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Why
did Aurangzeb Demolish the Kashi by Koenraad Elst
During the Ayodhya controversy, there were occasional
statements in the Hindutva camp confirming (VHP) or denying (BJP)
that apart from Ram Janmabhoomi, two other sacred sites should
also be "liberated" from Islamic "occupation":
Krishna Janmabhoomi in Mathura and Kashi Vishvanath in Varanasi.
Though the Hindu business community in central Varanasi has made
it clear that it refuses to suffer the inevitable losses which
would accompany an agitation in their densely populated
neighbourhood, the liberation of Kashi Vishvanath is still on the
VHP's agenda. Therefore, some authors have tried to "do an
Ayodhya" on Kashi, viz. try to make people believe that there
never was a Hindu temple at the disputed site.
Syed Shahabuddin asserts that Muslims cannot possibly have
destroyed any Hindu temple, because "pulling down a place of
worship to construct a mosque is against the Shariat"; claims
to the contrary are all "chauvinist propaganda" (1);
Arun Shourie has confronted this claim with the information given
in the official court chronicle, MaasiriAlamgiri, which records
numerous orders for and reports of destructions of temples. Its
entry for 2 September 1669 tells us: "News came to court that
in accordance with the Emperor's command his officers had
demolished the temple of Vishvanath at Banaras".(2);
Moreover, till today, the old Kashi Vishvanath temple wall is
visible as a part of the walls of the Gyanvapi mosque which
Aurangzeb had built at the site.
In the face of such direct testimony, it is wiser not to challenge
facts headon. It is better to minimize or to justify them. Thus,
Percival Spear, co-author (with Romila Thapar) of the prestigious
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.(3);
But a perusal of the same Moghul chronicle thoroughly refutes this
reassuring assertion: Aurangzeb had thousands of temples
destroyed. And other chronicles, diaries and other documents
concerning Muslim rulers in India prove that the practice was not
a personal idiosyncrasy of Aurangzeb's either.
Therefore, a more promising way of defusing the conflict potential
which the mosque at the Kashi Vishvanath site carries, is to
justify the replacement of the temple with a mosque. Maybe the
owners and users of the temple had brought it on themselves? Maybe
Islam can be disentangled from this act of destruction in favour
of a purely secular motive?
JNU historian Prof. K.N. Panikkar offers one way out: "the
destruction of the temple at Banaras also had political motives.
It appears that a nexus between the sufi rebels and the pandits of
the temple existed and it was primarily to smash this nexus that
Aurangzeb ordered action against the temple(4); The eminent
historian quotes no source for this strange allegation. In those
days, Pandits avoided to even talk with Mlecchas, let alone to
concoct intrigues with them.
Other secularists have spread a more sophisticated variation, now
regularly reproduced in the media: "Did Muslim rulers destroy
temples? Some of them certainly did. Following the molestation of
a local princess by some priests in a temple at Benaras, Aurangzeb
ordered the total destruction of the temple and rebuilt it at a
nearby site. And this is the only temple he is believed to have
destroyed.(5) This story is now repeated ad nauseam, not only in
the extremist Muslim press and in the secularist press but also in
academic platforms by "eminent historians". It is
repeated with approval by historian Gargi Chakravartty, who also
reveals the source of this story.
She introduces the quotation as follows: "Much has been said
about Aurangzeb's demolition order of Vishwanath temple at Banaras.
But documentary evidence gives a new dimension to the whole
episode:" (6) What follows is the theory launched by B.N.
Pande, working chairman of the Gandhi Darshan Samiti and former
Governor of Orissa:
"The story regarding demolition of Vishvanath temple is that
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 a journey on the Palkis. They took their
dip in the Ganges and went to the Vishwanath temple to pay their
homage. After offering Puja 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 it,
he was very much enraged. He sent his senior officers to search
for the Rani. Ultimately, they found that the statue of Ganesh
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 Jagannath's seat. The Rajas expressed their
vociferous protests. As the crime was heinous, the Rajas demanded
exemplary action. Aurangzeb ordered that as the sacred precincts
have been despoiled, Lord Vishvanath may be moved to some other
place, the temple be razed to the ground and the Mahant be
arrested and punished.(7);
The story is very bizarre, to say the least. First of all, it has
Aurangzeb go to Bengal. Yet, in the extant histories of his life
and works, no such journey to Bengal, or even any journey as far
east as Varanasi, is recorded. Some of his generals were sent on
expeditions to Bengal, but not Aurangzeb himself. There are fairly
complete chronicles of his doings, day by day; could B.N. Pande or
any of his quoters give the date or even the year of this
remarkable episode?
Neither was Aurangzeb known to surround himself with Hindu
courtiers. And did these Rajas take their wives along on military
expeditions? Or was it some holiday picnic? How could the Mahant
kidnap a Rani who was there in the company of other Ranis, as well
as the appropriate courtiers and bodyguards? Why did he take such
risk? Why did the "Rajas" wait for Aurangzeb to take
"exemplary action": did they fear his anger if they
punished the priests or destroyed the temple themselves? And since
when is demolition the approved method of purifying a defiled
temple, an eventuality for which the Shâstras have laid down due
ritual procedures?
