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Koenraad Elst
The Ayodhya Debate: Focus On The 'No Temple' Evidence Part I
Two sides to the story
In references to the question whether there really was a Hindu
temple at the Ayodhya site later covered by the Babri Masjid, the
focus is invariably on the case made by the Hindu side, viz. that
there was a temple, and that different types of evidence confirm
this. The standard question is: is this evidence for the temple
demolition scenario valid? Have they succeeded in proving the
existence of the temple? By contrast, the opponents of the temple
hypothesis are but very rarely asked to put their evidence on the
table.
Let us now look at the anti-temple argumentation (with due
attention to the several non-archaeological types of evidence) (1)
and in particular to its offer of positive evidence that the
allegedly demolished Hindu temple never existed. Of course, some
might argue that it is impossible to prove the non-existence of
something, and that it is therefore unreasonable to demand such
proof. (2) But this argument is not valid: if there was no temple
and no temple destruction, then there must have been something
else at the site, some other history preceding the building of the
mosque, which is exactly as capable of leaving some written or
archaeological testimony as a demolished temple would. There is no
need to prove the temple's non-existence, it will do to prove the
existence of something else at the site.
The disputed site is an elevated site near the centre of a city,
quite well-known to a whole city population, so it is perfectly
reasonable to expect the existence of testimonies of any
alternative history of the site. Thus, the site may have been
covered with a forest and the city records mention its felling to
make way for a mosque; or the owner of some secular building
standing at the site sold his real estate to the builder of the
projected mosque at a fair price, vide the written sales contract.
As much as the temple party is expected to provide evidence for
the temple, the non-temple party must provide evidence for the
alternative to the temple.
Now, a close scrutiny of the argumentation by the non-temple
party, whether by the Babri Masjid Action Committee, by the
scholars representing it during the government-sponsored scholars'
debate of December-January 1990-91 (at least its last two
meetings) (3) , or by independent scholars such as those of
Jawaharlal Nehru University) (4) shows that none of them even
formulates an alternative hypothesis. Not one of the numerous
scholars who took up arms against the temple party has thought it
necessary to explicitate even in the vaguest terms what exactly
happened before a mosque was built at the site. Much less does any
of them provide any kind of evidence for such an alternative
scenario, eventhough positive proof for a non-temple scenario
would be the best possible refutation of the temple scenario.
Vanquishing a straw man
The non-temple argumentation is confined to two types of evidence:
arguments from silence, and attempts to find fault with pieces of
evidence offered by the temple party.
Criticism of the pro-temple argument is usually directed against a
straw man, not against the actual argumentation as presented by
pro-temple scholars. A number of much-acclaimed anti-temple
publications bravely announce in the introduction or on the cover
that they will demolish every argument given (or
"concocted" and "maliciously propagated") by
the temple party, but then fail to address or even mention the
main statements of the pro-temple party. Thus, Asghar Ali Engineer
has published two anthologies of articles on this controversy (5)
, but carefully leaves out the official as well as the competent
non-official formulations of the pro-temple position; instead he
includes only a few clumsy ones to create a semblance of
even-handedness.
The most powerful non-official books by pro-temple scholars are
simply never mentioned, let alone discussed. (6) Even the official
argumentation offered by the scholars mandated by the Vishva Hindu
Parishad during the government-sponsored debate is generally
ignored. (7) Gyanendra Pandey manages to leave all this
argumentation by professional historians totally unmentioned in
three successive publications purporting to deal with the Hindu
way of doing history during the Ayodhya controversy, focusing
instead on some Hindi pamphlets by local religious personnel
totally unacquainted with scholarly historiography.(8)
The same ignoring of the very argumentation which is purportedly
refuted is found in the successive editions of S. Gopal's Anatomy
of a Confrontation, for most foreign scholars the only accessible
source about the Ayodhya conflict. Even the fact that a
government- sponsored debate between historians mandated by both
sides took place is obscured in most publications, and when it is
at all mentioned, it is mostly to denounce the fact that the
government had "collaborated with the communal forces"
by giving them a hearing at all.
