer of Mathura,
apparently without noticing the gory sarcasm in Ghaznavi's eulogy.
Moreover, Nehru denied that Mahmud had committed his acts of
destruction out of any religious motive: "Mahmud was not a
religious man. He was a Mohammedan, but that was just by the way. He
was in the first place a soldier, and a brilliant soldier."
That Mahmud was definitely a religious man, and that he had
religious motives for his campaigns against the Hindus, is quite
clear from Utbi's contemporary chronicle. Every night Mahmud copied
from the Quran for the benefit of his soul. He risked his
life several times for the sake of destroying and desecrating
temples in which there was nothing to plunder, just to terrorize and
humiliate the Pagans. In his campaigns, he never neglected to invoke
the appropriate Quran verses. In venerating Mahmud as a pious hero
of Islam, Indian Muslims are quite faithful to history: unlike
Nehru, the ordinary Muslim refuses to practise negationism.
With Nehru, negationmism became the official line of the Indian
National Congress, and after Independence also of the Indian state
and government.
2.3 THE ALIGARH SCHOOL
A second factor in the genesis of negationism was the penetration
of Western ideas among a part of the Muslim elite, and especially
the (in Europe newly emerged) positive valuation of tolerance. The
Islamic elite was concentrated around two educational institutes,
spearheads of the traditional and of the (superficially)
westernizing trends among Indian Muslims. One was the theological
academy at Deoband, the other the British-oriented Aligarh Muslim
university.
The Deoband school was (and is) orthodox-Islamic, and rejected
modern values like nationalism and democracy. It simply observed
that India had once been a Dar-ul-Islam (house of Islam), and that
therefore it had to be brought back under Muslim control. The fact
that the majority of the population consisted of non-Muslims was not
important: in the medieval Muslim empires the Muslims had not been
in a majority either, and moreover, demography and conversion could
yet transform the Muslim minority into a majority.
Among the scions of the Deoband school we find Maulana Maudoodi, the
chief ideologue of modern fundamentalism. He opposed the Pakistan
scheme and demanded the Islamization of all of British India. After
independence, he settled in Pakistan and agitated for the full
Islamization of the (still too British) polity. Shortly before his
death in 1979, his demands were largely met when general Zia
launched his Islamization policy.
Outsiders will be surprised to find that the same school of which
Maudoodi was a faithful spokesman, also brought forth Maulana Abul
Kalam Azad, who was Congress president for several terms and who was
to become minister of Education in free India. Understandably but
unjustifiably, Azad has often been described as as moderate
and
nationalist Muslim: he rejected the Partition of India and the
foundation of Pakistan, not because he rejected the idea of a Muslim
state, but because he wanted all of India to become a Muslim state
in time.
When in the forties the Partition seemed unavoidable, Azad
patronized proposals to preserve India's unity, stipulating that
half of all members of parliament and of the government had to be
Muslims (then 24% of the population), with the other half to be
divided between Hindus, Ambedkarites, Christians, and the rest.
Short, a state in which Muslims would rule and non-Muslims would be
second-class citizens electorally and politically. The Cabinet
Mission Plan, proposed by the British as the ultimate sop for the
Muslim League, equally promised an effective parity between Muslims
and non-Muslims at the Central Government level and a veto right for
the Muslim minority. Without Gandhiji's and other Congress leaders'
knowing, Congress president Azad assured the British negotiators
that he would get the plan accepted by the Congress. When he was
caught in the act of lying to the Mahatma about the plan and his
assurance, he lost some credit even among the naive Hindus who
considered him a
moderate. But he retained his position of trust in Nehru's
cabinet, and continued his work for the ultimate transformation of
India into a Muslim State.
Maulana Azad's pleas for Hindu-Muslim co-operation had an esoteric
meaning, clear enough for Muslims but invisible for wilfully
gullible non-Muslims like his colleagues in the Congress leadership.
Azad declared that Hindu-Muslim co- operation was in complete
conformity with the Prophet's vision, for "Mohammed had also
made a treaty with the Jews of Madina". He certainly had, but
the practical impact of this treaty was that within a few years, two
of the three Jewish clans in Medina had ben chased away, and the
third clan had been massacred to the last man (the second clan had
only been saved by the intervention of other Medinese leaders, for
Mohammed had wanted to kill them too). Maulana Azad could mention
Mohammed's treaty with the Jews as a model for Hindu-Muslim
co-operation only because he was confident that few Hindus were
aware of the end of the story, and that better-informed Hindus
honoured a kind of taboo on criticism of Islam and its Prophet.
This parenthesis about Maulana Azad may help clear up some illusions
which Hindus and Westerners fondly entertain about the possibility
of Islamic moderacy. The Deoband school was as fundamentalist in its
Azad face as it was in its Maudoodi heart, and its spokesmen had no
problems with the horrors of Islamic history, nor did they make
attempts to rewrite it. That Muslims had persecuted and massacred
Hindus, counted as the fulfilment of Allah's salvation plan to
transform the whole world into a Dar-ul-Islam. As Mohammed Iqbal
wrote: "All land belongs to the Muslims, because it belongs to
their God." (Iqbal would, however, end up in the Aligarh camp,
cfr. infra) Maulana Azad shared this view of history. He condemned
Moghul emperor Akbar's tolerant rule as the near-suicide of Indian
Islam, and praised fanatics like the theologian Ahmad Sirhindi, who
through his opposition to Akbar's tolerance had brought the Moghul
dynasty back on the right track of Hind-persecution.
Unlike the Deoband school, the Aligarh school tried to reconcile Islam
with modern culture. It understood the principles of democracy and
majority rule, and recognized that a modern democracy would be
incompatible with the transformation of India into an Islamic state as
long as Muslims only formed a minority. The tactical opposition against
the disadvantageous system of democracy was underpinned ideologically by
Mohammed Iqbal, who criticized it as a system in which heads are
counted but not weighed. But Iqbal understood that democracy was
the wave of the near future, and, together with more modern and
sincerely democracy-minded people in the Muslim intelligentsia, he faced
the logical consequence that the Muslims had to give up the ambition of
gaining control over all of India immediately. Instead they should
create a separate state out of the Muslim-majority areas of India:
Pakistan. The ideal of Pakistan was launched by Iqbal in 1930, and in
1940 it became the official political goal of the Muslim League. Aligarh
Muslim University has often been described as the
cradle of Pakistan.
From their better knowledge of and appreciation for modern culture,
the Aligarh thinkers accepted the modern value of religious
tolerance. Not to the extent that they would be willing to co-exist
with the Hindus in a single post-colonial state, but at least to
this extent that they wanted to do something about the imge of
intolerance which Islam had come to carry. Around 1920 Aligarh
historian Mohammed Habib launched a grand project to rewrite the
history of the Indian religious conflict. The main points of his
version of history are the following.
Firstly, it was not all that serious. One cannot fail to notice that
the Islamic chroniclers (including some rulers who wrote their own
chronicles, like Teimur and Babar) have described the slaughter of
Hindus, the abduction of their women and children, and the
destruction of their places of worship most gleefully. But,
according to Habib, these were merely exaggerations by court poets
out to please their patrons. One wonders what it says about Islamic
rulers that they felt flattered by the bloody details which the
Muslims chroniclers of Hindu persecutions have left us. At any rate,
Habib has never managed to underpin this convenient hypothesis with
a single fact.
Secondly, that percentage of atrocities on Hindus which Habib was
prepared to admit as historical, is not to be attributed to the
impact of Islam, but to other factors. Sometimes Islam was used as a
justification post factum, but this was deceptive. In reality
economic motives were at work. The Hindus amassed all their wealth
in temples and therefore Muslim armies plundered these temples.
Thirdly, according to Habib there was also a racial factor: these
Muslims were mostly Turks, savage riders from the steppes who would
need several centuries before getting civilized by the wholesome
influence of Islam. Their inborn barbarity cannot be attributed to
the doctrines of Islam.
Finally, the violence of the Islamic warriors was of minor
importance in the establishment of Islam in India. What happened was
not so much a conquest, but a shift in public opinion:
when the urban working-class heard of Islam and realized it now had
a choice between Hindu law (smrti) and Muslim law (shariat), it
chose the latter.
