| 2. Brief rebuttal to the
AIBMAC documents
A.1) C. Rajagopalachari gives no
evidence whatsoever. He quotes Gandhiji as saying
that the episodes of the Ramayana are "stories".
So what? You can buy books called "The tragic Story
of Partition": they are just as much about history.
If they also have a moral, you can tell them to your
children, and then they become "stories".
If we are not misled by the word "story", we can
read on and notice that C. Rajagopalachari made a
distinction between Rama as "avatar" and Rama as
"king of the Ikshavaku race", i.e. between the
mythological and the historical Rama.
The fact that Rajagopalachari makes the
Rama scenario into a children's story, proves the
non-historicity of Rama only if one is willing to conclude
that real events and characters cease to be historical the
moment their "story" is made into a Bombay film.
A.2.a) Periyar E.V. Ramaswamy
gives no evidence whatsoever. He lambasts Rama as a
mean character and representative of the "Aryan
race" - a wholly unscientific category thoroughly
discredited by the use Hitler made of it. In fact,
even on that spurious count, Ramaswamy is mistaken: Rama,
like Krishna, is classically described as dark-coloured,
like the purest specimens of Ramaswamy's Dravidian race.
But the point for this discussion is that Ramaswamy
doesn't even deny the essential historicity of the
Ramayana. He only denies its sacredness, and asserts
that its real hero was Ravana. The purely
propagandistic, unscientific and contradictory character
of Ramaswamy's approach to the Ramayana, can be seen from
the fact that on the one hand, he often called the
Brahmins the guardians of the oppression of the Dravidians
by the Aryans, and on the other, he calls the Brahmin
Ravana the Dravidian hero who fights the ugly Aryan
invader, the non-Brahmin Rama.
A.2.b) Jawaharlal Nehru gives no
evidence whatsoever. He merely notices that parodies
of the Ramayana are staged by Dravidian separatists who
propagate variations on the Aryan race theory. This
propaganda of course assumes that the successful fight of
the Northern king Rama against the Southern king Ravana in
fact dramatises a historical event of conquest of the
South by the North. While not a proof of the
Ramayana's historicity, it is at least proof of
contemporary people's conviction that it has a historical
core. Nehru says in so many words: "The
Ramayana and the Mahabharata deal with the days of the
Indo-Aryans, their conquests and civil wars."
Further on, he says he didn't consider
the Rama episodes as factually true (When? As a child?),
but in a next quote he explodes this hypothesis by saying
that the Ramyana is the story of "the Aryan expansion
in the South", which he doesn't conceive as a myth
but as history. So, he says the Ramayana is
dramatised history.
A.3) Dr. Sukumar Sen gives no evidence
whatsoever. But at least, here we meet the first
scholar among the authorities invoked to substantiate the
AIBMAC case.
From what Dr. Sen writes, we learn that
Valmiki was a historical character and that in his time,
the Rama story already existed. However, no
testimony of Rama of the other Ramayana characters is
available in the Vedas (though Sita appears as an earth
goddess). But Rama shows up occasionally in other
writings, including the Mahabharata. And there were
many Rama traditions, variations on the Rama theme, upon
which Valmiki drew to compose his most classical version
of the story. In spite of the current efforts to pit
Buddhism against Rama, there are Buddhist versions of the
Rama "legend" and Buddhist sources relate with
pride that Buddha was of the same Ikshavaku lineage as
Rama.
Dr. Sen notes that Sita appears in the
Vedas as an earth goddess. But all he really knows,
is that the name Sita appears there. It is perfectly
possible that the worship of Sita together with Rama is
not a continuation of any Vedic Sita worship, but concerns
a later human being who was called Sita just like anyone
can be called after a god or goddess, and who became the
wife of the historical character Rama. From the fact
that old texts mention a god Shiva, we also do not infer
that therefore Shivaji cannot have been a historical
character.
The fact that there are many versions
of the Ramayana, is no evidence against its historicity at
all. Try the experiment of telling one story to
several people and letting them renarrate it to others:
after a few steps in this transmission process,
substantial differences will have crept in. Consider
also the plural versions of stories in scriptures of other
cultures. For instance, in the Bible, there are two
different Creation stories; two wholly different
genealogies of Jesus are given; in fact, every single
story from Jesus' life is related differently by the
different Gospel-writers, a mere thirty to sixty years
after Jesus' death. And yet, no serious scholar
concludes therefrom that Jesus did not exist.
A.4) P.S. Sridhara Murthy doesn't
give any evidence whatsoever. His text is full of
crank statements and crackpot theories, all built on top
of the Hitlerian theory of the Aryan race. Thus, he
calls Shiva "the only non-Aryan original Indian
god": may we remind him that Shiva was depicted as
white, like the "Aryans", while the Vishnu
incarnations Krishna and Rama are depicted as dark, like
the "non-Aryans"?
His crank tendencies develop into a
full-fledged conspiracy theory (of course pure conjecture
without any proof) where he combines his visceral hatred
for the Brahmin Aryan "race" with the
inconvenient fact that central characters in the Rama
tradition (Rama, Valmiki, Vishvamitra) were non-Brahmins,
and that the bad guy, Ravana, was a Brahmin: the Brahmins
"were desperately looking for an epic hero who could
attract the non-Brahmin common folk and show how the Vedic
tradition can condescend to honour and worship one
practisinng certain ideals. The image, character and
personality of Rama just fulfilled this need. Rama
was manufactured to fill the vacuum. Valmiki, Rama
and Vishvamitra had to be, therefore, non-Brahmins...
They also had to notify the common folk that in the Vedic
religion even Brahmins and scholars when found guilty
would not be spared and would be branded as villains and
demons. So Ravana had to be depicted as a Brahmin
and a scholar."
This is quite a mad line of reasoning.
It says that, if Brahmins depict others in a scornful way,
it proves they consider them inferior; and if they don't,
but make them into heroes (even assuming that it is
"they" who created the Ramayana), it proves the
same thing, only it now involves a ploy to hide this scorn
from the people who are its objects. This tendency,
quite persistent in Mr. Murthy's text, to explain
any course of events in such a way as to prove invariably
the same thing, is called paranoia.
More of this Brahmin conspiracy theory
is the contention that the episode of Rama's abandoning
Sita "was designed by the Vedic religion to hint the
people that Buddha's conduct was, after all, wrong".
The "hint" is based on the fact that Buddha too
left his wife. He writes this four sentences after
stating that "Rama's conduct was in direct contrast
with that of Buddha".
Mr. Murthy also makes a lot of
the now-abandoned 19th century theory that Ravana was a
Buddhist, and quotes with approval the wholly
unsubstantiated statement that "Rama legend
represents the victory of Hinduism over Buddhism".
While we don't subscribe to this interpretation, we do
notice that the Ramayana is once more presented as an
embellished version of an actual historical process.
