Sunday, December 5, 2010

Demolition of Babri Masjid is demolition of Indian history - Ghulam Muhammed | Accidental Historian - Richard Eaton - Paramita Ghose - Hindustan Times

Demolition of Babri Masjid is demolition of Indian History. Hindutva extremists cannot fool the world with their skewed version of 'faith-based' mythologizing of Indian history and Brahmin Aryan's vain attempts to treat Muslim Rule as alien while trying to settle in as the very original inhabitants of India divinely chosen to rule the lesser children of God. The Aryan Brahmins cannot digest what they have chewed. Bigger fish always swallow small fish.

Ghulam Muhammed, Mumbai


"Unlike the Sangh Parivar's fanciful claims that 60,000 temples were demolished in the medieval period, Eaton showed through scientific data and intensive research into primary sources that the number was actually 80 over the entire spread of Muslim rule in India from 1190 to 1760. He also investigated why, when and where the temples were destroyed and the wide range of motives that led to their destruction". --- Paramita Ghosh



http://www.hindustantimes.com/The-accidental-historian/Article1-634479.aspx


HindustanTimes Mon,06 Dec 2010


The accidental historian
Paramita Ghosh, Hindustan Times
Email Author
December 05, 2010

Grand historical narratives have almost always had humble beginnings in the exacting labour of microscopic research. French Annales historians such as Marc Bloch and Fernand Braudel showed how to mingle the modesty of a local schoolteacher's profession with the ambitious scope of a historian's
vocation. Richard M Eaton, liberal India's favourite western scholar, has followed in their footsteps.


In town for the Medieval History Journal's annual lecture, Eaton turned into a historian from two encounters. He met India via Iran and he travelled through an American county looking for a teaching job. On any subject. It turned out that they wanted a history teacher.
In the Sixties, this gameyness turned the 21-year-old college graduate with a degree in philosophy towards history with a small detour through soil chemistry.

"I was posted in Tabriz as a Peace Corps volunteer…. Before the (Islamic) Revolution, the government of Iran thought Americans could teach anything, so I was asked to teach soil chemistry in an agricultural school," says Eaton with a laugh, sitting on one of the ramparts of the Lodhi tomb, remembering a journey to Delhi in the mid-sixties by train from Iran across the Baluchistan desert.

Eaton's book, Essays on Islam and Indian History (2000) has been the backbone of most arguments for denying the Hindu right's charge of Islam as the sole guiding principle for the destruction of temples by the Mughal rulers of India, and makes it essential reading, especially in our post-Ayodhya times.

Historian Harbans Mukhia says Eaton shifted the terms of debate in medieval history.
"Unlike the Sangh Parivar's fanciful claims that 60,000 temples were demolished in the medieval period, Eaton showed through scientific data and intensive research into primary sources that the number was actually 80 over the entire spread of Muslim rule in India from 1190 to 1760. He also investigated why, when and where the temples were destroyed and the wide range of motives that led to their destruction".

For example, according to Eaton's book, in 1679, temples patronised by Rajput chieftain, Rana Raj Singh, were destroyed by Aurangzeb for having backed his brother and rival, Dara Shikoh.

According to Eaton, the recent Ayodhya judgment - which some have interpreted as 'legitimising' the Babri demolition - is a "panchayat decision" and is symptomatic of the success with which Hindu fundamentalists have been able to project the concept of a 'Hindu nation' versus a 'Muslim nation' onto the 16th century.

"The idea of India as a nation or even two nations is a modern construct. And there was no sustained pattern of a Hindu resistance to Muslim rule unlike Chinese history which was marked by unstable dynasties and their violent overthrow," he says.

Unlike many western scholars whose need to 'understand' Islam is as recent as the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan, if not 9/11, Eaton's interest stems from evidences of Islam's pluralism. That this is not a popular idea, even among Muslims themselves, owes a lot, he says, to the technology of communication.

"Earlier, you had local, village Islams... Then came the steamship. Muslims from different parts of the country started going for the Haj together. Travelling on the ship, they began to see themselves as a single community," he says.

"The TV, radio, ship, broke down differences between here and there. It made it all one."
Why is history writing in India skewed? National movements, says Eaton, made it necessary for historians to justify India, and Pakistan, in bipolar terms.

"Historians became servants of politics," he says.

"Post-Independence, the use of Persian declined and historians did not look up sources in the original. To discover new information, you have to go to the mofussil record rooms and not just sit in Calcutta and expect them to come to you."

Or, think that if the information was not in Delhi or Kolkata, it was in London.

If history doesn't stand still, should historians? Eaton, who witnessed the birth of the Subaltern Studies school in the '80s, says its latter-day tendency to do historiography "by keeping the British Raj in the centre" defeated its initial work of writing history from below.
Eaton says his work has Marxist 'influences'.

"Marx," he says, "taught that history is not just pushed along by great men."


As for Partha Chatterjee, the leading light of the Subaltern school, he is, says Eaton, "an old monument".

2 comments:

  1. Just read the biography of the 15th-century Shia Sufi preacher Shamsuddin Araki by one of his disciples. In the thinly-populated area of Gilgit and Baltistan, he and his pupils destroyed already more than 80 temples. He justified this with reference to Mohammed's own destruction of the idols in the Kaaba, the great precedent of all Islamic iconoclasm. The count of only 80 destroyed temples over all, given by Mukhia and attributed to Eaton, is worse than ridiculous. But the political power equation that lets him and your esteemed paper get away with spreading such nonsense is bound to lapse one day. In the end, truth shall prevail.

    ReplyDelete
  2. 1. Clearing of Kaaba from Idols is a fact. However that should not paper over the fact, that Kaaba as a House of Allah, was built by Abraham, the monotheist prophet. So the placing of idols actually was a clear desecration of a monotheistic place of worship. All Prophet Mohammed did was to restore Kaaba to its original status. Thats how Hindurvadis are trying to justify their demolition of Babri Masjid. Only it is not yet proved that there was a temple where Babri Masjid was built. For that matter, the city of Ayodhya has any number of temples that claim to be the Ramjanambhoomi, or birth place of RAM. Another fact is that there was no tradition of building temples to worship RAM in earlier times. How can that fit with the claim of a Ramjanambhoomi temple at the disputed site?

    2. Shia Sufi and others were given to boast and eulogize their kings and benefactors by attributing to them the imaginary record of destruction of temples. That cannot be verified just by citing their writings.

    ReplyDelete