Mohammed Habib's excise in history-rewriting cannot stand the test
of historical criticism on any score. We can demonstrate this with
the example of Sultan Mahmud Ghaznavi (997-1030), already mentioned,
who carried out a number of devastating raids in Sindh, Gujrat and
Punjab. This Ghaznavi was a Turk, certainly, but in many respects he
was not a barbarian: he patronized arts and literature (including
the great Persian poet Firdausi, who would end up in trouble because
his patron suspected him of apostasy, and the Persian but
Arabic-writing historian Albiruni) and was a fine calligraphist
himself. The undeniable barbarity of his anti-Hindu campaigns cannot
be attributed to his ethnic stock. His massacres and acts of
destruction were merely a replay of what the Arab Mohammed bin Qasim
had wrought in Sindh in 712-15. He didn't care for material gain: he
left rich mosques untouched, but poor Hindu temples met the same
fate at his hands as the richer temples. He turned down a Hindu
offer to give back a famous idol in exchange for a huge ransom:
"I prefer to appear on Judgement Day as an idol-breaker rather than
an idol-seller." The one explanation that covers all the
relevant facts, is that he was driven to his barbarous acts by his
ideological allegiance to Islam.
There is no record of his being welcomed by urban artisans as a
liberator from the oppressive Hindu social system. On the contrary,
his companion Albiruni testifies how all the Hindus had an
inveterate aversion for all Muslims.
Another ruler, Firuz Shah Tughlaq (1351-88), personally confirms
that the descruction of Pagan temples was done out of piety, not out
of greed: "The Hindus had accepted the zimmi status and the
concomitant jizya tax in exchange for safety. But now they built
idol temples in the city, in defiance of the Prophet's law which
forbids such temples. Under divine leadership I destroyed these
buildings, and killed the leaders of idolatry, and the common
followers received physical chastisement, until this abomination had
been banned completely." When Firuz heard that a Pagan festival
was going on, he reacted forcefully: "My religious feelings
exhorted me to finish off this scandal, this insult to Islam. On the
day of the festival I went there myself, I ordered the execution of
the leaders and practitioners of this abomination... I destroyed
their idol temples and built mosques in their places."
The contention that Hindus stored their riches in temples
is completely plucked out of thin air (though some of the richer
temples contained golden statues, which were temple property): it is
one among many ad hoc hypotheses which make Habib's theory a
methodologically indefensible construction. In fact, Habib is
proclaining a grand conspiracy theory: all the hundreds of Islamic
authors who declared unanimously that what they reported was a war
of Islam against Infidelity, would all have co-ordinated one single
fake scenario to deceive us.
This is not to say that the entire report which the Muslim
chroniclers have left us, should be accepted at face value. For
instance, writers like Ghaznavi's contemporary Utbi give the
impression that the raids on, and ultimate conquest of Hindustan
were a walk-over. Closer study of all the source material shows that
the Muslim armies had a very tough time in India. From Muslim
chronicles one only gets a faint glimpse of the intensity with which
the Hindus kept on offering resistance, and of the precariousness of
the Muslim grip on Hindistan through the Muslim period. The
Muslim chroniclers have not been caught in the act of lying very
often, but some of them distort the proportions of victory and
defeat a bit. This is quite common among partisan historians
everywhere, and a modern historian knows how to take such minor
distortions into account. The unanimous and entirely coherent
testimony that the wars in Hindustan were religious wars of Muslims
against Kafirs is a different matter altogether: denying this
testimony is not a matter of small adjustments, but of replacing the
well-attested historical facts with their diametrical opposite.
Habib tried to absolve the ideology (Islam) of the undeniable facts
of persecution and massacre of the Pagans by blaming individuals
(the Muslims). The sources however point to the opposite state of
affairs: Muslim fanatics were merely faithful executors of Quranic
injunctions. Not the Muslims are guilty, but Islam.
2.4 NEGATIONISM RAMPANT: THE MARXISTS
The Aligarh school has been emulated on a large scale. Soon its
torch was taken over by Marxist historians, who were building a
reputation for unscrupled history-rewriting in accordance with the
party-line.
In this context, one should know that there is a strange alliance
between the Indian Communist parties and the Muslim fanatics. In the
forties the Communists gave intellectual muscle and political
support to the Muslim League's plan to partition India and create an
Islamic state. After independence, they successfully combined (with
the tacit support of Prime minister Nehru) to sabotage the
implementation of the constitutional provision that Hindi be adopted
as national language, and to force India into the Soviet-Arab front
against Israel. Ever since, this collaboration has continued to
their mutual advantage as exemplified by their common front to
defend the Babri Masjid, that symbol of Islamic fanaticism. Under
Nehru's rule these Marxists acquired control of most of the
educational and research institutes and policies.
Moreover, they had an enormous mental impact on the Congress
apparatus: even those who formally rejected the Soviet system,
thought completely in Marxist categories. They accepted, for
instance, that religious conflicts can be reduced to economic and
class contradictions. They also adopted Marxist terminology, so that
they always refer to conscious Hindus as the communal forces
or elements (Marxism dehumanizes people to impersonal
pawns, or
forces, in the hands of god History). The Marxist historians
had the field all to themselves, and they set to work to
decommunalize Indian history-writing, i.e. to erase the
importance of Islam as a factor of conflict.
In Communalism and the Writing of indian History, Romila
Thapar, Harbans Mukhia and Bipan Chandra, professors at Jawaharlal
Nehry University (JNU, the Mecca of secularism and
negationism) in Delhi, write that the interpretation of medieval
wars as religious conflicts is in fact a back- projection of
contemporary religious conflict artificially created for political
purposes. In Bipan Chandra's famous formula, communalism is not
a dinosaur, it is a strictly modern phenomenon. They explicitly
deny that before the modern period there existed such a thing as
Hindu identity or Muslim identity. Conflicts could not have been
between Hindus and Muslims, only between rulers or classes who
incidentally also belonged to one religious community or the other.
They point to the conflicts within the communities and to alliances
across community boundaries.
It is of course a fact that some Hindus collaborated with the Muslim
rulers, but that also counted for the British colonial rulers, who
are for that no less considered as foreign oppressors. For that
matter, in the Jewish ghetto in Warsaw the Nazis employed Jewish
guards, in their search for absconding Jews they employed Jewish
informers, and in their policy of deportation they even sought the
co-operation of the Zionist movement: none of this can disprove
Nazi- Jewish enmity. It is also a fact that the Muslim rulers
sometimes made war among each other, but that was equally true for
Portuguese, French and British colonizers, who fought some wars on
Indian territory: they were just as much part of a single colonial
movement with a common colonial ideology, and all the brands of
colonialism were equally the enemies of the indian freedom movement.
Even in the history of the Crusades, that paradigm of religious war,
we hear a lot of battles between one Christian-Muslim coalition and
another: these do not falsify the over-all characterization of the
Crusades as a war between Christians and Muslims (triggered by the
destruction of Christian churches by Muslims).
After postulating that conflicts between Hindus and Muslims as such
were non-existent before the modern period, the negationists are
faced with the need to explain how this type of conflict was born
after centuries of a misunderstood non-existence. The Marxist
explanation is a conspiracy theory: the separate communal identity
of Hindus and Muslims is an invention of the sly British
colonialists. They carried on a divide and rule policy, and
therefore they incited the communal separateness. As the example par
excellence, prof. R.S. Sharma mentions the 19th -century 8-volume
work by Elliott and Dowson, The History of India as Told by its
own Historians. This work does indeed paint a very grim picture
of Muslim hordes who attack the Pagans with merciless cruelty. But
this picture was not a concoction by the British historians: as the
title of their work says, they had it all from indigenous
historiographers, most of them Muslims.
Yet, the negationist belief that the British newly created the
Hindu-Muslim divide has become an article of faith with everyone in
India who calls himself a
secularist. It became a central part of the negationist
argument in the debate over the Ram Janmabhoomi/Babri Masjid issue.
Time and again, the negationist historians (including Bipan Chandra,
K.N. Panikkar, S. Gopal, Romila Thapar, Harbans Mukhia, Irfan Habib,
R.S. Sharma, Gyanendra Pandey, Sushil Srivastava, Asghar Ali
Engineer, as well as the Islamic politician Syed Shahabuddin) have
asserted that the tradition according to which the Babri mosque
forcibly replaced a Hindu temple, is nothing but a myth purposely
created in the 19th century. To explain the popularity of the myth
even among local Muslim writers in the 19th century, most of them
say it was a deliberate British concoction, spread in the interest
of the divide and rule- policy. They affirm this conspiracy
scenario without anyhow citing, from the copious archives which the
British administration in India has left behind, any kind of
positive indication for their convenient hypothesis - let alone the
rigorous proof on which a serious historian would base his
assertions, especially in such controversial questions.
They have kept on taking this stand even after five documents by
local Muslims outside the British sphere in the 19th century, two
documents by Muslim officials from the early 18th century, and two
documents by European travellers from the 18th and 17th century, as
well as the extant revenue records, all confirming the temple
destruction scenario, were brought to the public's notice in 1990.