In the racist anti-Aryan theory of both
Ramaswamy Naicker and Sridhara Murthy, one need not look
for consistency. Since all possible facts prove the
same thing, there is no need for them to co-ordinate
facts. For instance, even while inferring, from the
fact that Rama was a warrior, that he must have been
hostile to the Buddhists and Jains because of their
absolute "non-violence", Mr. Murthy makes
much of a Jain king who "repulsed" Mahmud
Ghaznavi's nephew who came on conquest.
He says that Jains ruled Ayodhya well
into the 12th century AD, and lists 10 Jain temples
existing in 1330. None of these was claimed to be
where we say the Janmabhoomi is, so we have no quarrel
with that. In fact, some of these Jain temples have
also been destroyed by Muslim conquerors, and add proof to
our well-founded proposition that Muslim conquerors have
massively destroyed temples of all Pagan sects, including
Jainism and Buddhism.
In his booklet, published in 1988,
which seems little more than a rehashing of Mrs.
Surinder Kaur's The Secular Emperor Babar,
published in 1977, Mr. Murthy quotes some more big
names.
A.4.a) S.K. Chatterjee gives no
evidence whatsoever. He gives the opinion that
"there is evidently no historical core below the
surface, no scholar of Indian history now thinks that Rama,
the hero of Ramayana, was a historical person who can be
relegated to a particular period of time". This
opinion is already amply disproven by all the people,
including scholars, who have said that the Ramayana is a
dramatisation of the "Aryan conquest of South
India", which amounts to a basis in history.
So, his statement is flatly untrue. Equally untrue
is the statement that the Ramayana is "a literary
creation by some single poet who has been named Valmiki":
there were many poetic creations built around the Rama
story available in different parts of India, by the time
Valmiki composed his classical version.
So, S.K. Chatterjee may have been an
authority on some things, but on the Ramayana he was not
above making flatly untrue statements.
The contention that the Rama story
cycle was invented out of thin air, goes against all we
know of ancient culture. The same mistake was made
about Homer's Iliad, the story of the conquest of Troy by
the Greeks. The official teaching was that it was
fiction, until Schliemann started digging and found Troy.
Generally, all the ancient epics are embellished and
dramatised amplifications or modifications of a true
story.
A.4.b) Dr. B.R. Ambedkar gives no
evidence whatsoever. He gives the opinion that the
Ramayana "in its second edition, from a purely
historical work, also became a didactic work aiming to
teach a right code... [In the third edition, it
was], like the Mahabharata, made into a repository of
legends, knowledge, philosophy..." What Ambedkar
says, is quite the opposite from what S.K. Chatterjee
says: the Ramayana most certainly grew around a historical
core.
A.4.c) Dr. Jyoti Prasad Jain gives no
evidence whatsoever. He wants to claim all the
temples of Ayodhya for the Jains. Mr. Murthy and the
AIBMAC infer from that that he may be a good ally against
the Hindus. Unfortunately for them, Dr. Jain shares
our view that Babar and other Muslim rulers destroyed many
Hindu (including Jain) temples. He restates the
well-known fact that Babar mutilated Jain idols. Mr.
Murthy promises to disprove this well-known fact "in
the following pages", but in the following 29 pages,
he doesn't return to this subject at all.
A.4.d) The Gazetteers do not give any
evidence whatsoever, according to Mr. Murthy. Yet,
some of the Court petitions filed by Ayodhya Muslims base
themselves on the 1905 Gazetteer by Neville, which is here
dismissed as written by someone who has "neither
studied history nor archaeological reports".
His only argument is that the report does not tally with
the 1960 Gazetteer. And this is where it does not
tally: the 1905 Gazetteer says that Babar stayed in
Ayodhya for "a week", while the 1960 Gazetteer
says he stayed there for "a few days" (this last
version is explicitly taken from Mrs. Beveridge's
translation, which was published years after Nevill's
Gazetteer). It certainly proves that Nevill was a
non-historian: he does not even correct his figures in the
light of a Gazetteer published 55 years later!
If our AIBMAC friends want to wage this
debate on the strength of the confabulations of a crackpot
like Mr. Sridhara Murthy, we could have given them
plenty.
In fact, in spite of the scorn Mr.
Murthy heaps on them, the Gazetteers do prove that the
British surveyors, who were generally non-partisan and
conscientious people, saw no reason to doubt the veracity
of the local tradition that the Babri Masjid had been
built on a demolished Hindu temple. All the relevant
British Gazetteers state that Babar or his subordinate
demolished a temple to replace it with the Babari Masjid.
A.4.e) The pillars in the Babri
structure, and their iconography, give no evidence
whatsoever - at least not in favour of the anti-Mandir
hypothesis. For a detailed rebuttal of Mr. Murthy's
statements (based on the findings of a "research
team" led by Sher Singh) on pp.31-35 and pp.41-43, we
refer to our own evidence, notably annexure 28.
Briefly: Mr. Murthy is wholly mistaken in stating that the
same stone has been used in other masjids (Kasauti is but
a popular and imprecise name, the stone used here is schistose),
and that the sculptures are Buddhist. His sources
are wholly outdated since the archaeological work of A.K.
Narain and B.B. Lal.
A.5) Dr. R.L. Shukla gives no evidence
whatsoever. His text starts with a political tirade.
Then, he heaps scorn on a number of archaeologists and
historians, calling them "fanatic",
"notorious", "nonsense", "opposed
to social change" etc., all kinds of personal attack
which are totally irrelevant to the discussion.
Short, this man has no scientific temper, and his pamphlet
does not belong in a compilation of scientific evidence.
Then, without naming his source, he extensively restates
some of the research results of the excavation campaigns
led by Prof. A.K. Narain and Prof. B.B. Lal. It is
well-known by now that the latter has publicly stated that
the Babar Masjid has replaced a pre-existing building,
quite possibly a temple, and has claimed that the Ramayana
has a historical core (as in his article in Manthan,
October 1990). So, all the archaeological findings,
including the as yet unpublished ones, do not at all add
up to evidence that no Mandir was there, on the contrary.
A.6) The Jataka story gives no evidence
whatsoever. It was apparently included because it
locates the dynasty of Dasharath and Rama in Benares
rather than Ayodhya. Of course, in a cultural
tradition not guarded by a central authority, variations
occur, and these may include the localisation of the main
events. But there is no living tradition anytime in
the past millennium that locates Rama in Benares. We
base our claim on the Ram Janmabhoomi site not on some
long-forgotten isolated statement dug up from ancient
manuscripts, but on a well-established living tradition.
A.7) V. Raghavan and C. Godakumbura
give no evidence whatsoever. They give some more
variations on the Rama story, proving once more that the
Ramayana was not "a literary creation by some single
poet who has been named Valmiki", as S.K. Chatterjee
claimed. The book, especially the parts omitted in
the AIBMAC compilation, but mentioned in the table of
contents, also describes how Muslims in Malaysia and
Indonesia venerate Rama and narrate and enact his story
(in spite of restrictions recently imposed by Malaysia's
Islamic government).