Case study of a straw man
The single most important book in the whole Ayodhya controversy is
Sita Ram Goel's two-volume book Hindu Temples, What Happened to
Them. Its first volume contains a number of presentations of
specific cases of temple demolitions, a brief presentation of the
Islamic theology of iconoclasm, and most of all a list of nearly
2,000 mosques standing on sites of temples demolished by Islamic
iconoclasm.(9) Everybody whispered that within the Ayodhya
movement, a list of "3,000" demolished temples was
circulating. The normal thing to do for serious historians would
have been, to analyze this list inside out, and to try to refute
it. After all, far from basing itself on "myth", Goel's
argument consists of two thousand precise and falsifiable claims,
as a scientific theory should. It turns out that none of the
anti-temple historians has taken up the challenge of refuting even
one of those claims, viz. by proving objectively that one of the
mosques in the list had definitely not been built in forcible
replacement of a temple. The list has never been discussed and
figures in practically no bibliography. (10)
Even more important is the second volume, The Islamic Evidence. It
is the key to the whole Ayodhya controversy, no less. Its main
parts are a 174-page compilation (emphatically not claiming
completeness, merely the discovery of a "tip of the
iceberg") of Muslim literary and epigraphic evidence for the
demolition of Hindu temples, and a 138-page presentation of the
Islamic theology of iconoclasm. Goel's comment on the compilation
open thus: "Starting with Al-Biladhuri who wrote in Arabic in
the second half of the ninth century, and coming down to
Bashiruddin Ahmad who wrote in Urdu in the second decade of the
twentieth, we have cited from seventy histories spanning a period
of more than a thousand years. Our citations mention fifty kings,
six military commanders and three sufis who destroyed Hindu
temples in one hundred and seven localities..." (11)
The importance of the book is that it provides the historical and
ideological context of the temple demolitions: it demonstrates
that the Ayodhya dispute is not a freak case but on the contrary
an entirely representative case of a widespread and centuries-long
phenomenon, viz. Islamic iconoclasm. It shows that the
iconoclastic demolition of Hindu temples was practised in
practically all Indian regions which were under Muslim rule at one
time. Historians, particularly modern historians with their
emphasis on "context", ought to welcome it and study it
closely. Instead, it has been completely obscured and kept out of
the picture in the whole controversy.
It may have achieved mention in a footnote here or there. The
longest discussion of it which I am aware of, is by political
scientist Chetan Bhatt (who does not try to hide his ignorance
about medieval history), who devotes fifteen lines to it: two
separate lines in his text, and a 13-line footnote. He accuses
Goel of "a highly selective obsession with archaeology and to
some extent anthropology" (12) , of marshalling "the
most selective archaeological and historical facts" (13) ,
and of this: "Goel's text uses Islamic sources to 'prove'
that Mughals were only interested in religious domination of
Hindus and nothing more. The historical method used is based
almost entirely on highly selective non- contextual quotations
from these sources." (14)
It is of course very convenient to allege that embarrassing
quotations are "selective" and "pulled out of
context", especially when you don't say what that context is,
nor how it changes the meaning of the quotation. But here we are
dealing with hundreds of quotations, requiring no less than an
equal number of contexts to redeem them, to turn a testimony of
fanatical vandalism into a testimony of tolerance. Moreover, it is
normal for quotations to be selective (those in Bhatt's own book,
culled from writings by Hindu nationalist ideologues to put them
in a bad light, certainly are); at any rate, quoting from primary
sources is a decent form of scholarship. Incidentally, that the
"Mughals" (meaning the Islamic invaders in general) were
"only" interested in religious domination is a
caricature misrepresenting Mr. Goel's stated views; his point
merely is that the religious motive provides an exhaustive and
well- attested explanation for the observed fact of Islamic
temple- demolishing campaigns.