In their pamphlets and books, the negationists simply kept on
ignoring most or all of this evidence, defiantly disregarding
historical fact as well as academic deontology.
Concerning the Ayodhya debate, it is worth recalling that the
negationists have also resorted to another tactic so familiar to our
European negationists, and to all defenders of untenable positions:
personal attacks on their opponents, in order to pull the public's
attention away from the available evidence. In December 1990, the
leading JNU historians and several allied scholars, followed by the
herd of secularist penpushers in the Indian press, have tried to
raise suspicions against the professinal honesty of Prof. B.B. Lal
and Dr. S.P. Gupta, the archaeologists who have unearthed evidence
for the existence of a Hindu temple at the Babri Masjid site.
Rebuttals by these two and a number of other archaelogists hae
received coverage in the secularist press.
In February 1991, Irfan Habib give his infamous speech to the Aligarh
Muslim University historians, in which he made personal attacks on the
scholars who took part in the government-sponsored debate on Ayodhya in
defence of the Hindu claim, and on Prof. B.B. Lal. In this case, the
weekly Sunday did publish a lengthy reply by the deputy superintending
archaeologist of the Archaeological Survey of India, A.K. Sinha. The
contents of this reply are very relevant, but it is a bit technical
(i.e. not adapted to the medium of a weekly for the general public) and
written in clumsy English, which gives a poor over-all impression.
Actually, I speculate that the Sunday-editor may well have selected
it for publication precisely because of these flaws. The practice is
well-known in the treatment of
letters to the editor: those defending the wrong
viewpoint only get published if they are somewhat funny or otherwise
harmless. I cannot be sure about this particular case, but it is a
general fact that from their power positions, the negationists use
every means at their disposal to create a negative image for the
Hindu opponents of Islamic imperialism, including the selective
highlighting of the most clumsy and least convincing formulations of
the Hindu viewpoint.
In his Babri Masjid Ram Janmabhoomi Controversy, the Islamic
apologist Ali Asghar Engineer has also selected a few incomplete and
less convincing statements of the Hindu position, in order to create
a semblance of willingness to hear the Hindu viewpoint while at the
same time denying the Hindu side any publicity for its strongest
arguments. He has kept the most decisive pieces of evidence entirely
out of the readers' view, but has covered this deliberate distortion
of the picture behind a semblance of even- handedness. In
Anatomy of a Confrontation, the JNU historians do not even
mention the powerful argumentation by Prof. A.R. Khan, while Prof.
Harsh Narain and Mr. A.K. Chatterjee's presentation authentic
testimonies (in Indian Express, republished by Voice of India in
Hindu Temples, What happened to Them and in History vs.
Casuistry) are only mentioned but not detailed and discussed,
let alone refuted; but clumsy RSS pamphlets and improvised
statements by BJP orators are quoted and analyzed at length.
The concluding paragraph of A.K.Sinha's rebuttal to Irfan Habib's
speech points out the contradiction between the earlier work of even
Marxist historians about ancient India (in which they treat the
epics as sources of history, not mere fable) and their recent
Babri-politicized stand:
"Today, even taking the name of Mahabharata and Ramayana is
considered as anti-national and communal by the communist leaders,
Babri Masjid Action Committee historians and the pseudo-secularists.
What do they propose to do with all that has been published so far
in [this] context by the Marxists themselves, notably D.D. Kosambi,
R.S. Sharma, Romila Thapar, K.M. Shrimali, D.N. Jha and others? I
have been thinking about the behavious of our Marxist friends and
historians, their unprovoked slander campaign against many
colleagues, hurling abuses and convicting anyone and everyone even
before the charges could be framed and proved. Their latest target
is [so] sobre and highly respected a person as prof. B.B. Lal, who
has all his life (now he is nearing 70) never involved himself in
petty politics or in the groupism [which is] so favourite a sport
among the so- called Marxist intellectuals of this country. But then
[slander] is a well-practised art among the Marxists."
Another trick which a student of Holocaust negationism will readily
recognize in the pro-Babri campaign of the Indian negationists, is
that truly daring form of amnipulation: selectively quoting an
authority to make him say the opposite of his own considered
opinion. When the JNU historians started slandering Prof. B.B. Lal
as a turncoat hired by the VHP, this was a panic reaction after
their earlier tactic had been exposed (though only in Indian
Express, but the negationist front will not tolerate even one hole
in the cordon of information control). Until then, they had been
using B.B. Lal's fame to suport their own position that the Babri
Masjid had not replaced a temple.
In their pamphlet The Political Abuse of History, the JNU
historians had quoted from a brief summary, published by the
Archaeological Survey of India in 1980, of Prof. B.B. Lal's report
on his excavations in Ayodhya and other Ramayana sites. They knew
this report perfectly well, for they had gleefully quoted its
finding that the excavations just near the Babri Masjid had not
yielded any remains pre- dating the 9th century BC. But then they
had gone on to state that there was no archeological indication for
a pre- Masjid temple on that controversial site at all, even when
the same report had cursorily mentioned the remains of a building
dated to the 11th century AD. Later on, they have quoted the same
summary as saying that the later period was devoid of any
interest, suggesting that nothing of any importance dating from
the medieval period had been found.
In fact, this remark only proves that the ASI summarizer saw no reason
to give (or saw reasons not to give) details about the uninteresting
but nonetheless existing medieval findings. But in autumn 1990, some of
these details have been made public and they turned out to be of
decisive importance in the Ram Janmabhoomi debate. Prof.K.N. Panikkar
(in Anatomy of a Confrontation) suggests that, if these
relevant details were not recently thought up to suit the theories
of the RSS, they must have been deliberately concealed at that
time (late seventies) by the ASI summarizer. The latter possibility
means that negationists are active in the ASI publishing section,
editing archaeological reports to suit the negationist campaign.
The implied allegation is so serious that K.N. Panikkar expects the
reader to assume the other alternative, viz. an RSS concoction. But he
may well have hit the nail on its head with his suggestion that
negationists in the ASI are doing exactly the same thing that they are
doing in all Indian institutions and media: misusing their positions to
distort information.
At any rate, the details of the full report were given in articles
by Dr. S.P. Gupta and by Prof. B.B. Lal himself (and independently
by other archaeologists in talks and letters to Indian Express) in
late 1990. The pillar-bases of an 11th century building, aligned to
the Babri Masjid walls, were presented by Prof. B.B. Lal and Dr.
S.P.Gupta in separate filmed interviews with the BBC. There could be
no doubt about it anymore: Prof. B.B. Lal had arrived at a
conclusion opposite to the one ascribed to him by a number of
Marxist historians (not only from JNU).
That is why is early December 1990 several of the most vocal Marxist
historians suddenly took to slander and accused Prof. B.B. Lal of
having changed his opinion in order to suit the VHP's political
needs. Now that they could no longer use Prof. Lal's reputation for
their own ends, they decided to try and destroy it. In the case of
Dr. S.P. Gupta, they have not taken back their ridiculous allegation
that he had falsely claimed participation in the Ramayana sites
excavations. But with a big name like B.B. Lal, an impeccable
academic of world fame, they had to be careful, because slander
against him might somehow backfire. That is why they have nor
pressed the point, and why a number of Marxist historians and other
participants in the Ayodhya debate have quitely reverted to the
earlier tactic of selectively quoting from the ASI summary of Prof.
B.B. Lal's report, and acting as if the great archaeologist has
supported and even proven their own position. As the press had given
minimum coverage to B.B. Lal and S.P. Gupta's revelations, many
people would not suspect the truth.
Another trick from the negationists' book that has been very much in
evidence during the Ayodhya debate, consists in focusing all
attention on the pieces of evidence given by those who upheld the
historical truth,, and trying to find fault with them as valid
evidence. Thus, at the press conference (19 Dec. 1992) where Dr.
S.P. Gupta and other historians presented photographs of an
inscription found during the demolition of the Babri Masjid, which
proved once more that a temple had stood on the site, and that it
was specifically a birthplace temple for "Vishnu Hari
who defeated Bali and the ten-headed king [Ravana]", some
journalists heckled the speakers with remarks that "because of
the demolition, the inscription was not in situ and therefore not
valid as evidence", and similar feats of petty fault-finding.
A few days later, a group of 70 archaeologists and historians,
mostly names who had not taken a prominent role in this debate so
far, brought shame on themselves by pronouncing judgement on this
piece of evidence without even seeing, let alone studying it. They
demanded not that the government look into this new evidence, as
would be proper for representatives of the scientific spirit, but
that it trace down from which museum the planted evidence
had been stolen and brought to Ayodhya. In doing history
falsification, it is best to remain on the attack, and to put the
bonafide historians on the defensive by accusing them first.