The version which is given, "is
not widespread" and even now "only known to
traditional performers". The writer
"obtained it from a dancer" in one particular
village. If such a lone tradition in the backwoods
of Sri Lanka must count as clinching evidence on the
Ayodhya issue, then the numerous local testimonies should
count even more as evidence, right? The cited text
incidentally also says that "some of it may have a
historical basis".
A.8) Malladi Venkata Ratnam doesn't
give any evidence whatsoever. What he does give is a
crank theory: that Ayodhya is really the Greek word Agadon,
that Rama ruled in Egypt, and more such totally
unsubstantiated flights of the imagination. Look, if
we had wanted, we could have included some Hindu crank
theories as well: that Rome really is Ram-nagar, that the
Taj Mahal was built by Hanuman, that Menes the first
pharoah is merely our Manu, and what not. But we
decided to give some genuine scientific evidence.
And we did not expect to find some of the unfortunate
deadwood of Hindu scholarship in our opponents'
"evidence".
A.9) Sushil Srivastava doesn't give any
evidence whatsoever. He creates a wholly artificial
problem by reading the Ayodhya Mahatmya directions for the
location of the Janmasthan as if they were written for
(and by) people who use a compass rather than orient
themselves roughly by solar directions. In one
paragraph, Mr. Srivastava has to use the word
"exactly" (North, West, etc., with zero degrees
aberration) seven times, in order to arrange for the
Mahatmya directions not to lead us "exactly" to
the Babri Masjid site. And with all that
hair-splitting, he only manages to move the
"exact" location of the indicated Janmasthan two
dozen yards, so that "Kaushalya Bhavan is nearer the
Janmabhoomi than the Babri Masjid is".
Methodologically, we can only notice that he distorts the
text by acting as if it says "exactly North"
etc., in a modern sense of the term "exact".
Further on, Mr. Srivastava himself
declares that it is but logical that Muslim officers chose
"the central spot" as "the best
location" for erecting their place of worship: does
he not realise that the many Hindus, Jains and Buddhists
there must have had the same idea during the preceding
centuries ?
It may be of interest that in a part of
his book which was not included in the AIBMAC evidence,
Mr. Srivastava floats the theory that the Masjid was not
built by Babar, but sometime in the 14th century.
The theory that the Masjid was not built by Babar, seems
to be implicitly assumed also in documents A.4 and A.11.
Since the enemies of Hinduism will use absolutely anything
to sow doubts, we may as well reply to that theory.
We may point out simply that this
theory makes absolutely no difference to our case.
The Hindu attachment to the site is in no way dependent on
who destroyed the temple and built the "Babri"
Masjid. Looters may quarrel over the booty, but for
the victim the damage has been done all the same.
Those testimonies (among the ones we have presented in
support of the local consensus that the Masjid had been
built on a Hindu sacred place to which the Hindus kept
returning) which include the belief that Babar built the
Masjid, are not rendered unreliable, since this belief can
be explained perfectly from the inscriptions on the Masjid
which claim the honour for Babar.
If anything, this theory would deprive
the already discredited "argument from silence"
about the temple demolition in Babar's diary from its last
bit of force. The argument that Babar was a
"secular emperor", would also lose its
relevance. If we look at the record of the preceding
Muslim dynasties in temple-destruction, the destruction of
a Ram Mandir in Ayodhya would only be true to type.
We may at once put to rest the fable,
with which Mr. Sushil Srivastava sympathises (as well as
the writers of A.4 and A.11) that Babar was a secularist
(unless a "secularist" is defined as
"someone who has utter contempt for Hinduism",
as seems appropriate these days). In his diary, he
himself writes that his attack on Chanderi was a Jihad
to convert a Dar-ul-Harb ("land of
strife") into a Dar-ul-Islam. On the eve
of his Jihad against Rana Sanga, he vowed to give
up drinking and had the cups and vessels destroyed:
"These vessels were broken into pieces in the manner
in which, if Allah wills, the idols of the Pagans will be
smashed." He also comments on his victory against the
Rajput confederacy in 1527, and after quoting copiously
from the Quran, he writes: "After this success, ghazi
(slayer of infidels) was written amongst the royal titles.
Below the titles entered on the Fath-Nama, I wrote the
following quatrain:
"For Islam's sake, I wandered in the wild,
prepared for war with Pagans and Hindus,
resolved myself to meet the martyr's death.
Thanks be to Allah ! A ghazi I became."
If this Babar was a secularist, can the
present-day Babri advocates be communalists ?
A.10) Arvind N. Das gives no
evidence whatsoever. He does, however, repeat the
trick of the JNU historians (see document A.16) in their
famous statement, of quoting the convenient part of B.B.
Lal's findings (that Ayodhya was not inhabited before the
7th century BC) but concealing his other finding, that
there must have been an 11th-century building right where
the Babri structure stands. Mr. Das quotes Mr.
Srivastava (see document A.9) without any criticism.
After deliberately concealing the findings at the site, he
suddenly goes on to assume that a building was there, and
to postulate that it cannot have been a Hindu temple.
And then he opines that the stone pillars and old reports
suggest that there was "a Buddhist stupa" here.
Of course, the Chinese travellers whom he mentions, have
never located a stupa at that site, they have merely
described a strong Buddhist presence in Ayodhya. And
of course, if Mr. Das had not been 100% illiterate on
Indian culture, he would have known that a Stupa is a
solid structure, not a pillared one.
And then he brings up the big lie of a
centuries-long vast struggle between Brahmins and
Buddhists, systematically spread by Hindu-baiters:
"The possibility of the destruction of this site by
Brahmanical onslaught, which desecrated even the Mahabodhi
temple at Gaya, cannot be discounted". Of
course, the Mahabodhi temple was never destroyed by
Hindus. It was abandoned when the Buddhists, who had
continued to live and work in Hindu India for many
centuries, were exterminated by the Muslim invaders,
especially Bakhtiar Khalji who destroyed the Buddhist
universities, levelling both the buildings and their
inmates. This was exactly what the Muslim invaders
had done in Central Asia. They didn't fabricate an
opposition between Hindus and Buddhists, as our
secularists have been doing: for them, these were both
Kafirs. They killed Brahmins as they killed Buddhist
monks, they broke Buddha statues as the broke Shiva idols,
they levelled Buddhist temples as they levelled Vaishnava
temples, and they wrote it down with equal glee and pride,
so that we at present have all the evidence, and nobody
can deny it.
The same thing counts for Jain
establishments: Pagan institutions of every sect have
suffered under the Islamic onslaught. Famous
Buddhist and Jain institutes that have been destroyed by
the Muslims without leaving a trace, used to flourish at
the following places: Bukhara (from bihara, vihara,
i.e. Buddhist monastery), Samarkand, Khotan, Balkh,
Bamian, Begram, Jalalabad, Peshawar, Takshashila,
Mirpur-Khas, Nagar-Parkar, Sringar, Sialkot, Agroha,
Mathura, Hastinapura, Kanauj, Sravasti, Ayodhya, Sarnath,
Nalanda, Vikramshila, Vaishali, Rajgir, Odantpuri, Bharhut,
Paharpur, Jagaddala, Jajnagar, Nagarjunikonda, Amaravati,
Kanchi, Dwarasamudra, Bharuch, Valabhi, Palitana, Girnar,
Patan, Jalor, Chandrawati, Bhinmal, Didwana, Nagaur, Osian,
Bairat, Gwalior and Mandu. Smaller establishments
add up to several hundreds.