One question which we can readily answer is, where did B.N. Pande
get this story from? He himself writes: "Dr. Pattabhi
Sitaramayya, in his famous book The Feathers and the Stones has
narrated this fact based on documentary evidence.(8) So, we have
to go one more step back in time to find this intriguing
"documentary evidence". Let us turn to this book, now
hard to find, to see what the documentary evidence is on which
this whole wave of pro Aurangzeb rumours is based, but which no
one has cared to reproduce or even just specify. This is what
Gandhian Congress leader Pattabhi Sitaramayya wrote in his prison
diary:
"There is a popular belief that Aurangazeb was a bigot in
religion. This, however, is combated by a certain school. His
bigotry is illustrated by one or two instances. The building of a
mosque over the site of the original Kasi Visveswara Temple is one
such. A like mosque in Mathura is another. The revival of Jazia is
a third but of a different order. A story is told in extenuation
of the first event.
"In the height of his glory, Aurangazeb like any foreign king
in a country, had in his entourage a number of Hindu nobles. They
all set out one day to see the sacred temple of Benares. Amongst
them was a Ranee of Cutch. When the party returned after visiting
the Temple, the Ranee of Cutch was missing. They searched for her
in and out, East, North, West and South but no trace of her was
noticeable. At last, a more diligent search revealed a Tah Khana
or an underground storey of the temple which to all appearances
had only two storeys. When the passage to it was found barred,
they broke open the doors and found inside the pale shadow of the
Ranee bereft of her jewellery.
"It turned out that the Mahants were in the habit of pick ing
out wealthy and bejewelled pilgrims and in guiding them to see the
temple, decoying them to the underground cellar and robbing them
of their jewellery. What exactly would have happened to their life
one did not know. Anyhow in this case, there was no time for
mischief as the search was diligent and prompt. On discovering the
wickedness of the priests, Aurangazeb declared that such a scene
of robbery could not be the House of God and ordered it to be
forthwith demolished. And the ruins were left there.
"But the Ranee who was thus saved insisted on a Musjid being
built on the ruined and to please her, one was subsequently built.
That is how a Musjid has come to exist by the side of the Kasi
Visweswar temple which is no temple in the real sense of the term
but a humble cottage in which the marble Siva Linga is housed.
Nothing is known about the Mathura Temple.
"This story of the Benares Musjid was given in a rare
manuscript in Lucknow which was in the possession of a respected
Mulla who had read it in the Ms. and who though he promised to
look it up and give the Ms. to a friend, to whom he had narrated
the story, died without fulfilling his promise. The story is
little known and the prejudice, we are told, against Aurangazeb
persists.(9)
So now, we finally know where the story comes from: an unnamed
mullah friend of an unnamed acquaintance of Sitaram ayya's knew of
a manuscript, the details of which he took with him in his grave.
This is the "document" on which secularist journalists
and historians base their "evidence" of Aurangzeb's fair
and secularist disposition, overruling the evidence of archaeology
and the cold print of the MaasiriAlamgiri, to "explode the
myth" of Islamic iconoclasm spread by the
"chauvinist" Hindutva propagandists.(10) Now you just
try to imagine what the secularists and their mouthpieces in
Western academe would say if Hindus offered evidence of this
quality.
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References
Statement made by Syed Shahabuddin in a Newstrack debate,
1-8-1992, also quoted in A. Shourie: Indian Controversies,
"The latest argument", p.429.
A. Shourie: "Take over from the Experts", included as
Ch.18 in his Indian Controversies, ASA, Delhi 1993.
P. Spear: Penguin History of India, vol.2, p.56.
K.N. Panikkar: "What is Communalism Today?", in Pratul
Lahiri: Selected Writings on Communalism, People's Publishing
House, Delhi 1994, p.73.
Namita Bhandare, Louise Fernandes and Minu Jain: "A Pampered
Minority?"", Sunday, 7­2­1993. The Kashi
Vishvanath temple was indeed rebuilt at a nearby site, but of
course not by Aurangzeb, who had a mosque built at the original
site.
Gargi Chakravartty: "BJP/RSS and Distortion of History",
in Pratul Lahiri, ed.: Selected Writings on Communalism, p.168.
B.N. Pande: Islam and Indian Culture, Khuda Bakhsh Oriental
Library, Patna 1987, p.44-45.
B.N. Pande: Islam and Indian Culture, p.45. He adds: "Dr. P.L.
Gupta, former curator of Patna Museum, has also corroborated this
incident." Of course, if this P.L. Gupta had anything to add
in his capacity of historian, B.N. Pande would not have failed to
reproduce it. Instead, the more likely explanation is that he
simply had read the same book (quite popular in Gandhian circles
after its publication in 1946) which Pande quoted as his source.
Pattabhi Sitaramayya: Feathers and Stones, Bombay 1946, p.177-178.
In Muslim India, Oct. 1996, p.455, Syed Shahabuddin reproduces
this excerpt from Sitaramayya's Feathers and Stones minus the last
para, apparently because this poor documentary basis is too
embarrassing.
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