After dozens of pieces of evidence for the forcible replacement
of temple with mosque scenario had been given, the Babri
negationists had never come up with a single piece of counter-
evidence (i.e. positive evidence for an alternative scenario); they
could not do better than keep silent over the most striking
evidence, and otherwise scream at the top of their voice that
evidence A did not count, evidence B was not valid, evidence C was
flawed, evidence D was fabricated. In 1992 alone, in the clearing
operations near the Janmabhoomi site in June, during several visits
of experts, and during the demolition on 6 December, more than 200
pieces of archaeological evidence for the pre-existent Vaishnava
temple had been found, but these 70 scholars preferred to disregard
all them. This time, the suggestion was that in the middle of the
kar seva, the inscription had been planted there. You could just as
well join the Holocaust negationists and say that the gas chambers
found in 1945 had been a Hollywood mise-en-scene. Picking at a
single testimony as if the whole case depends on it has been a
favourite technique of the negationists to distract attention from
the larger picture, to make people forget that even if this one
piece of evidence were flawed, this would not invalidate the general
conclusions built on a whole corpus of evidence.
A final point of similarity between the Marxist involvement in the
Babri Masjid case and the techniques of Holocaust negationism is the
fact that there was a Babri Masjid debate in the first place.
Indeed, postulating doubt and the need for a debate is the first
step of denial. The tradition that the Babri Masjid had forcibly
replaced a temple was firmly established ad supported by sources
otherwise accepted as authoritative; when it was challenged, this
was not on the basis of newfound material which justified a
re-examination of the historical position. The correct procedure
would have been that the deniers of the established view come up
with some positive evidence for their innovative position: until
then, there was simply no reason for a debate. Instead, they started
demanding that the other side give proof of what had been known all
along, and forced a debate on something that was really a matter of
consensus. Subsequently, instead of entering the ring, attacking or
countering their opponents' case with positive evidence of their
own, the challengers set themselves up as judges of the other side's
argumentation. This is indeed reminiscent of the negationist
Institute for Historical Review announcing a prize for whomever
could prove that the Holocaust had taken place.
There is yet another trick from the negationist arsenal which has
been tried in India: find a witness from the victims' camp to
testify to the aggressor's innocence. Of course there are not
witnesses around who lived through Aurangzeb's terror, but there are
many who lived through the horrors of Partition. It is nobody's case
that the killings wich Jinnah considered a fair price for his Muslim
state, never took place. But the negationists have spent a lot of
effort on proving the next best thing: that the guilt was spread
evently among Hindus and Muslims.
The Communist novelist Bhishma Sahni has used the novel Tamas to
point the Hindus as the villains in the Partition violence. The
interesting thing is that Bhishma Sahni's own family was among the
Hindu refugees hounded out or Pakistan. His anti-Hindu bias, coming
from a man who would have more reason for an anti-Muslim animus, is
a gift from heaven for the Hindu-baiters. Marxist Professor Bipan
Chandra parades a similar character in his paper: Communalism - the
Way Out (published together with two lectures by KJhushwant Singh
as: Many Faces of Communalism). One of his students had survived the
terror of Partition in Rawalpindi, losing 7 family members. Bud he
did not have any animus against the Muslims, for he said: "Very
early I realized that my parents had not been killed by the Muslims,
they had been kiled by communalism." Coming from a victim of
Muslim violence, this is excellent material for those who want to
apportion equal blame to Hindus nd Muslims.
Of course, Bipan Chandra's student was right. The cause of Partition
and of its accompanying violence was not the Muslims, but
communalism, i.e. the belief that people with a common religion
form a separate social and political entity. This belief is not
fostered by Hinduism, but it is central to Islam ever since Mohammed
founded his first Islamic state in Medina. It is true that some
Hindu groups (most conspicuously the Sikhs) have recently adopted
some Islamic elements, including the communalist belief
that a religious group forms a separate nation entitled to a
separate state. But the source of this communalist poison
in India is and remains Islam. Therefore, Bipan Chandra's student
has in fact said: "My family was not killed by the Muslims, but
by Islam."
It is a different matter that Muslims are the most likely carriers
of the Islamic disease called communalism, and that they had
massively voted for the commnalist project of creating a separate
Muslim state. The culprit was Islam, and concerning the positions of
the Muslims in the light of the fanatical nature of Islam, I would
quote Bipan Chandra's own simile for understanding the difference
between communalism and its adherents: when a patient
suffers from a terrible disease, you don't kill him, but cure him.
The victims of Islamic indoctrination should not be the target of
Hindu revenge, as they were in large numbers in 1947. Don't kill the
patient, kill the disease. Remove Islam from the Muslims' minds
through education and India's communal problem will be as
good as solved.
At this point we may take a second look at the Marxist position,
mentioned above, that the Hindu community is a recent
invention. The observations which I just made concerning the Islamic
provenance of communalism might seem to confirm that there
was no Hindu communal identity. However, the authentic
sources from the medieval period are unanimous about the sharp
realization of a separate communal identity as Muslims and as
Hindus, overwhelmingly on the Muslim side, but also on the Hindu
side. We know for instance that Shivaji, who turned the tide of the
Muslim offensive in the late 17th centure, was a conscious partisan
of an all-Hindu liberation war against Muslim rule (Hindu Pad
Padashahi). The same counts for Rana Pratap and many other Hindu
leaders, and there cannot be any doubt that the Vijayanagar empire
was conscious of its role as the last fortress of Hindu
civilization.
It is true that some Hindu kings attacked neighbouring Hindu states
in the back when these were attacked by the Muslim invaders. They
were at first not aware that these Islamic newcomers were a common
enemy, motivated by hatred against all non-Muslims; but their lack
of insight into the character of Islam in no way disproves their
awareness of a common Hindu identity. The fact that they were
acutely aware of their internal political rivalries, does not
exclude that they were aware of a more fundamental common identity,
which was not at stake in these internecine feuds, but which they
defended together once they realized that it was the target of this
new kind of ideologically motivated aggressor, Islam. Brothers are
aware that they have a lot in common, and this is not disproven by
the fact that, when left to themselves, they also quarrel with each
other.
If at all some Hindus had at first only been conscious of their own
caste or sect rather than of the Hindu commonwealth, the Muslim
persecutions of all Hindus without distinction certainly made them
aware of their common identity and interest. So, if the Marxists
perforce want to deny the common culture and value system underlying
the diversity of the Hindu commonwealth, then let them apply some of
their own dialectics instead. "It is in their common struggle
aginst the Islamic aggressors, that the disparate sections of the
native Indian society have forged their common identity as Hindus":
I do not agree with this statement which posits a negative and
reactive basis for a common Hindu identity, but it must be accepted
if one labours under the assumption that there never had been a
positive common identity before. It is unreasonable to expect the
Indian Pagans to be lumped together as Hindus for
centuries on end, to be uniformly made the target of one neverending
aggression by Islam, to be subjected to the same humiliations and
the same jizya tax, and yet not become conscious of a common
interest. This common interest would then give rise to unifying
cultural superstructure. That is how the sustained and uniform
Islamic attack on all India Pagans would inevitably have given rise
to at least a measure of common Hindu identity if this had not
previously existed.
In his Communal History and Rama's Ayodhya (1990), the
Marxist Professor R.S. Sharma argues that the medieval Hindus did
not see the Muslims as a distinct religious entity, but as
an ethnic group, the Turks. His proof: the Gahadvala
dynasty levied a tax called Turushkadanda, tax financing the
war effort against the Turks. But this does not prove what
Sharma thinks it proves.
The Muslims called the Pagans of India sometimes
Kafirs, unbelievers, i.e. a religious designation; but often
they called them Hindus inhabitants of Hindustan, i.e. an
ethnic-geographical designation (from Hind, the Persian equivalent
of Sindh). And they gave religious contents to this geographical
term, which it has kept till today: so it is correct that the
Hindus never defined themselves as Hindus, as this was
the Persian and later the Muslim term for the Indian Pagans adhering
to Sanatana Dharma. But that was only a terminological matter, the
fundamental religious unity of the Sanatana Dharmis was just as much
a fact. Similarly, the Hindus called these newcomers Turks, but this
does not exclude recognition of their religious specificity. On the
contrary, even Teimur the Terrible, who made it absolutely clear in
his memoirs that he came to India to wage a religious war against
the Pagans, and who freed the Muslim captives from a conquered city
before putting the Hindu remainder to the sword, referred to his own
forces as the Turks. Conversely, the Hindus describe as the
typical Turkish behavious pattern that which is enjoined by
Islam.