As for the Bodh Gaya temple, Mr. Das
should know that, after centuries of disuse, it was taken
over by a Hindu priest in the late 19th century, when a
project of the Burmese king to renew it fell through
because of the Burmese war. Is that what he means by
"desecrated"? In spite of British attempts to
keep the Buddhists (identified with Japanese expansionism)
out, and in spite of small-human individual interests
coming in the way, the temple was peacefully restored as
Buddhism's foremost shrine in the world. Since 1953,
the temple is managed by a mixed Hindu-Buddhist management
committee, constituted under the Bihar Bodh Gaya Temple
Act, passed in 1949 on the basis of earlier agreements
worked out between the Mahabodhi Society and the Hindu
Mahasabha.
While Hindu society was never guilty of
finishing the Buddhist presence at this sacred place, and
could have invoked the British rulers' assent to the
non-Buddhist control of the place (as our AIBMAC friends
invoke the British assent to the status-quo in citing the
1886 court ruling), we didn't mind restoring it to the
Buddhist community, not so much because they belong to the
same sanatana tradition as we, but because we are
sensitive to their veneration to that place. We do
not claim this sensitivity as merit, it comes naturally to
all human beings. It is only a mistaken commitment
to fanatical dogmas that is disturbing the AIBMAC people's
sensitivity in the case of our own three shrines.
A.11) The unnamed authors of the
chapter "Birthplace of epic hero" (among
them, apparently, is Sher Singh, the chief authority for
Sridhara Murthy's opinions, see A.4), give no evidence
whatsoever. But it is nice of them to quote H.R.
Nevill, who notes that "it is locally affirmed
that... the Janmasthan was in Ramkot and marked the
birthplace of Rama. In 1528 AD Babar...
destroyed the ancient temple and on its site built a
mosque." In fact, that is what we have been saying
all the time. Why aren't the Babri polemists coming
up with a document stating that "Babar saw this empty
land and on its site built a mosque"? That would be
evidence. But this here is secondary evidence for
our own viewpoint, that the Babri Masjid was built on a
forcibly destroyed temple.
The AIBMAC has underlined the statement
that "no record of the visit to Ayodhya is to be
found in the Musalman historians". If this
means that they consider this statement to be vindicated
by the authority of Mr. Nevill, from whom it is
quoted, we want to draw attention to the fact that Mr.
Nevill nonetheless sticks to the opinion that Babar did
visit Ayodhya, which must have occurred about the time of
his expedition to Bihar". Mr. Nevill was
one of those competent scholars who are aware that an
"argument from silence" is the weakest kind of
argument. He took care not to be deceived by it,
especially because he had other, positive evidence to take
into account: the inscriptions on the Masjid that mention
Babar as its patron.
As we notice with agreement, these
authors are convinced that Mahmud Ghaznavi destroyed
absolutely every temple that he came across, for they
demand from Mrs. Beveridge an explanation on "how the
three important Hindu temples could survive the attack of
Mahmud Ghaznavi".
These authors are quite incompetent as
historians, for they simply can't read their own evidence,
and keep on drawing wrong conclusions. They say Mr.
Nevill had "grave doubts about [the Ramayana's]
historicity", which is a very non-neutral attitude,
when in fact Mr. Nevill had written quite neutrally,
without any uncommon gravity :"It is not yet possible
to say whether any of this story is really
historical". The research on ancient history
was outside the scope of Mr. Nevill's job as
Gazetteer-writer.
They falsely accuse Mrs. Beveridge of
hiding Mr. Nevill's opinion from the reader. She
does indeed not give every other author's opinion, which
is quite legitimate if you prefer facts to opinions.
An example: "She also wants to keep the readers in
the dark about another statement made by Nevill regarding
the construction of this mosque." This is the
statement which she conceals: "In 1528 Babar built
the mosque at Ayodhya on the traditional spot where Rama
was born." Of course, Mrs. Beveridge herself has not
said anything else.
Or has she? This, according to the pro-Babri
writers, is the difference: "There is no mention of
destroying any ancient temple [in Nevill]", while
Mrs. Beveridge had said that Babar had destroyed a temple
which marked Ram's birthplace. Well, two pages
earlier, they themselves have quoted Nevill stating that
Babar "destroyed the ancient temple and on its site
built a mosque". So, Mr. Nevill needed two
sentences to say that Babar destroyed a temple and that it
was considered Ram's birthplace, while Mrs. Beveridge says
it in one sentence. That is then with a lot of
grimness presented as distortion.
If we leave out Ramaswamy Naicker, then
this is already the third outright crank document which
the AIBMAC offers as "evidence". We think
this is, in effect, a tactic to make us waste our energy
on stupid non-evidence, and to distract the eventual
reader's attention from the real evidence, which we have
given, and from AIBMAC's own utter lack of any genuine
evidence.
A.12) Rajesh Kochhar doesn't give any
evidence whatsoever. He makes a large number of
assumptions, in fact many more than he can explicate.
If his contention that Ayodhya lay in Afghanistan is true,
all the work done so far about the "archaeology of
the Ramayana sites", has to be re-done. But the
interesting point is that this writer does not give the
slightest trace of an argument for his case. All he
says is that the "Aryans" must have lived in
Afghanistan in the time allotted by the Puranas to Rama,
about 1900 BC, and that sites have been excavated there.
This says absolutely nothing about any Ram indications
(even while tacitly assuming that the Ramayana does have a
historical core).
Moreover, he is not up-to-date
concerning the "Aryan" theory and the Indus
civilisation. Thus, he still says that the Indus
people did not know the horse, that typically Aryan
animal. This is not true: remains of horses have
meanwhile been found at two sites. The entire Aryan
Invasion theory is now being questioned internationally,
though we have no illusions that Hindu-baiters will soon
stop exploiting this theory, for which a lot of opinion
but not a single piece of proof has ever been mustered.
He himself does not give a single
reference to any proof for this theory, but because of his
attachment to the Aryan Invasion dogma, he does overrule
available literary evidence that conflicts with it:
"Archaeological evidence does not prove that Puranic
history is bunk. It does, however, prove that its
geography is all wrong. Obviously, the Ayodhya of
today cannot be the same as the Ayodhya of ancient
times." How so, obviously? You can only say
that its geography is all wrong, if you know what the
right geography was. But the "right
geography" at present only means that which conforms
to the still-prevailing paradigm, the Aryan Invasions
theory. There is absolutely nothing in this document
that substantiates an alternative geography, from which
the Puranic geography could then be shown up as wrong.
