A contrary view on re- naming Delhi roads with special
reference to Aurangzeb.
I hold Dr. Abdul Kalam in an extremely high
esteem and he was very dear to me. Yet I feel in the expanding Capital Delhi
some other new upcoming and suitably grand road should have been named after
him, rather than renaming of Aurangzeb road as the most revered and most
respected "Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam" Road.
The reasons for selecting "Aurangzeb" Road
for the change are not very convincing. They range from the Emperor being a
Muslim Fundamentalist, to being intolerant of other religions, even an
idiotic leader who valued his outdated medieval religious beliefs over
practicality.
The worst thing you can do in history is to indulge in
absolutism. The roads of New Delhi were named after Indian Emperors by the
British. Aurangzeb was one of them. For the Good or Bad. Changing names,
renaming roads etc is not going to help anybody or make a qualitative
difference. Embrace your history for what it is.
An Interesting Excerpt from "QUORA"
The noted Indian scholar and historian, Dr Bishambhar
Nath Pande, ranked among the very few Indians and fewer still Hindu historians
who tried to be a little careful when dealing with the Muslim rule in India
that lasted for almost 1000 years. Dr Pande passed away on 1 June 1998 and
Impact International of London (July 1998) wrote the following obituary which
we think sheds some light into some of the myths on Indian history, such as
on Mughal
Emperor Aurangzeb, created by the British with the clear
objective of divide and rule:
The noted Indian scholar and historian, Dr Bishambhar
Nath Pande, ranked among the very few Indians and fewer still Hindu historians
who tried to be little careful when dealing with the Muslim rule in India that
lasted for almost 1000 years. Dr Pande passed away on 1 June 1998 and Impact
International of London (July 1998) wrote the following obituary [at the end of
the article], which we think sheds some light into some of the myths on Indian
history, such as on Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb, created by the British
with the clear objective of divide and rule:
The Muslim rule in India lasted for almost 1000 years.
How come then, asked the British historian Sir Henry Elliot, that
Hindus 'had not left any account which could enable us to gauge the traumatic
impact the Muslim conquest and rule had on them'? Since there was none, Elliot
went on to produce his own eight-volume History of India from its own
historians (1867). His history claimed Hindus were slain for disputing with
'Mohammedans', generally prohibited from worshipping and taking out religious
processions, their idols were mutilated, their temples destroyed, they were
forced into conversions and marriages, and were killed and massacred by drunk
Muslim tyrants. Thus Sir Henry, and scores of other Empire scholars, went on to
produce a synthetic Hindu versus Muslim history of India, and their lies became
history.
However, the noted Indian scholar and historian, Dr
Bishambhar Nath Pande, who passed away in New Delhi on 1 June 1998, ranked
among the very few Indians and fewer still Hindu historians who tried to be a
little careful when dealing with such history. He knew that this history was
'originally compiled by European writers' whose main objective was to produce a
history that would serve their policy of divide and rule. Lord Curzon (Governor
General of India 1895-99 and Viceroy 1899-1904, d.1925) was told by the
Secretary of State for India, George Francis Hamilton, that they 'should so plan the
educational text books that the differences between community and community are
further strengthened'. Another Viceroy, Lord Dufferin (1884-88), was advised by the
Secretary of State in London that the 'division of religious feelings is
greatly to our advantage', and that he expected 'some good as a result of your
committee of inquiry on Indian education and on teaching material'. 'We have
maintained our power in India by playing-off one part against the other,' the
Secretary of State for India reminded yet another Viceroy, Lord Elgin (1862-63),
'and we must continue to do so. Do all you can, therefore, to prevent all
having a common feeling.' In his famous Khuda Bakhsh Annual Lecture (1985) Dr Pande said:
'Thus under a definite policy the Indian history books text-books were so
falsified and distorted as to give an impression that the medieval [i.e.
Muslim] period of Indian history was full of atrocities committed by Muslim
rulers on their Hindu subjects and the Hindus had to suffer terrible
indignities under Muslim rule. And there were no common factors [between Hindus
and Muslims] in social, political and economic life.'