While it is true that the Hindus have been much too slow (till
today) in studying the religious foundation of the barbaric
behavious which they experienced at the hands of the Turushkas,
at least they soon found out that for these invaders religion was
the professed motive of their inhuman behavious. Prof. Sharma's
piece of evidence, the institution of a Turushkandana, does however
prove very clearly that the Islamic threat was extraordinary: the
normal armed forces and war credits were not sufficient to deal with
this threat which was in a class by itself.
The original source material leaves us in no doubt that conflicts
often erupted on purely religious grounds, even against the
political and economical interests of the contending parties. The
negationists' tactic therefore consists in keeping this original
testimony out of view. A good example is Prof. Gyanendra Pandey's
recent book, The Construction of Communalism in Colonial North
India. As the title clearly says, Pandey asserts that
communalism (the Hindu-Muslim conflict) had been
constructed by the British for colonial purposes anmd out of
colonial prejuidices, was later interiorized by Indians looking for
new, politically profitable forms of organization in modern colonial
society. This is like saying that anti-Judaism is a construction of
modern capitalists to divide the working class (the standard Marxist
explanation for all kinds of racism), while concealing the copious
medieval testimony of anti-Judaism on undeniably non-capitalist
grounds. Prof. Pandey effectively denies a millenniumful of
testimonies to Islamic persecution of the Indian (Hindu)
Kafirs.
Another example is prof. K.N. Panikkar's work on the
Moplah rebellion,,, a pofgrom against the Hindus by the Malabar
(Kerala) Muslims in the margin of the khilafat movement in 1921
(official death toll 2,339). Panikkar takes the orthodox Marxist
position that this was not a communal but a class conflict, not
between Hindus and Muslims but between workers who happened to be
Muslims and landlords who happened to be Hindus. In reality the
communal character of the massacre was so evident that even Mahatma
Gandhi recognized it as terrible blow for his ideal of Hindu-Muslim
unity. It is quite possible that the occasion was used to settle
scores with landlords and money- lenders (that stereotype of
anti-Hindu as well as of anti- Jewish sloganeering), but the mullahs
exhorted their flock to attack all Hindus, and added in so many
words that not only the landlords but all the Hindus were their
enemies. The poison of Islamic fanaticism is such that it turns any
kind of conflict into an attack on the non-Muslims.
More Marxist wisdom we encounter in Romila Thapar's theory (in her
contribution to S. Gopal's book on the Ayodhya affair, Anatomy of a
Confrontation) that the current Hindu movement wants to unite all
Hindus, not because the Hindus feel besieged by hostile forces, not
because they have a memory of centuries of jihad, but because
"a monolithic religion is more compatible with capitalism" (to
borrow the formulation of a reviewer). She thinks that the political
Hindu movement is merely a concoction by Hindu capitalists, or in
her own words "part of the attempt to redefine Hinduism as an
ideology for modernization by the middle class", in which
"modernization is seen as linked to the growth of capitalism".
She reads the mind behind the capitalist conspiracy to reform
Hinduism thus: "Capitalism is often believed to thrive among
Semitic religions such as Christianity and Islam. The argument would
then run that if capitalism is to succeed in India, then Hinduism
would also have to be moulded in a Semitic form".
It is always interesting to see how Communists presuppose the
superiority of Hinduism by denouncing Hindu militancy as the
semiticization or islamization of Hinduism. But the
point is that the political mobilization of Hindu society under the
increasing pressure of hostile forces is explained away as merely a
camouflage of economic forces. One smiles about such simplistic
subjection of unwilling facts of Marxist dogma. Especially because
such
analyses were still being made in 1991, and are still being
made today: in India it has not yet dawned on the dominant
intelligentsia that Marxism has failed not only as a political and
economical system, but also as a socialogical model of explanation.
On the contrary, Indian Marxists even manage to make foreign
correspondents for non- Marxist media swallow their analysis, e.g.
after the Babri Masjid demolition, even the conservative Frankfurter
Allgemeine Seitung explained Hindu fundamentalism in the
same socio-economical terms, complete with urban traders
who are looking for an identity etc.
Incidentally, Romila Thapar is right in observing that certain Hindu
revivalists ae trying to "find parallels with the Semitic
religions as if these parallels are necessary for the future of
Hinduism" (though her attempt to force the Ram Janmabhoomi
movement into this mould, with Rama being turned into a prophet
and the Ramayana into the sole revealed Scripture etc., is
completely unfounded and another pathetic case of trying to force
unwilling facts into a pre- conceived scheme). She sounds like
favouring a renewed emphasis on "the fact that the religious
experience of Indian civilization and of religious sects which are
bunched together under the label of Hindu are distinctively
different from that of the Semitic".
It is true that some Hindu revivalist movements have tried to
redefine Hinduism in terms borrowed from monotheism, with rudiments
of notions like an infallible Scripture (back to the Vedas:
the Arya Samaj), iconoclastic monotheism (Arya Samaj, Akali
neo-Sikhs), or a monolithic hierarchic organization (the RSS). But
the reason for this development cannot with any stretch of the
imagination be deduced from the exigencies of capitalism. An honest
analysis of this tendency in Hinduism to imitate the
Christian-Islamic model will demonstrate that a psychology of
tactical imitation as a way of self-defence against these aggressive
Semitic religions was at work. The tendency cannot possibly be
reduced to the socio- economical categories dear to Marxism, but
springs from the terror which Islam (not fedualism or capitalism,
but Islam) had struck in the Hindu mind, and which was subsequently
fortified with an intellectual dimension by the Christian missionary
propaganda against primitive polytheism. Those Hindus who
were waging the struggle for survival against the Islamic and
Christian onslaught have come to resemble their enemies a bit, and
have interiorized a lot of the aggressors' contempt for typical
Hindu things, such as idol- worship, doctrinal pluralism, social
decentralization. It is for Hindu society to reflect on whether this
imitation was the right course, and whether it has not been self-
defeating in some respects.
At any rate, the very existence of this psychological need among
some militant Hindus to imitate the prophetic- monotheistic
religions is a symptom of an already old polarization between
Hinduism and aggressive monotheism, especially Islam. Bipan
Chandra's chronology of
communalism as a 20th century phenomenon cannot explain the
communal polarization of which Sikhism and the Arya Samaj were
manifestations. These can only be understood from the centuries oif
active hostility between Islam and Hinduism. Shivaji was not a
herald of capitalism, nor a product of British divide and rule
policy, but a participant in an ongoing war between Hindu
civilization and Islamic aggression.
Since the 1950s the history market is being flooded with
publications conveying the negationist version to a greater or
lesser extent. The public is fed negationist TV serials like
The Sword of Tipu Sultan, an exercise in whitewashing the
arch-fanatic last Muslim ruler. Most general readers and many
serious students only get to know about Indian history through
negationist glasses. In India, the negationists have managed what
European negationists can only dream of: turn the tables on honest
historians and marginalize them. People who have specialized in
adapting history to the party-line, are lecturing others about the
political abuse of history. By contrast, geunine historians who
have refused to tamper with the record of Islam (like Jadunath
Sarkar, R.C. Majumdar, K.S. Lal) are held us as examples of
communalist historywriting in textbooks which are required
reading in all history departments in India.
But the negationists are not satisfied with seeing their own version
of the facts being repeated in more and more books and papers. They
also want to prevent other versions from reaching the public.
Therefore, in 1982 the National Council of Educational Research and
Training issued a directive for the rewriting of schoolbooks. Among
other things, it stipulated that: "Characterization of the
medieval period as a time of conflict between Hindus and Muslims is
forbidden." Under Marxist pressure, negationism has become
India's official policy.
Now that Marxism is no longer the fashion of the day, it is very
easy to expose the shameless dishonesty of many vocal Marxist
intellectuals. It is time to go through the record and see what they
have said about the "economic successes" of the Soviet
Union, the enthusiasm of the Chinese people for the Great
Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution, about the Communist
involvement in crimes like Katyn, and about the lies put
out by the CIA-sponsored dissidents and camp survivors.
Their Islam negationism is by far not their first systematic
falsification of a chapter of history.