According to the findings of the
excavation campaign "Archaeology of the Ramayana
sites", Valmiki's description of Rama's exile journey
does fit the archaeological findings at five sites, and if
not Rama's, then at least Valmiki's Ayodhya must be
today's Ayodhya (about the historicity of the Ramayana and
its localisation, see Prof. B.B. Lal's article in
Manthan, October 1990). And in Valmiki's time, we
know for fact that at least Buddhists and Jains stayed in
Ayodhya (among other things, coins with Jain imagery of
the 3rd century BC have been found, i.e. roughly
contemporary with Valmiki) There is no reason to believe
that they would, after that, have lost track of their
sacred city (where five of the Jain Tirthankaras were
born). So, these are already two indications that
there is a continuity from Valmiki's Ayodhya to today's
Ayodhya.
With that, Mr. Kochhar's claim
becomes in effect that Valmiki situated Rama in an area he
himself knew, the present Ayodhya, without therefore
pretending it was the historical location of the events
around which he wrote his Ramayana. That is not
logically impossible. But then that is the only
thing that can be said in favour of his theory.
There is not even a single hint at any kind of evidence
for his suggestion that Rama lived in Afghanistan.
A.13) Chidananda Dasgupta doesn't give
any evidence whatsoever. He does a lot of abusing
and accusing, and totally glosses over the real issue in
this context: the historical fact that the Ram Mandir in
Ayodhya was forcibly replaced with a mosque, not as an
isolated incident, but as the local application of a
thousandfold practice which was kept up throughout the
area of Muslim conquest. The part which the AIBMAC
has underlined is merely an abuse against "the"
Brahmins; but the sentence goes on to bracket them with
the Ulema, who are said to have an equal disregard for
competent historical opinion. At any rate, somebody
who fills a page with curses against people who disregard
historical evidence, should have come up with some
evidence himself, instead of taking a position that is
thoroughly discredited by the authentic evidence which we
have offered.
Since much of Mr. Dasgupta's
tirade is directed against us, we want to state clearly
that it is not we who "demand that history books
should be burnt". It is those who want to
rewrite and "decommunalise" history, and to
whitewash the awful record of the Islamic conquerors and
rulers, who make efforts to conceal authentic Muslim
history-writing, which details with what horrible fervour
and for what pious motives thousands of temples were
destroyed, and millions of Kafirs slaughtered.
In our bundle of evidence, we have
mentioned that some of the Muslim testimonies for the Ram
Mandir tradition have narrowly escaped oblivion, since
attempts were made to conceal or destroy them. Some
of the maps in the revenue records have been tampered
with. The "eminent JNU historians",
oft-quoted champions of the Babri cause, have been caught
in the act of manipulating evidence (see articles by Prof.
A.R. Khan in IE, 25/2 and 1/4/90, and appended to this
text). It is not those who have firm evidence, who
need to resort to such dirty tricks or to "burning
the history books".
A.14) Prof. R.S. Sharma doesn't give
any evidence whatsoever. In this interview with
Pranava K. Chaudhary, he calls the Ram temple
"fictitious". This is unscientific of him,
because it leaves unexplained the solid tradition of
testimonies to the contrary, as well as the archaeological
evidence.
The Times of India has gone
around collecting anti-Mandir statements from
"authorities", as if we are still in the Middle
Ages, when quoting an authority counted as proof.
All these big names still have to come up with the first
piece of proof for the hypothesis that the Babri Masjid
was built on an empty spot, that the Hindus under Muslim
rule went there for worship for no reason at all, that all
the Muslim and foreign testimonies were untruthful, and
that the local tradition for the pre-existence of a Ram
Mandir was somehow concocted.
Prof. R.S. Sharma states that "in
1981, A. Fuhrer uncritically adopts some motivated
local tradition that the three Ayodhya temples including
the one at Rama's birthplace were destroyed by Muslims.
But there is absolutely no basis for such sweeping
statements." This "motivated" local
tradition had been noted already in 1858 by Balfour.
About the Janmabhoomi, it had been noted by local Muslims
in 1735 and even earlier by Aurangzeb's granddaughter.
We could of course make inferences and
postulate a wilful ignorance on the professor's part.
But we don't like personal allegations, so let us rather
put it this way: if even a renowned professor who has just
recently published a book on "Rama's Ayodhya and
Communal History" can be ignorant of all the
plentiful documentary evidence ("absolutely no
basis", he says), how can we be expected to take
serious all the amateurs whom our AIBMAC friends have
brought together to provide "evidence"?
A.15) Sher Singh doesn't give any
evidence whatsoever. But at least he makes a try.
He claims that "the whole mischief was started by P.
Carnegy in 1870. He alleged that the columns used by
the Muslims in the construction of the Babri mosque belong
to the Janmasthan temple". In reality, that
much had already been said in 1767 by Father Tieffenthaler.
And it has very recently been proven by Dr. S.P. Gupta,
with the most modern methods for the use of which Mr. Sher
Singh makes an appeal.
Sher Singh is the chief expert on which
Sridhara Murthy bases his remarks on the archaeological
part of his crank tirades. This is already his third
appearance in this list of documents (the AIBMAC sources
are not so numerous as they had seemed, after all).
He wants the JNU historians to make a C14 testing of a
beam in the Babri structure, which the 1960 Gazetteer
considers as made of Sandalwood, and taken from the
earlier Ram Mandir. In fact, this wooden beam was
put in during the repairs carried out on orders of the
British government, after the 1934 riots. A C14
dating could only confirm that. After having led a
research team working on this controversy, Sher Singh
should have known these things.
A.16) The 25 JNU historians don't give
any proof whatsoever. All they can do, is try to
cast asperrsions on the arguments which Hindus have been
giving. A coherent alternative hypothesis which
takes into account all the known facts, is not available
in the JNU historians' oft-quoted statement. Their
statement has been taken care of by Prof. A.R. Khan
(articles in Indian Express, 25/2 and 1/4/90,
appended to this text) and by the Belgian scholar Koenraad
Elst (Ram Janmabhoomi vs. Babri Masjid).
Nevertheless, even after Prof. Khan exposed this document
as "elusive in character", criticised its
methodology, and drew attention to "not only
concealment of evidence but also distortion of
evidence", the entire pseudo-secularist
intelligentsia has continued to quote "the eminent
JNU historians" as the final word on this issue.
The AIBMAC should have shown in what
way this document substantiates their case, then we could
give a precise reply to that deduction. So far, we
can only say that this statement beats around the bush
flamboyantly.
It talks a lot about there being no
proof for Rama's existence, his time and place of birth,
his elevation to divine status etc.: all these things do
not concern us here, we have been asked by the Government
for evidence of the medieval Ram Mandir and its
destruction by Muslim invaders who built the Babri Masjid
on top of it, and we have given that evidence. We
repeat that we do not have to justify why we consider a
place sacred, we expect our sacred places to be respected
as much as members of other religions would do.