Therefore, Dr Pande was extra careful. Whenever he
came across a 'fact' that looked odd to him, he would try to check and verify
rather than adopt it uncritically. He came across a history text-book taught in
the Anglo-Bengali College, Allahabad which claimed that 'three thousand
Brahmins had committed suicide as Tipu wanted to convert them forcibly into the
fold of Islam'. The author was a very famous scholar, Dr Har Prashad
Shastri, head of the department of Sanskrit at Calcutta
University. Tipu Sultan (1750-99), who ruled over the South
Indian state of Mysore (1782-99), is one of the most heroic figures in Indian
history. He died on the battlefield, fighting the British. Was it true? Dr
Pande wrote immediately to the author and asked him for the source on which he
had based this episode in his text-book. After several reminders, Dr Shastri
replied that he had taken this information from theMysore Gazetteer. So Dr
Pande requested the Mysore University vice chancellor, Sir Brijendra Nath Seal,
to verify for him Dr Shastri's statement from the Gazetteer. Sir Brijendra
referred his letter to Prof Srikantia who was then working on a new
edition of the Gazetteer. Srikantia wrote to say that the Gazetteer mentioned
no such incident and, as a historian himself, he was certain that nothing like
this had taken place. Prof Srikantia added that both the prime minister and the
commander-in-chief of Tipu Sultan were themselves Brahmins. He also enclosed a
list of 136 Hindu temples which used to receive annual grants from the Sultan's
treasury. It transpired that Shastri had lifted this story
from Colonel
Miles' History of Mysore which Miles claimed he had taken from
a Persian manuscript in the personal library of Queen Victoria. When Dr Pande
checked further, he found that no such manuscript existed in Queen Victoria's
library. Yet Dr Shastri's book was being used as a high school history
text-book in seven Indian states, Assam, Bengal, Bihar, Orissa, Uttar Pradesh,
Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh. So he sent his entire correspondence about the
book to the vice chancellor of Calcutta University, Sir Ashutosh
Chaudhary. Sir Ashutosh promptly ordered Shashtri's book out of the
course. Yet years later, in 1972, Dr Pande was surprised to discover the same
suicide story was still being taught as 'history' in junior high schools in
Uttar Pradesh. The lie had found currency as a fact of history.
The Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb (born 1618, reigned
1658-1707) is the most reviled of all Muslim rulers in India. He was supposed
to be a great destroyer of temples and oppressor of Hindus, and a
'fundamentalist' too! As chairman of the Allahabad Municipality (1948-53), Dr
Pande had to deal witha land dispute between two temple priests. One of them
had filed in evidence some farmans (royal orders) to prove that Aurangzeb had,
besides cash, gifted the land in question for the maintenance of his temple.
Might they not be fake, Dr Pande thought, in view of Aurangzeb's fanatically
anti-Hindu image? He showed them to his friend, Sir Tej Bahadur Sapru, a
distinguished lawyer as well a great scholar of Arabic and Persian. He was also
a Brahmin. Sapru examined the documents and declared they were genuine farmans
issued by Aurangzeb. For Dr Pande this was a 'new image of Aurangzeb'; so he wrote to the
chief priests of the various important temples, all over the country,
requesting photocopies of any farman issued by Aurangzeb that they may have in
their possession. The response was overwhelming; he got farmans from several
principal Hindu and jain temples, even from Sikh Gurudwaras in northern India.
These farmans, issued between 1659 and 1685, related to grant of jagir (large
parcel of agricultural lands) to support regular maintenance of these places of
worship. Dr Pande's research showed that Aurangzeb was as
solicitous of the rights and welfare of his non-Muslim subjects as he was of
his Muslim subjects. Hindu plaintiffs received full justice against their
Muslims respondents and, if guilty, Muslims were given punishment as necessary.
One of the greatest charges against Aurangzeb is of
the demolition ofVishwanath temple in Banaras (Varanasi). That
was a fact, but Dr Pande unravelled the reason for it. 'While Aurangzeb was
passing near Varanasi on his way to Bengal, the Hindu Rajas in his retinue
requested that if the halt was made for a day, their Ranis may go to Varanasi,
have a dip in the Ganges and pay their homage to Lord Vishwanath. Aurangzeb
readily agreed. 'Army pickets were posted on the five mile route to Varanasi.
The Ranis made journey on the palkis [palanquins]. They took their dip in the
Ganges and went to the Vishwanath temple to pay their homage. After offering
puja [worship] all the Ranis returned except one, the Maharani of Kutch. A
thorough search was made of the temple precincts but the Rani was to be found
nowhere. 'When Aurangzeb came to know of this, he was very much enraged. He
sent his senior officers to search for the Rani. Ultimately they found that
statue of Ganesh [the elephant-headed god which was fixed in the wall was a
moveable one. When the statue was moved, they saw a flight of stairs that led
to the basement. To their horror they found the missing Rani dishonoured and crying
deprived of all her ornaments. The basement was just beneath Lord Vishwanath's
seat.' The Rajas demanded salutary action, and 'Aurangzeb ordered that as
the sacred precincts have been despoiled, Lord Vishwanath may be moved to some
other place, the temple be razed to the ground and the Mahant [head priest] be
arrested and punished'. (B N Pande, Islam and Indian Culture, Khuda Bakhsh
Oriental Public Library, Patna, 1987) Dr Pande believed in the
innate goodness of human nature.