Bhatt also claims that Goel "provides 'evidence' that the
Black Stone in the Ka'ba at Mecca (the most sacred site for
Muslims) was originally a shrine to the Hindu God Shiva".(15)
In reality, Goel explicitly denies just that claim. He discusses a
long-standing Hindu tradition to this effect, as well as
testimonies of the mutual visits to each other's temples by
Pagan-Arab and Hindu traders and of the (well-founded) Muslim
belief in a connection between Arab and Hindu polytheism, to the
extent that the first Muslim invaders took great risks to reach
and demolish the Somnath temple (Gujarat), in which they believed
the Arab deities had taken refuge after the islamization of
Arabia. At any rate, the presiding deity of the Ka'ba, Hubal, was
a male moon-god just like Shiva, and polytheists have always
identified their own gods with roughly corresponding deities in
other pantheons. (16) Goel explains how he always
"dismissed" this belief as an invention of crank
historians, until he ran into some new evidence, and even then he
reserves his judgment: "But in the course of the present
study this author has run into some facts which force him to
revise his judgment. He is not prepared to say that the Ka'ba was
a Shiva temple. He, however, cannot resist the conclusion that it
was a hallowed place of Hindu pilgrimage." (17)
Bhatt describes Goel's book as "a fairly typical RSS-Hindu-nationalist
text". (18) I challenge him to produce a similar text by a
declared RSS man. Anyone familiar with the Hindu nationalist
movement knows that (and knows why) the RSS scrupulously avoids
this type of critical study of Islam as a doctrine. Since at least
the Emergency (1975-77, when RSS activists were jailed and
developed friendly relations with jailed activists of the
Jamaat-i-Islami), the RSS is wooing the Muslim community; its
political ally, the BJP, is courting the Muslim voters and showing
off its fast-increasing number of Muslim election candidates. Even
when criticizing specified Muslim politicians or Islamic
militants, the RSS and its allies firmly refuse to turn this into
a criticism of Islam as such; rather, they will denounce their
Muslim target as "straying from the true message of Islam,
which is a religion of peace and tolerance".
In the very book which Bhatt claims to be criticizing, Goel has
taken the RSS-BJP leaders to task for precisely this pro-Islamic
attitude: "Hindu leaders have endorsed the Muslim
propagandists in proclaiming that Islam does not permit the
construction of mosques at sites occupied earlier by other
people's places of worship. One wonders whether this kowtowing to
Islam is prompted by ignorance, or cowardice, or calculation, or a
combination of them all. The Islam of which Hindu leaders are
talking exists neither in the Quran nor in the Sunnah of the
prophet." (19) On other occasions as well, Goel has sternly
criticized the RSS and BJP for their policy of eschewing all
serious discussion of Islamic doctrine. (20) His book Time for
Stock-Taking is the single most incisive critique of the RSS
available; unlike the stereotyped and sloganeering tirades by
Marxists like Chetan Bhatt, it is based on first-hand knowledge,
including the testimonies by a number of disappointed RSS
volunteers. In spite of this, political "scientists"
like Bhatt can disregard all the evidence and label Goel as an RSS
man.
"Disregarding the evidence" is indeed the name of the
game. Critics of the Hindu historians' case on Ayodhya have so far
never looked their opponents in the eye, smugly settling for a
labelling number, excelling in demonizing terminology ad hominem
rather than in a factual analysis ad rem. It is historiographical
nonsense to discuss the phenomenon of Islamic iconoclasm, in
Ayodhya or elsewhere, without addressing the question of its
motivation -- always an important aspect in any history of human
behaviour. Yet, that is precisely what a whole establishment of
Indian historians have done in suppressing the very mention (or in
the case of Bhatt, at least the true contents) of Sita Ram Goel's
book.
The BMAC historians
The only (partial) exception to the solid front of scholarly
disregard for the pro-temple argument is the official statement by
the scholars mandated by the Babri Masjid Action Committee
half-way through the government-sponsored scholars' debate.(21)
The story behind this is that the BMAC officials, no historians
themselves, had shown up at the first meeting in December 1990, at
which bundles of evidence would be exchanged, with nothing but a
pile of photocopies of newpaper articles and book excerpts stating
opinions on the Ayodhya dispute, but no historical evidence (the
only solid material included pertained to the fairly
uncontroversial judicial history of the site since 1857). My
reading is that they had been misled into an unwarranted
self-confidence by the assurance propagated by certain media-savvy
academics that the pro-temple case was completely baseless and
fraudulent. To their surprise, they were confronted with a genuine
presentation of evidence by the pro-temple party, represented by
Prof. Harsh Narain, Prof. B.P. Sinha, Dr. S.P. Gupta, Dr. B.R.
