| 1. We have
given evidence
The
Government of India had asked both parties to this dispute
to present historical evidence concerning the question
whether a Hindu temple was demolished to make way for the
Babri Masjid. Evidence means, human or material
testimony for the scenario that a flourishing Hindu temple
stood there and that it was forcibly replaced by a mosque;
or for the alternative scenario, that something else than
a Hindu temple was there, such as empty space, and that
the mosque was built without interfering with the existing
customs of worship.
We have
given evidence: solid archaeological and iconographical
evidence that a Hindu temple existed there, and a mass of
documentary evidence of different types, showing the
unanimous tradition, held since at least the early 17th
century, that the Babri Masjid was built on a very sacred
but forcibly demolished Hindu temple, believed to indicate
Rama's birthplace.
But in the
long list of documents submitted by the All-India Babri
Masjid Action Committee (AIBMAC), we do not find any
primary evidence: testimony that the Masjid was built on
an empty spot, or that the owner of the plot had willingly
sold it to the Muslim rulers for construction of the Babri
Masjid. We also do not find any secondary evidence
in the AIBMAC bundle of documents: authentic testimony
from local people or from travellers saying explicitly
that they had always believed that the Masjid had been
built on empty land.
Allow us to
make a few general observations concerning the evidence
offered by the BMAC. The very first striking fact
about the documents, as already noted, is that none of
them contain evidence for the point which the AIBMAC was
required to present proof. In a few cases, they
contain scholarly argumentations. While not strictly
evidence, we do agree that they deserve to be in this
dossier. Quite a number of the pieces, however, are
pieces written by politically minded people with no
scholarly competence in this field at all. And even
among the genuine academics, there are some with a strong
ideological bias: history, as well as literature science,
cannot be equated with physics, as far as strict
neutrality is concerned. It follows that even the
opinion of big names cannot count as proof, unless the
actual evidence on which their tall opinion is based, is
added.
For
instance, S.K. Chatterjee may be a big name as a linguist,
but his two statements on the Ramayana are flatly untrue:
that nobody believes it has a historical core (many
scholars believe, for instance, that it dramatises the
conquest of the South by people from the North, which
amounts to a historical core), and that it was the purely
individual creation of one poet, Valmiki (who in reality
drew upon different earlier versions).
Big names
have no proof value. They are a social, not a
scientific category. So, no matter what the merits
of a C. Rajagopalachari, J. Nehru, B.R. Ambedkar may
have been, we cannot count them as knowledgeable in the
precise historical question with which we are dealing.
Had they come up with any evidence for their off-hand
opinions, we could have looked into it.
Unfortunately, we find nothing there but opinion.
A second
observation is that all these separate pieces of
"evidence" do not yield a coherent scenario at
all. In fact, many of the documents contradict
eachother. Thus, some ancient sources integrate the
Rama story into Buddhist tradition, while some modern
pamphletteers say the Ramayana symbolises the victory of
Brahmanism over Buddhism. Some say there is no
historical core at all, others say the Ramayana dramatises
the "Aryan" conquest of South India. Some
say the Janmabhoomi site was empty, others that it
contained a Buddhist stupa. Some say that the Masjid
was built by Babar, others say it was built one or two
centuries earlier. There can be only one history,
one scenario that took place in reality. The AIBMAC
people have not made clear for which scenario this
evidence musters proof.
A third
observation is that the AIBMAC evidence is quantitively
very copious, yet very meagre as far as the central issue
is concerned: proving or disproving that the Babri Masjid
forcibly replaced a flourishing Hindu place of worship.
There is
much about the legal story, which proves little more than
the obvious fact that after the Muslim take-over the place
was considered Muslim property both under Nawabi and
colonial rule. So, that part of the
"evidence" simply restates the judicial problem,
but does not clinch the issue of its historical rights and
wrongs. But then again, it also proves that Hindus
kept on claiming the place, both in court and on the
ground. The point is precisely that it was unjustly
in Muslim possession, and that Hindus kept on fighting for
what was theirs but was denied them by the Muslim and
British rulers.
But there
is in these documents only little about the events in
Ayodhya in the Moghul and Nawabi periods. And what
is conspicuously missing, is any kind of testimony that
Babar or another Muslim commander saw this empty piece of
land and, out of an abhorrence of emptiness, ordered a
Masjid to be built. That would have been evidence
for an alternative to the Mandir scenario.
In the
AIBMAC documents pertaining to ancient history, especially
to the period when Ram supposedly lived, we see the same
failure. There is not one contemporary or
near-contemporary testimony of Valmiki inventing the
character Ram out of nothing. There is not one line
from any of the many Ramayana versions, that declares the
Rama character was merely invented to build a good story
around. That would be something of a proof that Ram
was purely fiction. Failing that, it becomes quite
hard to prove that someone did not exist. We have
offered proof that Ram was at least considered and treated
as a historical character by ancient Hindu writers,
including Purana writers whose dynastic histories have
been at least partly confirmed by modern historical
research, even while this was not the question for which
evidence was requested. But our AIBMAC friends, even
while trying to smuggle Rama's historicity into the
debate, do not come up with any evidence, merely some
latter-day opinions.
We
reiterate that for us, the historical details of the
events that became the subject matter of the Ramayana are
not what is at stake in this debate. The point is
whether it is a traditional Hindu sacred place, not why it
is one. Therefore, all documents pertaining to other
aspects of the matter than the existence of a temple which
was forcibly replaced by the Babri Masjid, are really
beside the point.
Nevertheless,
we have given our comment on all the AIBMAC categories of
historical documents, in the one-by-one rebuttal.
With the judicial documents, we have dealt more briefly,
i.e. only in so far as they pertain to the historical
debate.
|