Despite all that senseless hate and periodical
outbreak of anti-Muslim violence after independence, he
remained an optimist. When one of the worst riots took place in 1979 in
Ahmadabad, in which more than 2,000 Muslims were killed and 6,000 houses burnt,
Dr Pande travelled there to see whether there was 'any humanity still alive'.
Yes, it was in one locality, Mewabhai Chaal, where he found that all the houses
had been burnt down. Did they all belong to Muslims? No. Only 35 belonged to
Muslims; some 125 belonged to Hindus, he was told. So, it meant, the arsonists
came in two different waves; one destroying the Muslim houses and the other the
Hindu houses? No, it was only one wave, said Kalayan Singh. That one, there, he
pointed out to smoke billowing from what used to be his house and his
tyre-shop. He was a Hindu and he had lost property and business worth 200,000
rupees. The miscreants had asked him to point out the Muslim houses so they
could spare the Hindu houses. Kalyan Singh refused, and watched as the mob set
fire to all the houses - including his own. How could I betray my Muslim
neighbours? he asked Dr Pande rhetorically. Dr Pande also went to the Muslim
students hostel. One-third of its residents were Hindus. "Come out all you
Hindu students," yelled a murderous mob gathered outside the hostel. No,
we won't, shouted back the Hindu students and locked the gate from inside. In
the event, the entire hostel was evacuated by the army and then left to the mob
to loot and burn. The Hindu students were told they could take with them their
books and research papers.
Dr Pande met a young DSc scholar, named Desai, who had
left behind his more than three years' labour, a ready-for-typing dissertation,
to be burnt by the arsonists. Desai said he couldn't think of saving his thesis
while some of his Muslim friends were in similar position with their theses. A
noble soul! Dr Pande who had been looking for humanity found it there as well.
The inhumanity did not lie in the Indian nature, but the nature had fallen
victim to the evil heritage of colonial history. Few realised how 1000 years of
their history had been stolen from them. Many tended to buy the fake and
doctored version handed down to them as part of their colonial heritage. Some
even saw a little political advantage in this trade. Dr Pande heard a leadingHindu
Mahasabha politician and religious leader, Mahant Digvijaynath,
telling an election meeting that it is written in the Qur'an that killing a
Hindu was an act of goodness (thawab). Dr Pande called upon the Mahant (High
Priest) and told him that he had read the Qur'an a few times but didn't find
such a statement in it, and he had, therefore, brought with him several
English, Urdu and Hindi translations of the Qur'an; so would he kindly point to
him where exactly did the statement occur in the Qur'an? Isn't it written there?
said the Mahant. I haven't found it; if you have, please tell me, replied Dr
Pande. Then what does it say? It speaks about love and brotherhood, about the
oneness of mankind. What's jihad then? What is jizyah? How then India got
partitioned? The Mahant went on asking, and Dr Pande kept on explaining, hoping
the Mahant would correct himself. However, the Mahant's ideas were fixed, in
prejudice and in ignorance. Dr Pande himself had been a senior member of the
ruling Congress party which he had joined at a very young age. He was a
disciple of Gandhi, a friend of Nehru; he had taken part in each and every
non-cooperation movement against the British and gone to jail eight times. The
Congress was supposed to be an all-Indian nationalist platform and yet Dr Pande's
party was hardly free from the bias and ignorance of a cleverly deconstructed
history.
The rise of militant Hindutva tendency is only recent,
but before it all became overt, the Congress itself was doing the same, albeit
a little covertly. All the horrific anti-Muslim carnage took place during more
than four decades of Congress rule. The doors of the Babari Mosque were
opened for Hindu worship during the tenure of Nehru's grandson, Rajiv Gandhi.
The Mosque itself was pulled down during the regime of another Congress Prime
Minister P V Narasimha Rao. Dr Pande was, however, just one individual. That
made his work all the more important, not just from the Muslim but from the
point of view of the entire country. India's deconstructed history is like a time
bomb; unless it is defused, India cannot survive in one piece. Not for very
long.
Bishambhar Nath Pande born on 23 December 1906 in the Madhya Pradesh of Umreth;
member UP Legislative Assembly (1952-53); member UP Legislative Council
(1972-74); twice member of the upper house, Rajya Sabha (1976 and 1982);
Governor of Orissa state (1983-88); recipient of the highest national award
Padma Shri (1976); author of several books, including The Spirit of India and
The Concise History of Congress; died in New Delhi, 1 June 1998.
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