When the Marxists start lecturing Hindus about tolerance and the
respect for Barbar's mosque, it is easy to put them on the defensive
by asking what happened to churches, mosques and temples when Mao
took over. Communist regimes' treatment of religion has been similar
to Islam's treatment of infidelity. Either religious people had the
zimmi status, i.e. they were suffered to exist but at the cost of
career prospects, benefit of social or material benefits, always
under the watchful eye of police informers, and of course without
the right to convert or to object to state atheism's conversion
efforts (according to the chinese Constitution, there is a right
to practise religion and a
right to practise and propagete atheism); or they were simply
persecuted, their religious education forbidden (in the Soviet
Union, many people have spent years in jail for transporting Bibles
or teaching Hebrew), their places of worship demolished or
expropriated for secular use. Communism and Islam are truly comrades
in intolerance.
Certainly some statements can be dug up of Indian Communists
defending the Cultural Revolution in which so many thousands of
places of worship were destroyed and their personnel brutalized or
killed. When the Khumar Rouge were in power, less that 1,000 of the
65,000 Buddhist monks managed to survive : what did the Indian
Marxists (card- carrying and other) say then? The bigger part of the
Marxists' success was in their aggressiveness: as long as they
remained on the offensive, everyone tried to live up to the norms
they prescribed. Now it is time to put them to scrutiny.
2.5 FOREIGN SUPPORT FOR INDIAN NEGATIONISM
Some foreign authors, influenced by Indian colleagues, have also
added a big dose of negationism to their work on Indian history. For
instance, Percival Spear, co-author (with Romila Thapar) of the
Penguin History of India, writes: "Aurangzeb's supposed
intolerance is little more than a hostile legend based on isolated
acts such as the erection of a mosque on a temple site in Benares."
This is a repetition of the thesis defended by Zahiruddin Faruki in
his "Aurangzeb and his times" (1935), recently taken up
again by S.N.M. Abdi in Illustrated Weekly of India (5/12/1992), who
claims that Aurangzeb was not anti-Hindu, and that the
Ma'asir-i-Alamgiri (made available to the public by the Royal
Society of Bengal and translated by Jadunath Sarkar), which lists
Aurangzeb's temple- destroying activities from day to day, is a
forgery. Faruki and Abdi count on the public's limited zeal for
checking the sources, when they falsely claim that "apart from
the Ma'asir-i-Alamgiri, there is no other reference to the order for
the destruction of temples", and that we do not hear of any
protest which large-scale temple destruction would have caused.
Abdi thinks he can get away with claiming as evidence a stone slab
allegedly seen by Faruki in the Gyanvapi mosque in Benares,
mentioning a date (1659) that does not tally with the traditional
date (1669) of the forcible replacement of the Kashi Vishvanath
temple with this mosque; even while admitting that "the slab
seen by Faruki has disappeared mysteriously, along with another
significant piece of evidence". Without blinking, he then cites
a theory that the Gyanvapi mosque already existed under Akbar, i.e.
a century before either of the two dates. Further, he quotes as
authority a local agitator who claims: "My research reveals
that a Buddhist vihara was demolished to make way for a temple,
which was subsequently pulled down and the Gyanvapi mosque
constructed on its site." The first claim, in spite of
flaunting the pretentious term research, in a plain lie;
the second is of course true but contradicts the case which Mr. Abdi
is building up. Such is the quality of the argument for Aurangzeb's
tolerance and Hindu- friendliness.
What are the facts? In Beneras (Varanasi), Aurangzeb (1658-1707) did
not just build an isolated mosque on a destroyed
temple. He ordered all temples destroyed, among them the Kashi
Vishvanath, one of the most sacred places of Hinduism, and had
mosques built on a number of cleared temple sites. All other Hindu
sacred places within his reach equally suffered destruction, with
mosques built on them; among them, Krishna's birth temple in
Mathura, the rebuilt Somnath temple on the coast of Gujrat, the
Vishnu temple replaced with the Alamgir mosque now overlooking
Benares, the Treta-ka-Thakur temple in Ayodhya. The number of
temples destroyed by Aurangzeb is counted in 4, if not in 5 figures.
According to the official court chronicle, Aurangzeb "ordered
all provincial governors to destroy all schools and temples of the
Pagans and to make a complete end to all Pagan teachings and
practices". The chronicle sums up the destructions like this:
"Hasan Ali Khan came and said that 172 temples in the area had been
destroyed... His majesty went to Chittor, and 63 temples were
destroyed... Abu Tarab, appointed to destroy the idol-temples of
Amber, reported that 66 temples had been razed to the ground".
In quite a number of cases, inscriptions on mosques and local
tradition do confirm that Aurangzeb built them in forcible
replacement of temples (some of these inscriptions have been quoted
in Sitaram Goel: Hindu Temples, vol.2, along with a number of
independent written accounts). Aurangzeb's reign ws marked by
never-ending unrest and rebellions, caused by his anti-Hindu
policies, which included the reimposition of the jizya and other
zimma rules, and indeed the demolition of temples.
Aurangzeb did not stop at razing temples: their users too were
levelled. There were not just the classical massacres of thousands
of resisters, Brahmins, Sikhs. What gives a more pointed proof of
Aurangzeb's fanaticism, is the execution of specific individuals for
specific reason of intolerance. To name the best-known ones:
Aurangzeb's brother Dara Shikoh was executed because of apostasy
(i.e. taking an interest in Hindu philosophy), and the Sikh guru
Tegh Bahadur was beheaded because of his objecting to Aurangzeb's
policy of forcible conversions in general, and in particular for
refusing to become a Muslim himself. Short, Percival Spear's
statement that Aurangzeb's fanaticism is but a hostile legend, is a
most serious case of negationism.
An example of a less blatant (i.e. more subtle) form of negationism
in Western histories of India, is the India entry in the
Encyclopaedia Brittannica. Its chapter on the Sultanate period
(which was much more bloody than even the Moghul period) does not
mention any persecutions and massacres of Hindus by Muslims, except
that Firuz Shah Tughlaq "made largely unsuccessful attempts to
convert his Hindu subjects and sometimes persecuted them". The
article effectively obeys the negationist directive that
"characterization of the medieval period as a time of Hindu- Muslim
conflict is forbidden".
It also contains blissful nonsense about communal amity in places
where the original sources only mention enmity. Thus, it says that
Bahmani sultan Tajuddin Firuz extracted tribute payments and the
hand of the king's daughter from the Hindu bastion Vijayanagar after
two military campaigns, and that this resulted in "the
establishment of an apparently amicable relationship between the two
rulers". Jawaharlal Nehru considered the induction of Hindu
women in Muslim harems as the cradle of composite culture
(his euphemism for Hindu humiliation), but it is worse if even the
venerable Encyclopedia considers the terms of debate as a sign of
friendship. At any rate, the article goes on to observe naively that
peace lasted only for ten years, when Vijaynagar forces
inflicted a crushing defeat on Firuz. In this case, the more
circumspect form of negationism is at work: keeping the inconvenient
facts out of the readers' view, and manipulating the terminology.
An American historian's book is introduced thus: "In this book
[Public Arenas and the Emergence of Communalism in North India],
Sandra Freitag examines one of the central problems of modern Indian
history, the Hindu-Muslim conflict, with new and provocative
insight. She challenges long-standing interpretations by defining
this conflict as a developing social process groups, not simply
Hindu or
Muslim, in highly specific local contexts bound
together in a changing institutional order."
This sophisticated verbiage cannot conceal that the book's approach
is merely the standard secularist version propagated by Indian
establishment historians since decades. There is nothing new and
provocative about a book that claims to explain communalism
without touching on its single most important determinant, viz. the
doctrine laid down in Islamic scripture, and that blurs the
clear-cut process of India's communalization by Islam with the help
of scapegoats like colonialism.
It is not entirely clear to what extent such Western authors are
conscious accomplices in the intellectual crime of negationism, and
to what extent they are just gullible copiers of the version given
to them by English-speaking Indians. In the case of a historian
invited by Penguin to write a History of India, it is hard to
believe that he didn't know better.
Another case of malafide reporting is former Time correspondent
Edward Desmond's lengthy review of JNU Professof S. Gopal's
Anatomy of a Confrontation in the New York Review of Books. I
know that Mr. Desmond had gone through the books stating the Hindu
case on Ayodhya; he had talked to both Mr. Sitaram Goel and myself
(by telephone); he knew about hard evidence for the temple that was
forcibly replaced by the Babri Masjid, including Prof. B.B. Lal's
filmed presentation of the archarological evidence. And yet, like
Prof. Gopal, he strictly keeps the lid on the Hindu case, does not
mention the extensive documentary evidence, and curtly dismisses the
archaeological evidence as bogus. Here, the psychology at
work is apparently that of status-consciousness: you wouldn't expect
a senior correspondent of a big American magazine to prefer the
company of marginal pro-Hindu writers to that of prestigious
Stalinist professors of India's Harvard, would you?