The JNU document also philosophises
about how there existed inter-communal amity as well as
intra-communal strife. Very well, people are people
and cannot be reduced to their religious denominations.
Therefore, many common Muslims don't observe the Quranic
injunctions against friendship with Kafirs (Quran 3:28,
3:118, 5:51, 5:144, 9:7, 9:28, 58:23, 60:4). Some
Muslim rulers also preferred a stable kingdom with
communal amity to their Islamic duty of persecuting the
Kafirs (though they were severely criticised for this
Islamic laxity by the guardians of orthodoxy, e.g. Akbar
by Ahmad Sirhindi, who had a wealth of verses at their
disposal for proving the Muslim's duty to fight the
Kafirs: Quran 2:191, 2:193, 4:66, 4:84, 5:33, 8:12,
8:15-18, 8:39, 8:59-60, 8:65, 9:2-3, 9:5, 9:14, 9:29,
9:39, 9:73, 9:111, 9:123, 25:52, 37:22-23, 47:4-5, 48:29,
69:30-37).
In particular, the Nawabs, who belonged
to the Shia sect, which shortly before had been persecuted
by Aurangzeb, were not too zealous in their observance of
Quranic rules regarding the Kafirs. That is why they
allowed the Hindus to worship in the Masjid courtyard,
understanding that the Hindus were very attached to this
sacred place. But all that peaceful co-existence
between Shias and Hindus does not add up to proof that the
Babri Masjid was built on empty land.
About the three instances of Nawabi
officials giving grants to Hindu institutions, cited in
the JNU pamphlet as evidence of the Nawabs' secularism,
Prof. A.R. Khan (History Dpt., Himachal University, Shimla)
has remarked :"It may be noted that in the first two
evidences the authors have deliberately concealed the fact
that both the diwans were Hindus. [By
contrast], while mentioning about the gifts by the
officials of the Nawabi court to Hindu priests (in their
third evidence), they have not forgotten to state that the
officials were Muslims. This not only amounts to
concealment of evidence but also distortion of
evidence." (IE 25/2/90)
The JNU text does not go into the
archaeological evidence, in fact it denies that there is
any for the relevant period: "So far no historical
evidence has been unearthed to support the claim that the
Babri mosque has been constructed on the land that had
earlier been occupied by a temple." As Mr. I.
Mahadevan has pointed out (IE 6/12/90), the JNU historians
have selected from the ASI report what suited them, the
absence of any remains of habitation from before the 7th
century BC, and left out the finding that there was again
a building on the disputed spot from the 11th century AD
onwards.
It is true that the first brief ASI
report on the excavation led by Prof. B.B. Lal does not
mention the pillar-bases; but it does mention the floors
made of lime and kankars. While not
mentioning the pillar-bases, the report does mention
remains of at least a building. In the present
discussion, that is a very pertinent fact: the Masjid
replaced a building. It is up for discussion what
kind of building it was, but at least, the choice of
possible scenarios has been narrowed down and no longer
includes the possibility that the Masjid was built on
empty land.
Concealing this all-important fact in a
statement that pretends to put distorters of history to
shame, is quite a feat. If there was an open
intellectual arena in India, rather than a Left-controlled
one, the JNU historians would have lost their big name for
their attempts at distortion, and maybe also their big
mouth.
The JNU historians, all 25 of them,
seem to be not aware of the existence of a great many
testimonies firmly establishing that the Masjid or at
least its courtyard were used by the Hindus for Ram
worship since well before the British period. Or
they gloss over it. They certainly don't bring up
arguments to disprove or somehow undermine this testimony.
Since the JNU historians disregard both the relevant
archaeological findings and all the documentary evidence,
their entire document in no way affects our case.
A.17) Sakina Yusuf Khan doesn't give
any evidence whatsoever. But as a journalist, she
deserves to be fired. The article "No
pillar-bases at Ayodhya: ASI report" is blatantly
undeontological in several respects.
First of all, while purporting to give
B.B. Lal's views on the recently disclosed presence of
pillar-bases just near the Babri building, it disregards
Prof. Lal's recent unambiguous support for the presence of
pillar-bases of the 11th century, made public in an
article in Manthan as well as in an interview with BBC
television. Instead it quotes an earlier report,
more than ten years old, in which the details of the
findings of the medieval period are not given, and acts as
if this is counter-evidence against the recent statements
by Dr. Gupta about the pillar-bases.
Secondly, it pretends that the ASI
report gives as its verdict: no pillar-bases. In
reality, such a statement is nowhere present in the
report. Since the excavations were primarily
concerned with the Ramayana period, the report was very
brief on the findings from the medieval period. That
is why it only mentioned the kankar/lime floors, not the
pillar-bases, and proclaims its own intention not to go
into the full details: "The entire later period was
devoid of any special interest." The pillar-bases
have been left unmentioned not by way of a verdict, but
because at that time, the ASI was not so interested in
them.
A.18) Praful Bidwai doesn't give any
evidence whatsoever. And that is very serious,
because he sets out to lecture people precisely on the
issue of history falsification and concoction of evidence.
What would Goebbels do if he came back today, and found
himself bereft of any evidence to support his case? What
absolutely cheap lie would he certainly launch to put his
enemies on the defensive? Simple, he would say: "VHP
campaign of lies: Goebbels is already here".
Praful Bidwai starts out with a heavy
allegation against us: "Concocting archaeological
'evidence' that a Ram temple existed at the disputed
site". How can archaeological evidence be
"concocted"? Not that we are interested in his
magic formula, we have the real evidence. But maybe
the pro-Babri faction would like to give it a try.
He attacks Dr. Gupta's presentation of
the archaeological evidence in Indian Express
(2/12/90), saying without any proof or even illustration
that its conclusion is based on logical fallacies.
He says that Dr. Gupta failed to show how the
pillars had a load-bearing function, that they belonged to
the site and to a religious building. But Dr. Gupta
has argued these points quite convincingly in that
article, and in more detail in annexure 28 to our
evidence. Moreover, it is only logical that pillars
bear weight, that religious sculptures indicate use in a
religious building, and it was a general practice to
re-use parts of a demolished temple in the very mosque
built on top of it. If Praful Bidwai wants to
propose an alternative scenario (which he implicitly does
by casting doubt on the scenario for which Dr. Gupta has
given evidence) which goes against common sense, the
burden of proof is on him.
Praful Bidwai repeats the JNU
historians' exercise in character assassination (reply to
Dr. Gupta's article, IE 5/12/90) by insinuating that Dr.
Gupta falsely claims participation in the excavations.
The fact of the matter, made clear in Indian Express
on 6/12/90, well before Praful Bidwai published his
article, is that Dr. Gupta could not formally be
registered as a member of the team, for the statutory
reason that he worked for the National Museum, not for the
ASI, so he was given "observer" status.
Bidwai also levels insinuations against Prof. B.B.
Lal and Mr. Mahadevan, who had aptly called the JNU's
statement a case of, in their own terminology,
"political abuse of history" (IE, 6/12/90).