Grover, and Mr. A.K. Chatterji (none of them formally associated
with the Vishva Hindu Parishad except for Gupta).
In desperation, the BMAC representatives approached Prof. Irfan
Habib of the Indian Council of Historical Research asking him to
save them. Habib collected a team of genuine historians for them,
led by Prof. R.S. Sharma. We will refer to these employees of the
BMAC as "the BMAC team", for it is in that capacity that
they have participated in the debate, notwithstanding their
initial attempt to be recognized as "independent
historians" (as the BMAC negotiators have continued to call
their own employees). Now that, in spite of minimum coverage in
the English-language Indian press, the impression was out that the
VHP-mandated team of historians was winning the debate, the BMAC
team had little choice but to address the pro-temple
argumentation.
On 24 January 1991, when they were expected to present their case,
Sharma and his team failed to show up and unilaterally broke off
the talks. One could see the unilateral walk-out from the
negotiations by the BMAC team as an admission of defeat. But the
day before, the four BMAC historians, in their first meeting
(chaired by a government representative) with the VHP team, had
said that they needed six weeks to study the evidence,-- a
remarkable position for people who had led 40 colleagues into
signing a public statement on the absolute non-existence of any
evidence, just a few days before. However, it must be admitted
that they did make their homework as promised. A few months later
they presented an argumentation under the title Historians' Report
to the Nation, which remained their central argument when the
talks briefly resumed in October 1992. Then too, they broke off
the talks, viz. in (arguably justified) protest against the VHP's
announcement that, disregarding the ongoing negotiations, it would
stage a demonstration in Ayodhya on December 6, the occasion when
the Babri Masjid was demolished.
In the BMAC team's Report, the salient point is that the BMAC
scholars exclusively attempted to refute (a part of) the
pro-temple argumentation but made no attempt whatsoever to present
any original evidence of their own. In effect, they pretended to
sit in judgment on evidence presented to them by supplicants, when
in reality they themselves were one of the contending parties in
the arena, expected to present their own evidence. Unfortunately,
to keep both parties to the rules of a debate and to evaluate the
evidence objectively, a genuinely neutral judge would have been
needed, and of course, it seemed that there was no neutral judge
available in India.
Arguments from silence
The central line of argument in the BMAC team's Report is that
until the late 18th century, no literary source mentions a temple
or a temple demolition at the site. Arguments from silence are
always the weakest type of argument. The absence of testimony in a
particular source may simply mean that that the author was unaware
of an event eventhough the event did take place; or it can mean
that the author had no intention of providing the kind of
information which we are looking for, either deliberately or
simply because he had a different project in mind when writing
that particular text. Thus, poet Tulsidas, author of the main
devotional work on Rama in Hindi, the Râmcharitmânas, is often
cited as remaining silent regarding the alleged temple demolition.
But this proves little, when you keep in mind that in his day
(ca.1600 AD) the construction of the Babri Masjid at the site
(1528 AD according to the inscription on the mosque itself) was a
long-accomplished fact, and that the same Tulsidas doesn't mention
any of the numerous temple demolitions even in his own Varanasi.
As a rewriter of ancient traditions, Tulsidas was just not a
reporter on recent events at all; he does not even mention his own
most famous contemporary, the enlightened Emperor Akbar.
But in this case, there is an even more decisive argument against
reliance on arguments from silence: each argument from silence
against the temple is equally valid as an argument from silence
against every possible alternative scenario, for none of the texts
cited mentions any non-temple entity at the site.
One frequently mentioned argument from silence is simply
disingenuous: the absence of any reference to Ayodhya in Babar's
memoirs. As Babar himself relates, the pages for the period when
he may have stayed in Ayodhya were blown away during a storm. If
those missing pages listed Babar's activities day by day and
failed to mention his stay in Ayodhya, then that would constitute
a serious argument from silence; but since those pages are
missing, there is not even an argument from silence in Babar's
memoirs.