On the other hand, in the day-to-day reporting on the
communal situation in India, there is a lot of bonafide copying
of the anti-Hindu views dominant in the Indian English-language
press. A typical mixed case of some complicity and some gullibility
was the TV documentary about
Hindu fundamentalism made by BBC correspondent Brian Barron,
and boradcase in the week of the first round of the Lok Sabha
elections in May 1991. Brian Barron is an otherwise meritorious
journalist, witness his revelations in October 1991 about the
massacre of thousands of Buddhist monks in the early years of
communist rule in Mongolia. But his programme about the Hindu
movement was second-rate and biased. For a start, it contained some
factual mistakes (like a map meant to show the trail of Hindu leader
L.K. Advani's procession in support of the Ram Janmabhoomi cause,
which drew a line unrelated to the actual trail, apart from placing
Delhi on the Ganga river), exemplifying the carelessness which
Western correspondents can afford when it comes to India reporting.
Barron said that India had already been partitioned because of
religion. In fact, India has been partitioned because of Islam,
against the will of other religions, and this seemingly small inaccuracy
is an old trick to distribute the guilt of Islam in partitioning India
over all religions equally. Barron made no attempt to seem impartial,
and introduced BJP leader L.K. Advani as a demagogue. He asked
Advani's declared enemy V.P. Singh whether Advani was not merely putting
a humane mask on
fanaticism. Easy, that way V.P. Singh only had to say yes. He
failed to take the opportunity to question V.P. Singh about his
political marriage with the Muslim fundamentalist leader Imam Bukhari,
while that was a case of a Hindu promoting fundamentalism
as well. He let Swami Agnivesh, a Marxist in ochre robe, accuse the BJP
of mixing religion and politics, but neglected to inform the viewers
that Swami Agnivesh has himself combining monkhood with being a Janata
Dal candidate in the Lok Sabha elections.
When Barron asked Advani why he had allowed so much bloodshed on his
procession (the rathyatra of October 1990), whereas in fact there
had been no riots all along the path of his month-long journey,
Advani correctly said: "You are taken in by a disinformation
campaign." A serious journalist would have inquired deeper when
his sources, with which the quality of his work stands or falls, are
questioned so pointedly. When a sadhu said that Muslims refuse to
respect Hindus and that Hindus are legally discriminated against,
Barron did not inquire what these discriminations were. Like all
western reporters, he has reported on Hindu fundamentalism
without asking even once why this movement has emerged, instead
relaying the Marxist line that it is all a camouflage for class
(c.q. caste) interests, an artificial creation for petty political
gain.
Barron interviewed prof. Romila Thapar, who accused the Hindu
movement of aiming at a system in which some communities would be
second-class citizens living in constant fear for their lives. From
a spokeswoman of Marxism, which has held entire populations in
constant fear and oppression, and which has killed numerous millions
of
"contrarevolutionary elements" (to use the criminalizing,
dehumanizing Marxist term), the allegation sounds rather shameless.
But the viewers were not told where Romila Thapar stands, they were
led to believe that this was a neutral observer who had been asked
for an objective explanation. The same thing has happened a number
of times in both Time Magazine and Newsweek: Bipan Chandra, Romila
Thapar and their comrades get quoted as if they are non-partisan
authorities. Though anti-Communist in their general reporting, when
it comes to India, these papers (unknowingly?) present the Marxists'
viewpoint as objective in-depth background information.
Only ten years ago, the Left-oriented media in many Western
countries freely attacked the really existing capitalism
and also conjured up all kinds of fantastic CIA and neo-fascist
conspiracies, but scrupulously shielded the
really existing socialism from criticism. Similarly, Brian
Barron gave Prof. Thapar the chance to say her thing about unproven
sinister plans imputed to the Hindu movement, but scrupulously
refrained from pointing out that Miss Thapar's picture of a
theocratic society in which minorities are second-class citizens
living in mortal fear, is already
reallly existing in the neighbouring Islamic republic of
Pakistan and in many Muslim states (and, mutatis mutandis in
Communist countries).
These days, reporting on the communal in situation in India
consists in highlighting the splinter in the Hindu eye and
concealing the beam in the Muslim eye. At the time of the 1991 Lok
Sabha elections, the German left-leaning weekly Der Spiegel
summarized the communal riots in independent India as follows:
"Since 1947, Indian statisticians have counted 11,000 riots with
12,000 Muslim victims." Hindu victims are not even mentioned,
as if you were reading a fundamentalist paper like Muslim India or
Radiance.
The Ayodhya conflict offers a good examples of the absurd standards
applied by reporters. A Hindu sacred site, back in use as a Hindu
temple (since 1949 with, since 1986 without restrictions) after
centuries of Muslim occupation, is claimed by Muslim leaders, who
also insist on continuing the occupation of two other sacred sites
in Mathura and Kashi (and numerous other sites which the Hindu
leaders are not even claiming back). Claiming the right to occupy
other communities' sacred sites: if this is not fanatical, I don't
know what is. Yet, the whole world press is one the side of the
Muslims, and decries a Hindu plan to build proper temple
architecture on the Ram Janmabhoomi site in Ayodhya as
fanatical. These are not just double standards, but inverted
standards.
The very fact that Muslims in India loudly complain about their
situation (e.g. about their low educational level, which is 100% the
fault of their own mullahs), proves that they are relatively
well-off: as I have had the occasion to observe, Hindu visitors or
refugees from Pakistan often do not dare to speak of the horrible
conditions in which they are forced to live under Muslim rule,
because they fear for their relatives, and because the constant
terror has conditioned them never to raise any objections against
the Muslim master race. Inside these Muslim states, the remaining
Hindus are even more careful never to displease the Muslim masters.
For unthinking journalists, their silence is proof that all is well
for the minorities in Muslim states, and so they prefer to listen to
the vocal malcontents who air the Muslim grievances in
tolerant India. Whoever shouts loudest, will get our correspondents'
attention, if only because India reporting is mostly of a very low
professional quality.
An example of the slanted impression which the Nehruvian
establishment creates about Hindu-Muslim relations, concerns the
internationally highlighted martyrdom of the Flemish Jesuit Father
Rasschaert, near Ranchi in 1964. Father Rasschaert's sister was a
friend of my mother's, so as a child I have often heard the details
of the story. The part which everybody knows, is that Muslims had
fled into a mosque, where Hindus wanted to pursue them, when Father
Rasschaert intervened to pacify the crowd, but was killed by the
Hindus who subsequently massacred the Muslims.
But the start of the story, never highlighted and sometimes not even
mentioned in the contemporary newspaper reports (much less in later
references), was that the Hindus in the area had been angered by the
sight of mutilated Hindus who had been brought by train from East
Pakistan, where they had at least survived the massacres which many
more had not. As always, Hindu violence was a retaliation against
Muslim violence. No missionary has stepped in to defend the Hindus
of Pakistan, in fact no missionary was around, as missions have a
vey hard time in Pakistan. The missions in Islamic countries find
their converts harassed and even killed by their own families, their
schools and churches attacked on all kinds of pretexts, their
graduates not given jobs. So, the missionary centres prefer to
direct their energies to more hospitable countries like India. The
fact that a missionary was killed by a Hindu while defending the
Muslims, and not the other way round, proves in the first place that
Catholic priests can function in India, much more than in Pakistan.
A closer scrutiny of this one incidence of Hindu fanaticism reveals
a background of much more systematic and institutionalized Muslim
fanaticism.
There is a third aspect to the story, which is never mentioned at
all. It is that the Hindus in Ranchi were desperate about their
government's unwillingness to defend the Hindus in Pakistan. One of
the chief culprits behind the massacre was Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru, the patron of secularism, who used Father
Rasschaert's death as yet another occasion to parade his concern for
the minorities in India, and to put Hindus in the dock. He himself
(and the entire secularist establishment till today) reneged on his
duty to defend the Hindus surviving in the Islamic state which he
had helped to create. By effectively condoning the persecution of
Hindus in Pakistan, he was also responsible for the retalitory Hindu
violence. But the international press has never thought the matter
through, and confined its reporting on Father Rasschaert's death to
condemning the Hindu fanatics, weeping for the Muslim victims, and
praising Nehru as the voice of sanity amid the religious madness.
The way our journalists are led by the nose towards reporting Muslim
grievances and ignoring grievances of Hindu minorities (and
ridiculing the very real grievances of even the Hindu majority in
India), is reminiscent of the sneaking bias in all non-rightist
media in Western Europe about the Left-right conflict before the
Gorbachov era. They all complied with Marxist-imposed terminology
like dictator Pinochet but president Ceaucescu,
or rightist rebels but leftist resistance.
