| 4. The larger picture
"The Mohammedan conquest of India
is probably the bloodiest story in history. It is a
discouraging tale, for its evident moral is that
civilisation is a precious thing, whose delicate complex
of order and liberty, culture and peace may at any time be
overthrown by barbarians invading from without or
multiplying within." Those are the words of Will
Durant, a Western scholar who was not a "Hindu
communalist". Its basic statement is but a
summary of the massive testimony given by the Muslim
invaders and their chroniclers themselves. It is
also confirmed by the "silent witnesses", all
the leftovers of destroyed temples which have been
incorporated in mosques. It is therefore not a
"prejudice" or "communal distortion of
history", it is just factual.
There is a convenient contention these
days, that the "communal" view of history, which
sees the Islamic onslaught as the materialisation of a
constant Islamic doctrine rather than as a diffuse
coincidence of economical and other secular factors, is
merely a British concoction in order to "divide and
rule". Thus, R.S. Sharma attributes to the
British scholar H.M. Elliot "the best example of
British communal historiography", because Elliot
"denounces the Muslim rulers in the most severe
terms". (Communal History and Rama's Ayodhya,
p.11) Yet, that tirade does not explain away the fact that
Elliot's classic (along with Dawson) History of India
as Told by its Historians, is entirely based on
authentic records by mostly Muslim historians. It is
not a concoction or a distortion, but a synthesis of the
Muslims' own testimony to the crimes as well as the
motives of Muslim conquerors and rulers.
So, when Indian historians have
recognised Islamic doctrine as the largest single factor
of communal strife in India, it was not because they
"were caught in the communal trap laid by British
historians", as R.S. Sharma wants us to
believe. It was because, as historians, they had to
take the authentic testimonies into account. By
contrast, the "secularist" historians have
glossed over a mass of authentic information in order to
impose their secular explanation on the unwilling facts.
One may always come up with conflicts
that have occurred between this sect and that, at some
point in time. Of course, any two groups, ethnic,
religious, occupational, may at some point develop a
conflict between them. But it is temporary and
ultimately gives was to a renewed peaceful co-existence.
But there are a few ideologies, notably Islam and
Marxism-Leninism, that entertain a doctrine of deliberate
aggression on and intolerance of other societies. In
their case, conflict emanates from an ideological
backbone. And instead of conflict situations always
gravitating back to a peaceful modus vivendi, we see that
in their case, strife becomes the rule. That is how
Hindu society came to suffer under the systematic
onslaught of invaders who had been taught to take pride in
killing and oppressing the Pagans, and to emulate the
example of desecration of Pagan temples, set by the
Prophet.
It is not a communalist concoction that
Mohammed took the Kaaba from the Pagans of Arabia, and
destroyed all the idols in it. This act, described
in detail and glorified in Islamic scripture itself, set
the tone for Islamic behaviour all through the conquest of
North India. It cannot be wished away now, no matter
how many "secularists" the AIBMAC may invite to
shout abuses at the top of their voice against those who
restate these simple and well-attested facts.
|