| 3. The tactics of dispute
With this total lack of evidence, the
AIBMAC cannot hope to clinch the issue in its favour.
So, the next best thing it could try, is to prevent the
Hindu side from clinching the issue in its favour, by
showing that the evidence which we have given, is not
really evidence. Though some of our documents have
been dug up from the archives only recently, a number of
them had been drawn attention to in public forums, so the
AIBMAC could have attacked the reliability of those
evidences. However, in the long list of AIBMAC
documents, there is not a trace of a critique of the four
Muslim testimonies presented by Harsh Narain (IE
26/2/1990) or Tieffenthaler's testimony presented by A.K.
Chatterjee (IE 26/3/1990). There is also not a trace
of evidence for the oft-used explanation that the local
people, gullible as Hindus and Muslims both can be,
swallowed a story purposely concocted by the British.
The anti-Mandir argumentation in other
intellectual forums including the press has also not come
up with any evidence that disproves our case or renders
our evidence unreliable. The AIBMAC list of
documents contains a number of these samples of the anti-Mandir
rhetoric that has been spread in the press, which
invariably blow a lot of hot air but don't give any
evidence whatsoever.
There have been a few attempts to
discredit the archaeological conclusions made public by
Prof. B.B. Lal and Dr. S.P. Gupta. These attempts
are not made by competent archaeologists or people who
have any kind of first-hand knowledge of the Janmabhoomi
archaeology, but by armchair historians like Prof. R.S.
Sharma or the JNU historians, who happen to be firmly
rooted in Marxism, a tradition notorious for its numerous
brutal falsifications of history. In particular,
there have been baseless insinuations against the
professional integrity of both archaeologists. On
top of that, all kinds of untenable denials as well as
fantastic alternative explanations of the archaeological
findings have been floated. But no evidence.
Competent archaeologists and art
historians have come out in support of Prof. Lal and Dr.
Gupta, including Muhammed K.K. (Dy. Superintending
Archaeologist, ASI Madras circle, in IE 15/12/90), Mr.
Iravatham Mahadevan (indologist and editor of Dinamani, IE
5/12/90), and Dr. R. Nath, author of History of Mughal
Architecture, whom the AIBMAC had quoted in support of
its case. He has confirmed :"I have been to the
site and have had occasion to study the mosque, privately,
and I have absolutely no doubt that the mosque stands on
the site of a Hindu temple on the north-western corner of
the temple-fortress Ramkot." (IE 2/1/91) But so far,
not one among the Hindu-baiters who have lectured us about
the primacy of science over myth, has given up his
attachment to the anti-Mandir myth in the face of the
incontrovertible scientific evidence.
There is a method in these unscholarly
attempts to sow suspicions against the undeniable
archaeological facts, though it is not the scientific
method. It is like a defence lawyer's attempt to
create confusion and thus hold up the clear-cut case of
the prosecutor. Perhaps such tactics are alright in
court, but in a scholarly debate they are considered
highly objectionable, and a definite indication of a
commitment to something else than the truth.
A distraction tactic, that is what the
entire anti-Mandir argumentation amounts to. Instead
of coming up with one genuine piece of evidence, the Babri
polemists merely raise new distractions to create
confusion. The effect is that, in writing this
reply, we have been forced to deal with silly statements
made by biased and incompetent people, whose opinions
would count for nothing in a sincere academic debate.
What does a Hindu-baiting politician like Ramaswamy
Naicker know about Ayodhya? Yet, because his biased
layman's opinion is presented as evidence, we are forced
to deal with it. To be sure, we are perfectly
willing to devote our time to any kind of evidence deemed
valid by our opponents, on this occasion. But in the
press, where the public opinion is sought to be moulded,
it is hardly feasible to go and disprove all these
spurious contentions, so bringing them up has effectively
created the impression that the anti-Mandir hypothesis
really rests on some evidence of its own.
A strong example of these distraction
tactics in the AIBMAC bundle of documents, is the fact
that no less than seven different hypotheses regarding
Rama's birth place have been given: 1) He was never born
at all; 2) He was born at an unknown place; 3) He was born
at Ayodhya, a few dozen yards north of the Ram Janmabhoomi
site, where now the Sita ki Rasoi stands; 4) He was born
in the village Ghuram in Panjab; 5) He was born in
Afghanistan; 6) He was born on the banks of the Saryu in
Nepal; 7) He was born in Benares. So, they expect us
to go and disprove all these seven hypotheses, of which
they themselves disbelieve at least six.
A typical case of a story floated in
the press to distract from the real debate on the real
evidence is the "theory" that the Janmabhoomi
spot housed a Buddhist establishment. The Leftist
press is exploiting this canard to the fullest, the AIBMAC
evidence mentions it in several places, but understandably
does not highlight it too much. In tactical terms,
the stand that the Masjid was built on empty space, is the
first line of defence, and it is still taken by the AIBMAC.
The stand that the spot was not empty, but that the
building was Buddhist, is the next line of defence,
increasingly taken by the Leftists, who realise that the
first line has become untenable.
That the Babri Masjid replaced a
Buddhist building, is not indicated by any iconographical
or documentary evidence (in contrast to the solid
iconographical testimony that it was a Vaishnava temple
and the massive written testimony that it was a Rama
temple). While there were plenty of Buddhist
buildings in North India, the Ram Mandir was not one of
them.
But the general proposition that
whatever Buddhist establishments existed, we demolished
the way the Ram Mandir was demolished, that proposition is
of course correct. For the Muslim conquerors,
Buddhism was just one sect of Hindu paganism. So,
they totally exterminated Buddhism both in Central Asia
and in North India. Owing to their centralised and
high-profile institutions, the Buddhist monks were an
easier target than the decentralised Vedic-Hindu society.
The recent canard that Hindus destroyed Nalanda University
(destroyed by Muslim conqueror Bakhtiar Khilji) and the
Bodh Gaya temple (never destroyed but left unkempt after
the Buddhists had been slaughtered by Bakhtiar and other
Muslim conquerors), is just an artificial smokescreen to
conceal the well-attested fact that Islam did to Buddhism
exactly what it did to other sects of Sanatana Dharma as
well as to other Pagan traditions wherever it found them.
The strongest weapon of the anti-Mandir
polemists has so far been their near-total control of the
media. This alone has enabled them to bring into
disrepute a firmly established and massively attested
tradition, to depict it as "myth" and
"distortion", and to float an alternative
hypothesis which is incoherent with our general historical
knowledge and in conflict with all the available specific
evidence. This mighty propaganda feat, achieved over
the last couple of years, is one small instance of a
larger operation of history-distortion. This
operation seeks to erase from our people's consciousness
the memory of the unprecedented crimes committed in the
name of Islam.
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