Criticism of the West was available in plenty, and given wide
coverage, but the muted populations of the Soviet bloc were not
heard, and little effort was made to go in and hear them. Those who
supported the cause of freedom in the Soviet bloc were riduclued.
Worse, when in 1968 the Russian physicist Sakharov had a report
about massive human rights violations in the USSR published, leading
intellectuals actually denied the existence of "that so-called
Russian physicist invented by the reactionary forces to slander the
glorious achievements of socialism in the USSR". Yes, so
noxious was the intellectual atmosphere in the heyday of Marxism. In
those days it was "better to be wrong with [communist] Sartre
than to be right with [anti-communist] Aron".
When glasnost made clear just how strong the Soviet bloc
populations' disgust with communalism really was, Western
intellectuals and socialist parties seemed sincerely surprised. They
themselves had so often pleaded that life in the Soviet system was
not really worse than in the "so- called free" West. The
press had never given us an adequate picture, not by telling
outright lies, but by ignoring the muted voices which the communist
dictators wanted us to ignore. At any rate, if there used to be far
more demonstrations in the streets of the West than in the Soviet
bloc, did it prove that there was less discontent in the latter? We
now know better: there was more protest in the West than in the
Soviet bloc because there was more freedom and less fear in the
West, and in spite of deeper discontent in the Soviet bloc. There is
no excuse for making the same mistake in our reporting on the
situation of the minorities in India and in Muslim countries.
Without really noticing, the Western press has become the
mouth-piece of the Marxist-Muslim alliance which dictates political
parlance in India. I assume only a few frontline journalists are
conscious participants in the ongoing disinformation campaign. Brian
Barron, for one, has demonstrated to what extent he has interiorized
the anti- Hindu bias of his Indian spokespersons, with a very little
but truly unpardonable piece of disinformation. Reporting on the
million-strong demonstration for the Ram Janmabhoomi temple (Delhi,
4 April 1991), he showed a monk carrying a saffron- coloured flag
with a white swstika. And for the less perceptive viewers, he added
in so many words that the Hindu movement carried the swastika. Of
course he knew these two things: (1) most Western viewers know the
swastika only as the symbol of Nazism; (2) most Indians know the
swastika only as their own age-old symbol of good fortune (swasti =
well-being). He must have known perfectly well that he was making
the Western viewers read a message which the Hindu demonstrators
never sent, viz. that the Hindu movement links up with Nazism.
Regardless of the moral quality of such distortive reporting, it
goes to show to what extent the negationist faction in the Indian
media has managed to picture the Hindus as the bad guys in the eyes
of the world.
A few more examples of how Western India-watchers swallow Indian
secularist disinformation. The pro-Ram Janmabhoomi
demonstration in Delhi on 4 April 1991 was not reported in 99% of
the Western papers and electronic news channels. I have inquired
among journalists about what they had received on their telexes
concerning the largest-ever demonstration in the biggest democracy
in the world. It turned out that these had mentioned 3 lakh
demonstrators (when even the government-controlled police had given
the estimate of 8 lakh), and not made the object of the
demonstration clear at all. The Indian sources had deliberately
blurred and minimized the information, so that the Western media
had, in good faith, not deemed it worth mentioning. If six weeks
later Brian Barron reported the number as more than a million
demonstrators, it was not to correct this earlier lapse, but because
of a different psychology. His aim was not to deny the importance
and magnitude of the Hindu movement which he detests so much, but on
the contrary to make it into a titillatingly gruesome dinosaur: the
TV consumers have heard enough about Muslim fundamentalism, so if
you want to get them interested in a new brand of fundamentalism,
you have to make it extra big and colourful.
Another example is the news concerning the Indian attitude to the
second Gulf War in early 1991. The Delhi correspondent for the
Flemish radio station BRTN said that the Indian population was on
the side of Saddam, against the Anglo-American forces (and their
Saudi employers). That is just what the Times of india editorial had
said a few days earlier. In fact, the Indian people was not on
Saddam's side at all. The Hindus had always cheered for Israel in
its wars with the Arabs, and now they were all for the defeat of
this Arab Hitler who had announced he would "burn half of
Israel with chemical weapons". The Muslim support for Saddam's
jihad against the Crusaders was not exactly massive either.
Firstly, millions of Indian Muslims personally suffered when they or
their reltives lost their jobs in Iraq and Kuwait as a result of
Saddam's annexation of Kuwait. Secondly, most Muslim leaders are
financed by the Arab monarchies (including Kuwait), and they sided
with their paymasters, either openly or by their quiet refusal to
support Saddam. The only ones who supported Saddam were the hard
core of the Nehruvian establishment (who forced the Chandra Shekhar
government to stop allowing American war planes to land in Bombay),
and the communists with their visceral anti-Americanism. A strike
imposed on the communists with their visceral anti-Americanism. A
strike imposed on the Calcutta dockers by the Communist trade-union
was about the only sign of Indian support for Saddam, but our
correspondent played it up as merely one example of a nation-wide
movement. I hope it was in good faith on his part, but for the Times
of India there cannot be such a benefit of the doubt.
Foreign correspondents in Delhi should realize that the Indian media
and academia are entirely untrustworthy when it comes to reporting
on the Hindu-Muslim conflict. When you report the truth about the
democratic opposition in China or Tibet, you don't copy the People's
Daily. When you want to know the truth about the Kurdish freedom
struggle, you don't trust the Iraqi stae radio. So, when you want to
understand the Hindu backlash, you don't believe strictly
partisan sources like the Times of India, or party-line historians
like those from JNU or AMU.
If a Mr. Vijay Singh writes in Le Monde Diplomatique an article full
of secularist invective titled: Hindu Fundamentalism, a Menace for
India, it is simply the reflection of a vested interest in
blackening Hinduism, though it is sold as an in-depth comment by a
first-hand observer. It so happens that the article is partly an
unacknowledged quotation from the introductory chapter of the book
"Understanding the Muslim Mind" by Rajmohan Gandhi, a party
politician of Iman Bukhari's favourite Janata Dal (nicknamed Jinnah
Dal). If in another issue of the same prestigious French monthly,
Mrs. Francine R. Frankel mouths all the worn-out secularist slogans
against what she calls the "Violent Offensive of Hindu
Extremists", it merely proves her incapability of reading her
Indian sources with the distance befitting partisan pamphlets. It is
quite a shameful matter that Western media have swallowed and
reproduced many similar motivated distortion.
The extreme ignorance and gullibility of the foreign press provides
the negationists with a strategic cover. Most English-knowing
Indians believe that the Western intelligentsia is more objective
and competent, and they keep on believing this even in domains where
the West is completely ignorant and incomponent. So the negationists
feel supported in the back by an outside world which they can
manipulate but which many in India still consider as a standard of
truth. If the Hindu leadership had taken the trouble of studying the
mental determinants of India's political configuration, it would
have blown this cover away by spreading first-hand information to
the foreign media, and educating them about the Stalinist-Islamic
grip on the Indian establishment.
In Great Britain and the United States, the anti-Hindu and
pro-Muslim bias in India reporting can partly be explained by the
political tilt towards Pakistan (now waning because of Pakistan's
nuclear ambitions). Thus, the prestigious British weekly The
Economist has, in a predictably negative article about nationalism
and separatism, held up the creation of Pakistan as an undisputably
justified case of separatism (small wonder that British Muslims are
imitating their Indian Muslim grandfathers and demanding a separate
"non-territorial state of British Muslims", justifiable on
exactly the same grounds). A more universal reason is that they
never get to know the Hindu viewpoint from competent and eloquent
spokesmen: firstly, these have practically no access to the national
English-language press, which Western correspondents in Delhi
faithfully copy because they are too lazy to seek out news for
themselves; secondly, the Hindus themselves have not yet
suifficiently realized the importance of public relations.
The most important reason is probably the political atmosphere in
Europe which demands that for the sake of anti-racism and
multiculturalism, Islam as the most conspicuous and assertive
guest culture in Europe gets painted in rosy colours. The result of
this imperative not to expose Muslim fanaticism is that even
avowedly Christian papers in the West keep silent about the ongoing
persecution of Christian papers and other minorities in the Middle
East. Christians cherish the illusion of a dialogue with Islam,
so they will not offend their Muslim partners by raising incovenient
issues like the status of religious minorities in Muslim countries.
Now, if the West does not stand up for its persecuted Christian
brethren, how much less will it be bothered about the idolatrous
Hindus.
And so, Western India-watchers go on licking the boots of the
aggressor, and keep on twisting contemporary news in the media, and
to a lesser extent even historical facts in academic publications,
to the advantage of the