A British concoction ?
But if there had never been a temple demolition, why did a
tradition come into being asserting just that? Usually, this
anomaly is explained by means of an ad hoc hypothesis, viz. that
the temple demolition scenario was invented by the British as part
of their policy of "divide and rule". Even pro-temple
authors like K.R. Malkani, editor-in-chief of the party paper BJP
Today, have conceded an important role to this British
"divide and rule" policy, which in my view is a figment
of the imagination.
Admittedly, at the institutional level the British did follow a
policy of "divide and rule": communal recruitment quota
and separate electorates for Muslims were obviously meant to
isolate the Muslims from the national movement. In their conquest
of India, the British had also used one community against another,
e.g. they took help from the Sikhs, hereditary enemies of the
Moghul Empire, to suppress the so-called Mutiny of 1857, which was
a predominantly Muslim revolt aimed at restoring the Moghul
Empire. However, in this process, they used existing antagonisms
between communities and had no need of inventing new ones.
Moreover, it is simply not true at all that the British encouraged
inter-religious rioting, nor that they exploited (let alone
created) the kind of emotive issues (such as temple demolitions)
which led to street fighting rather than to purely political
disunity. Once the British-Indian Empire was securely established,
the British rulers sought to establish communal peace, and did so
with remarkable success. The period between 1858 and 1920, at the
height of British power, saw the lowest incidence of Hindu-Muslim
violence since the Ghorid invasion of 1192. When Hindu-Muslim
riots started on a large scale in 1922, it was due to the failure
of the ill-conceived Khilafat agitation started by the (Muslim and
Congress Hindu) Indians themselves.
At any rate, not one of the proponents of the British concoction
scenario has discovered even the faintest evidence for it in the
copious colonial records. Remark, moreover, that this scenario
implies a number of highly unlikely presuppositions. Thus, it
imputes a great deal of stupidity to the wily Britons: it has them
concoct a temple demolition scenario when so many factual, well-
attested temple demolitions had marked India's landscape, often in
the form of temple remains being visibly incorporated in mosques
built over them. In Ayodhya itself, several Rama temples were
destroyed by Aurangzeb (Treta-ka-Thakur and Swargadwar), a fact
which even the official polemicists against the Ram Janmabhoomi
have not dared to deny; if the British had wanted to poke up
anti-Muslim feelings among the Hindus of Ayodhya by means of
temple demolition narratives, they had no need at all to go
through the trouble of concocting one.
Further, this scenario credits the guardians of Hindu tradition
with an uncharacteristic open-mindedness. All through the past
centuries, Hindu Pandits have refused to listen to European
scholars who claimed that the Sanskrit language had been brought
from South Russia during the so-called Aryan Invasion, eventhough
this Aryan Invasion Theory is taught in every schoolbook of
history in India. These Pandits have consistently turned a deaf
ear to European theories about Indian chronology, Sanskrit
etymology or Aryan- Dravidian relations. They won't even allow
non-Hindus into Hindu temples. Yet, we are asked to believe that a
few British agents could infiltrate the local traditions and make
these same Pandits swallow and then propagate a newly invented
story about the birthpla- ce of one of their greatest gods.
The British concoction hypothesis is conclusively refuted by
several pre-British testimonies of (at least the belief in) the
temple demolition scenario. The best-known and clearest testimony
is certainly the one by the Austrian Jesuit Tieffenthaler, who
wrote in 1768: "Emperor Aurangzebe got demolished the
fortress called Ramcot, and erected on the same place a Mahometan
temple with three cupolas. Other believe that it was constructed
by Babor."(22) One could speculate, along with R.S. Sharma
and his BMAC team of historians, that the tradition which
Tieffenthaler recorded, was a concoction from the early 18th
century (still "in its initial phase of creation") (23)
, but it cannot, at any rate, have been a British concoction.