Bidwai's totalitarian sympathies come
our clearly where he protests against the fact that Indian
Express had dared to publish other views than his own:
"The Express's attempt to balance this distortion by
Dr. Gupta was equally unbalanced. The paper did
carry the JNU historians' reply, but only as one of three
articles, the other two being pro-Gupta." Two
articles were pro-facts and one was Leftist insinuation:
secularist India will be damned if this continues.
Well, most papers kept their readers entirely in the dark
concerning the archaeological findings that clinch the
issue in favour of the Mandir. Some give plain lies
(see document A.17). The Times of India
collected replies from a number of academics, but did not
inform its readers of the findings that had occasioned
this sudden propaganda offensive (except indirectly in the
questions put to prof. Romila Thapar). Even if one
paper gave only the Hindu view, it would still come
nowhere near balancing the black-out on the Hindu view and
on the documentary and archaeological facts of this
matter, in the press at large.
Bidwai's indignation follows a
precedent. When, on 1/4/90, Indian Express
published the JNU historians' reply to Prof. A.R.
Khan's article (in which he demolished the JNU historians'
methodology and exposed some of their unmistakable
attempts at deception), they started out by complaining
that Indian Express had not published their
original and well-known statement, saying they feared that
this way, Prof. Khan's critique would be too
"confusing". Well, it had been published
in at least the Telegraph, the Times of India
and the Illustrated Weekly, and spread as a
separate pamphlet. And still they wanted more
publicity, because the Left have come to believe in its
own God-given (mmm) right to lord it over the media.
Recently, Dilip Simeon and others
protested in a joint letter (ToI, 2/11/90) against the
publication of "the VHP viewpoint", viz. a
not too anti-Hindu article by Swapan Dasgupta, who is not
one of our members, in the Times of India, which
mostly publishes rabidly anti-Hindu columns like Simeon's
own. Of course, the control over the press is
crucial when you have to prevent the truth from coming
out.
According to Mr. Bidwai, these
are also parts of Goebbels' propaganda: "Proving that
the temple was destroyed by 'invaders'..." and
"claiming that the only recompense for this act of
sacrilege is the demolition of the mosque".
As for the temple destruction, we have
given evidence, and Mr. Bidwai has only given swearwords
and slogans. His own allegations are mere slander
until he gives counter-proof. After regularly
writing on "communalism" for a long time, Praful
Goebbels has still not come up with anything, and we know
why: he doesn't have anything. In order not to be
found out, he has to keep up the offensive. Goebbels
knew that if you attack people, they tend to go on the
defensive rather than put you to scrutiny.
We are not claiming that the relocation
of the mosque is the recompense for this act of sacrilege.
We claim that the restoration of the three sacred sites in
Mathura, Varanasi and Ayodhya is merely a matter of
justice: these are Hindu sacred places, not Muslim ones.
The mosques there were only built to humiliate the Hindus,
and that is why the Hindu-baiters are so insistent on
keeping them there.
The recognition of the Hindu rights
over their sacred places is of course not a recompense for
"this" sacrilege on the sites themselves.
They are at most a symbolic recompense for the
thousandfold sacrilege, temple-destruction, Kafir-killing,
slave-taking, abduction of Kafir women, which the Muslim
invaders, egged on by their Scripture and their clerics,
have systematically committed in India, as in other Pagan
lands they conquered.
This simple recognition that the Hindus
have a right to their own sacred places, does by far not
amount to a recompense, much less to "avenging of
desecration of a Hindu monument by the 'Muslims'", as
Bidwai represents it. Avenging it would mean
desecrating the Muslim sacred places in West Asia.
Bidwai rejects the collective term
"Muslims", "who mysteriously remain the
same continuous subject in history - the present
generation being responsible for its ancestors'
deeds". But no, we do not think that Muslims
are automatically "continuous" with Babar and
other invaders. First of all, we are well capable of
distinguishing between the mass of people who merely
happen to have been born and raised in a Muslim community,
and those who are conscious keepers and propagaters of
specific Islamic doctrines about subduing and
exterminating the unbelievers. And even for those
leaders, there is no automatic continuity: it is their own
choice, whether to continue the way of Babar or that of
Dara Shikoh.
While Muslims come and go, the one
"continuous subject in history" is their
Scripture, Quran and Hadis. These contain dozens of
injunctions to make war on the Kafirs, i.e. on us.
Now, it is indeed possible that the present generation of
Muslims takes distance from these teachings, or gives a
radically new interpretation to terms like "Kafir"
and "Jihad". If so, the proof will be that
they can at least in a few symbolic instances undo the
wrong that the past application of the outdated
interpretation of their Scripture has inflicted on the
Kafir societies. Recognising the right of the Hindus
to the sacred places that earlier Muslim generations had
stolen from them, would indeed be
"discontinuous" with Islam's fanatic past.
Mr. Bidwai finds this also Goebbelsian:
"Sedulously propagating the lie that the mosque has
not been used since 1936 as a place of worship, and
therefore the dispute is between a (real) temple and a
non-existent mosque about which the Muslims are being mean
and unreasonable (unlike the Hindus)". Of
course, Mr. Bidwai doesn't give a trace of proof that this
is a lie.
This "lie" is simply the
official version. We would be open to the
possibility that the place was used for Muslim prayers
even in the forties, but we cannot help it that the Civil
Judge of Faizabad observed, in his 3/3/51 judgment :
"It further appears from the copies of a number of
affidavits of certain Muslim residents of Ayodhya that at
least from 1936 onwards the Muslims have neither used the
site as a mosque nor offered prayers there and that the
Hindus have been performing their Pooja etc. on the
disputed site. Nothing has been pointed to discredit
these affidavits." Certainly, Mr. Bidwai who is
lecturing us on abiding by the Court verdict, cannot
object to our quoting a Court verdict, based on the
unchallenged testimony of local Muslims. While
sometimes even a judge's view may later prove erroneous,
at any rate it is no proof of being Goebbels, to repeat
the text of a Court ruling.
This will do as a comment on Praful
Goebbels' slander campaign. There is, on top of all
this, the fact that, without referring to any authentic
statement, he describes "Hindu Rashtra" as
"a blatantly communal society run on majoritarian
terror and reduction of [the minority people] to the
status of second-class citizens, in which bigotry,
violence and intolerance rule". In fact, this
is an accurate description not of the Hindu Rashtra to
which we aspire, but of Pakistan, the Muslim Rashtra
already in existence. But it leaves out (as all
Hindu-baiting texts do) an analysis of why Pakistan is
like that. It is like that because it is informed by
the same anti-Hindu fervour which led to the destruction
of the Ram Mandir.
B.1) The six documents of group B don't
give any evidence whatsoever, except for our own
viewpoint.
The Persian inscriptions on the Babri
Masjid show that Mir Baqi built it at the
"command" of Shah Babar (Ba farmuda-i Shah
Babar), and not at his own sweet will. The date
given in the inscription fits the time Babar stayed in or
near Ayodhya (March-April 1528). The inscriptions
are given as evidence of "the construction of Babri
Masjid in 1528 AD by Meer Baqi Tashkandi". We
have no quarrel with that. It is standing there, so
someone must have built it.
