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Home Weekly Outlook

A Historical Perspective of Iconoclasmin India (II)

Kashmir Pen by Kashmir Pen
5 years ago
in Outlook, Weekly
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A Historical Perspective of Iconoclasmin India (II)
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BY DR ABDUL AHAD

Also whenever the Monarchy became suspicious of the activities of the management of worship places of both Hindus and Muslims , it did not hesitate to attack and demolish these all at once. By doing so it achieved multiple objectives. Not only it curbed the rebellious ambitions of the clergy and constricted their channels of communication with the worshippers and closed the premises of these places for congregational prayers, but it also acquired huge wealth and colossal readymade buildings which they put to various uses.
The non-Muslim rulers, however, preferred to render the seized mosques defunct by choosing to change them into granaries and arms storages. This is exactly what happened to the Badshahi Masjid, Lahore which according to Kanahiya Lal’s Tarikh-e-Lahore was converted into an Arsenal Depot and Horse Stable by Maharaja Ranjit Singh. Its precious jewels, marbles and chandeliers were retained by the British for themselves after they defeated the Sikhs. The Maharaja also ensured the closure of the magnificent Jamia Masjid, Srinagar after he conquered Kashmir, making it beyond the reach of local Muslims. Its siege continued during Dogra regime which also converted Pather Masjid, Srinagar into storehouse. No call for prayers is given from the Jamia Masjid presently for it continues to be closed by the government.
Like India, Kashmir’s ancient Kings desecrated and looted temples with manifold aims. Overcoming their financial crisis; foiling the intrigues of the league of Purohitas and Brahamans; breaking the hegemony of Kotta Rajas (fudatories of two divisions of Kashmir: Kamraz and Maraz) and other louche elements, upholding their sectarian cults and fulfilling their varied aspirations were prominent among their cherished designs. Kalhana’s Rajatarangini has ample evidence to this effect, making us believe that the Kashmiri Hindu Kings and Queens were too iconoclastic to annihilate and desecrate temples with impunity. In Rajatarangini we also come across Kings who attacked the temples whose managers had turned into a bunch of notorious gangsters, chasing after corruption, indulging in anti-monarchy activities, hatching conspiracies and resorting to fasts to pressure them into conceding their demands; the actions which were always beyond the Kashmir monarchy’s endurance.
While furnishing a huge list of idol-breakers, Rajtarangini places King Samkaravarman, King Kalasa and his son King Harsa at the top of those who followed the policy of iconoclasm by the “superabundance of their sins”. They defiled the statues of gods and goddesses by “pouring over their faces excrements and urine”.(see Rajatarangini, tr. Aurel Steine, b.vii, verses: 1090-1092 and 869-873).
The Muslims rulers too followed the practice of temple demolition as enthusiastically as did their counterparts in ancient times. They did so not to crush Hinduism (as publicised by medieval propagandists and Persian chroniclers) but to establish their suzernity, and augment their wealth possessed in abundance by the temples. Unfortunately enough the contemporary Chroniclers have interpreted such events subjectively according to their own whims and prejudices. Being Qaseeda (ode) writers and in majority cases Courtiers also, they have eloguized the Muslim rulers as “Butshiken” with the aim of pleasing them and earning religious merit and goodwill of the clergy, ignoring, thereby, the real historical purport of the antiquarian practice.
These Chroniclers have even suppressed the truth about the temples which were constructed and assigned lands by the Sultans in Kashmir and elsewhere in India. The fact that the Mughal ruler Aurangzeb gave land grants and donations to temples of Vrindavan, Ujjain and Guwahati, and also demolished a mosque in Golconda to grab the wealth the local chief had concealed there
is not at all highlighted.
Similarly, Emperor’s attempt at altering the circumference of the chief Diety of one of the temples in Banaras to restore its sanctity that was violated by the head Priest by raping, beneath its huge pedestal, a Hindu Rani is portrayed not as a noble move of the Mughal royal benevolence but an act of bigotry simply to coverup the immoral episode ( see Dr. Ahad, Kashmir: Triumphs & Tragedies, pp. 91-92).
In 1687, the Emperor gave a piece of land near the Kashi Ghat to Ramjivan Gosain to build residential dwellings for Brahmans which fact was highlighted by historian Pardeep Kasherwani. He writes that the ‘Dharam Dand (religious pillar) of one of the temples still bears an inscription of the maintenance grant sanctioned by the Emperor in its favour’. In 1659, Aurangzeb issued a firman which reflects his firm faith in the goodwill of Brahmans in these words:
It is enjoined upon every functionary of the empire that they “must see that nobody unlawfully disturbs the Brahmins or other Hindus of that region, so that they might remain in their traditional place and pray for the continuance of the Empire.”
While totally ignoring the building of temples, particularly at Ganpatyar, Srinagar, by Sultan Sikandar of Kashmir (the sculptural Slab of which is still extant with this Sanskrit inscription: “Sri Sikandara Saha Reoye Sangpati Rahulya Kastvehkena Tatha…”), these chroniclers falsely accuse him of breaking the idols. The author of Baharistan-e-Shahi, the contemporary Persian source emphasizes that ‘the Sultan Sikandar fully eradicated infidelity in Kashmir and, therefore, God rewarded him with victories and prosperity.’
But quite contrary to this, the magnificence of Kashmir temples, built, protected and maintained by the Kashmir Sultanate impressed Mirza Haider so increasingly that in his Tarikh-e-Rashidi he eulogized them as ‘ wonders of Kashmir not to be seen elsewhere in the world ‘.

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….Concluded

Dr. Abdul Ahad is an author and historian

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