To their credit, R.S. Sharma and his team are the only ones in the
no-temple camp to have abandoned the British concoction
hypothesis, at least implicitly. But they fail to give the
elements which could lend substance to a pre-British concoction
hypothesis: no who, no how, no why.
A closer look at the argument from silence
While Sharma c.s. leave undiscussed several pre-British
testimonies which the VHP-mandated team had brought as evidence,
they do mention a few other sources of this type nonetheless. In
each case, they claim it as an argument from silence: the source
fails to mention the pre-existence or the demolition of a temple
at the site. But each of these Ayodhya-related passages cited is
very brief and fails to mention other buildings in Ayodhya, and
none of the texts cited purports to be a history of temple
demolitions, so that the non-mention of a birthplace temple is
quite in keeping with the project of the texts concerned, and not
a telling omission.
Thus, Abul Fazl's Ain-i-Akbari, completed in AD 1598. Sharma c.s.
note that it includes Ayodhya among the foremost places of
pilgrimage, calling it "one of the holiest places of
antiquity" and "the residence of Ramchandra", and
mentioning the celebration of Ram Navami (Rama's birth festival)
there. The BMAC historians comment: "Clearly, the tradition
till then did not confine Rama's place of birth to the existing
town of Ayodhya, let alone the site occupied by the Baburi Masjid."
(24)
But this is hardly incompatible with a tradition concerning a
specific birthplace. Till today, people can say: "I'm from
Scotland", or: "I was born in Edinburgh", rather
than to tell you in exactly which house they were born. When
filling out forms, people still write the name of the town behind
the entry "place of birth", and not the full adress of
the building; yet in doing so, they are not denying that they were
born in that specific building. You really have to be a university
professor to come up with the brilliant idea that when people
mention a town as their place of birth, they are implying that
they have no notion of having been born in one specific house.
Anyone familiar with the lore of Hindu devotional tradition would
find it strange that Hindus would come on pilgrimage to Ayodhya as
Rama's city and not let that Rama association come alive in an
enactment of Rama's career with the designation of specific sites
as the theatres of specific scenes in Rama's life. That, for
example, is why another temple in Ayodhya was associated with
Rama's death: the Swargadwar, "gate to heaven". Even if
Rama were a purely fictional character, the religious imagination
would have created that kind of landscape, and in the Bhakti
period, i.e. from well before the start of the second Christian
millennium, it was the done thing to adorn such religiously
meaningful sites with temples.
Sharma c.s. assume that the identification of the demolished
building as a "fortress" (Ramkot, "Rama's
fortress") refutes the assumption that it was a temple; but
Hindu "idol-worshippers" consider a temple as the house
of the deity, in the case of a warrior-deity as his fortress. The
whole idea of idol-worship is to make a deity come alive,
realistically: the idol is washed and clothed and fed, and of
course it lives in a house appropriate to its character and epic
career.
On balance
So, in spite of sometimes painstaking attempts to neutralize the
evidence presented by the temple party, the proponents of the non-
temple hypothesis have failed to produce any positive evidence for
a non-temple scenario. This observation raises a few questions.
First of all: why is there an Ayodhya debate in the first place?
Normally, scholars only take time from their busy schedules to
reopen a settled affair when new evidence has surfaced which
throws a new light on the matter. In this case, no such new
evidence has ever been presented. It is most conspicuous by its
absence in the opening shot of the debate, the JNU historians'
pamphlet The Political Abuse of History (Delhi 1989). Had there
not been the purely political motives which drove some to declare
the Ayodhya debate opened, we would still have been with the
consensus of 1989"
Secondly: what is the score if each one of the attempted
refutations of the items of pro-temple evidence proves correct? In
that case, the pro-temple evidence is reduced to zero, but that
would still make it exactly as voluminous as the evidence for
every possible non-temple scenario, which to date is non-existent.
Even if all the trouble taken by the pro-temple scholars had been
in vain, their evidence would still be equal in magnitude to the
evidence offered by their oponents, whose endeavour has been
purely negative. Anyone weighing the actual evidence presented by
both sides would have to infer that the balance of evidence, while
not yet definitive, is strongly on the pro-temple side.
continues...
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