B.2) "Babar's testament", a
short but highly surprising declaration of secular
kingship, doesn't give any evidence whatsoever that the
mosque was built on something else than a destroyed Hindu
temple. Otherwise, it proves a lot.
The English note under the Persian text
says: "Dr. Tirnusi helped me in deciphering the text
and also confirm the evaluation of this document I had
made in the first edition of my Religious Policy of the
Mughal Emperors in 1940." Interesting. What
"evaluation of this document" do we find in that
1940 book?
Firstly, the copied page is in the book
from which it was copied (Babri Mosque or Ram Janam
Temple, by Dr. R.L. Shukla and Mrs. Nilofer Ahmad),
also a copy, from yet another book, by Dr. S.R. Sharma.
It has uncarefully retained the subscribed note by Dr.
Sharma, making it easy for us to check this out.
Alright, in appendix 9, Dr. Sharma gives this
testament. But on page no. 24 and 25, the
learned author has given a long list of reasons why this
document is a modern "forgery and clumsy
forgery".
A number of independent scholars have
concluded that this document is a forgery. Mrs.
Beveridge, for one. She has been quoted very
selectively in this compilation. She has listed no
less than 15 reasons why it has to be a forgery.
Radhey Shyam (in app.4 of his book Babar, 1978)
rejects a few of these, but not the conclusion. It
seems that P. Saran and S. Roy have also concluded that
this document is a forgery.
What is this nonsense, including a
proven forgery in a pile of "evidence"? It is
certainly evidence of something.
B.3) Even Babar's own diary doesn't
give any evidence whatsoever, except that he did go to
Ayodhya. As is well known, the pages with his notes
from the period in which he is supposed to have been in or
near Ayodhya, are missing. Interestingly, while one
page from Mrs. Beveridge's translation of the Babar
Nama has been presented, the other pages of the
appendix dealing with the inscriptions, as also the
following two pages with footnotes, and some other
relevant pages, have been cleverly concealed. There,
Mrs. Beveridge restates what was universally
believed, and what was recorded in all the successive
Gazetteers dealing with Ayodhya: a temple was destroyed
there to make way for a mosque.
Then again, it has not really been
concealed: in A.11 it has been quoted and vehemently
attacked as a "preconceived" piece of
"concealment" and "distortion".
B.4) Alexander Cunningham doesn't give
any evidence whatsoever that has any bearing on our case.
He declares himself that he is primarily interested in the
Buddhist sites and monuments as mentioned in the travel
accounts of the Chinese pilgrims, particularly Hsuen
Tsang's. The short and insignificant references to
historical sites of all other religions were only
incidental. Thus Cunningham's silence on what didn't
concern him, the Ram Janmabhoomi site, is absolutely no
proof that the place was not considered as Rama's
birth-place, hence sacred to the Hindus. This
document is absolutely irrelevant and only meant to
increase the bulk of papers sent to the VHP.
And yet, it is useful. Off-hand,
Cunningham confirms that Ayodhya is considered Ram's city
of birth. And he does not trace any Buddhist
monuments at the Janmabhoomi site, thus putting to rest a
recent canard floated to keep us busy running around after
the balloons of "secularist" concoctions.
B.5) Dr. R. Nath doesn't give any
evidence whatsoever, relevant to the topic under
consideration. He shows that there were different
types of mosque structures. Well, so what?
But more interesting for our purpose is
Dr. Nath's reaction to the inclusion of his text in the
AIBMAC "evidence". From a lengthy reply,
the Indian Express (3/1/91) has published this excerpt:
"The reference to my book is vague and I do not know
which statement of mine has been quoted in what context.
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, by
which the river Saryu (Ghagra) originally flowed."
B.6) Mrs. E.B. Joshi doesn't give any
evidence whatsoever. The 1961 Gazetteer, is a
very late and not unmotivated writing, which suppresses
the opinion of the previous Gazetteer authors without
invoking any new findings whatsoever that might justify
this deletion. Apparently this was done under
pressure from the then Government.
It becomes more curious when we see the
AIBMAC citing this document that repudiates Nevill's
Gazetteer, and at the same time citing Court petitions by
Muslims that invoke Nevill's Gazetteer as evidence.
The judgment in document E.25 (p.14) clarifies explicitly
that this Gazetteer text is admissible as evidence under
U/S 57 of the Evidence Act.
In this light, Mrs. Joshi's silence
over the destruction of the temple seems to be wilful
suppression of a long held fact of history.
C/D) The C and D groups have to be
dealt with together, since they pertain to revenue records
and court proceedings which are complementary to each
other. They do give evidence. Court after
court and writer after writer has firmly taken the view
that the mosque was built here after destroying a
pre-existing temple, which they very much regretted.
The British Judge in 1886 put it this way: "It is
very unfortunate that a mosque should have been built on
land held specially sacred by the Hindus". But
with his haughty colonial unconcern, he felt that:
"As that happened 356 years ago, it is too late to
remedy the grievance". The British were
objective enough to see the correctness and well-foundedness
of the Hindu grievance, but as a matter of colonial policy
they didn't want to interfere with the status-quo.
Document D.2 proves at least that the
chabootra (not necessarily the first one, given the
earlier upheavals between Hindus and Muslims and between
both and the British) was set up in 1857, so the Hindu
claim to the site cannot be passed off as a recent
"political gimmick for building vote-banks" and
other such nonsense. Hindu society has never given
up its claim to this sacred site.
E/F) The E and F groups of documents
don't give any evidence whatsoever, except for what we all
know and what is precisely the problem: some Muslims have
had official and effective possession of the site for a
long time after Babar forcibly took it from the Hindus.
Among the documents relating to the
1949 Hindu reconversion of the building into a place of
Ram worship, the Court Order of the Civil Judge of
Faizabad, dated 3/3/1951, is conspicuously missing.
We surmise that our AIBMAC friends did not want to draw
attention to the fact that the Judge was skeptical
regarding the Muslim claim of having offered Namaz in the
building up till December 1949, and on the contrary cited
the unchallenged testimony of local Muslims to the effect
that the building had not been used since 1936. But
then that is all we have to say about these judicial
documents, because we have no intention of walking into
the trap of exchanging the scholarly debate on the
evidence for the quarrels of the judicial dispute.
All the legal squabbles over land
titles etc. emanating from the situation created by force
in 1528, including the matter of the effective use of the
building before 1949, are completely irrelevant to the
issue about which the Government of India has requested
evidence, viz. the forcible demolition of a Hindu temple
and its replacement with the Babri Masjid; and even more
irrelevant for the fundamental issue of the restoration to
Hindu society of one of the places it holds specially
sacred. Even if a mosque forcibly imposed on one of
our sacred sites is effectively used as a mosque, it
remains just as much a forcibly imposed token of
desecration and humiliation.
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