TRUTH BEHIND TALES OF TEMPLE DESTRUCTION
Name of the Book: Temple Destruction and Muslim States in
Medieval India
Author: Richard M. Eaton,
Publisher: Hope India, Gurgaon (hope_india@indiatimes.com)
Year: 2004 Pages: 101 Price: Rs.225 ISBN: 81-7871-027-7
Reviewed by: Yoginder Sikand
Central to the diverse memories of Hindus and Muslims in India
about the history of Hindu-Muslim relations are incidents or claims
of the destruction of Hindu temples by Muslim rulers. These memories
are a defining element in the construction of contemporary communal
identities. Some Muslims see medieval Muslims Sultans who are said
to have destroyed temples as valiant heroes who struggled against
Brahminism, idolatry and polytheism. For many Hindus, these very
kings are the epitome of evil and godlessness.
The theme of the iconoclast Muslim Sultan is routinely put to use
for political mobilization by communal forces, as so tragically
illustrated in the case of the Babri Masjid controversy, resulting
in the deaths of thousands of people. Not content with that,
Hindutva forces are on record as declaring that they aim at
destroying or capturing some 30,000 mosques and Muslim shrines,
which, they claim, were built on the sites of Hindu temples
allegedly destroyed by Muslim rulers. Hindutva literature is replete
with exhortations to Hindus to avenge the misdeeds, both real and
imaginary, of medieval Muslim kings, including destruction of
temples. This propaganda and the communal mobilization that it has
provoked have resulted in a sharp deterioration of inter-communal
relations in recent years.
That some Muslim kings did indeed destroy certain Hindu temples
is an undeniable fact, which even most Muslims familiar with
medieval history would readily concede. However, as this remarkable
book by the noted historian Richard Eaton points out, extreme
caution needs to be exercised in accepting the claims of medieval
historians as well as in interpreting past events in terms of
today’s categories. Failure to do this, he says, has resulted in the
construction of the image of all Muslims as allegedly fired by an
irrepressible hatred of Hindus, a gross distortion of actual
history.
The notion of the Muslim Sultan as temple-breaker, Eaton says,
derives essentially from history texts written by British colonial
administrators, who, in turn, drew upon Persian chronicles by Muslim
historians attached to the courts of various Indian Muslim rulers.
Eaton argues that British colonial historians were at pains to
project the image of Muslim rulers as wholly oppressive and
anti-Hindu, in order to present British rule as enlightened and
civilized and thereby enlist Hindu support. For this they carefully
selected from the earlier Persian chronicles those reports that
glorified various Muslim Sultans as destroyers of temples and
presented these as proof that Hindus and Muslims could not possibly
live peacefully with each other without the presence of the British
to rule over them to prevent them from massacring each other.
Although some of these reports quoted in British texts were true,
many others were simply the figment of the imagination of court
chroniclers anxious to present their royal patrons as great
champions of Islamic orthodoxy even if in actual fact these rulers
were lax Muslims.
Dealing with actual instances of temple-breaking by Muslim
rulers, Eaton appeals for a more nuanced approach, arguing that in
most cases these occurred not simply or mainly because of religious
zeal. Thus, the raids on temples by the eleventh century Mahmud
Ghaznavi must be seen as motivated, at least in part, by the desire
for loot, since the temples he destroyed were richly endowed with
gold and jewels, which he used to finance his plundering activities
against other Muslim rulers in Afghanistan, Iran and elsewhere.
Beginning in the early thirteenth century, the Delhi Sultans’ policy
of selective temple desecration aimed, not as in the earlier
Ghaznavid period, to finance distant military operations on the
Iranian plateau but to de-legitimize and extirpate defeated Indian
ruling houses. The process of Indo-Muslim state building, Eaton
says, entailed the sweeping away of all prior political authority in
newly conquered territories. When such authority was vested in a
ruler whose own legitimacy was associated with a royal temple,
typically one that housed idol of ruling dynasty’s state-deity, that
temple was normally looted or destroyed or converted into a mosque,
which succeeded in ‘detaching the defeated raja from the most
prominent manifestation of his former legitimacy’. Temples that were
not so identified were normally left untouched. Hence, Eaton writes,
it is wrong to explain this phenomenon by appealing to what he calls
as an ‘essentialized theology of iconoclasm felt to be intrinsic to
Islam’.
Royal temple complexes were pre-eminently political institutions,
Eaton says. The central icon, housed in a royal temple’s garba griha
or ‘womb-chamber’ and inhabited by the state-deity of the temple’s
royal patron, expressed the ‘shared sovereignty of king and deity’.
Therefore, Eaton stresses, temple-breaking, especially of temples
associated with ruling houses, was essentially a political, rather
than simply religious, act. As proof of this thesis he cites
instances of the sacking of royal temples of Hindu rulers by rival
Hindu kings as early as the sixth century C.E.. In AD 642 CE the
Pallava king Narashimhavarman I looted the image of Ganesha from the
Chalukyan capital of Vatapi.. In the eighth century, Bengali troops
sought revenge on king Lalitaditya by destroying what they thought
was the image of Vishnu Vaikuntha, the state deity of Lalitaditya's
kingdom in Kashmir. In the early ninth century the Pandyan king
Srimara Srivallabha also invaded Sri Lanka and took back to his
capital a golden Buddha image that had been installed in the
kingdom's Jewel Palace. In the early eleventh century the Chola king
Rajendra I furnished his capital with images he had seized from
several neighboring Chalukya, Kalinga and Pala rulers. In the
mid-eleventh century the Chola king Rajadhiraja defeated the
Chalukyas and plundered Kalyani, taking a large black stone door
guardian to his capital in Thanjavur, where it was displayed to his
subjects as a trophy of war. In addition to looting royal temples
and carrying off images of state deities, some Hindu kings, like
some of their later Muslim counterparts, engaged in the destruction
of the royal temples of their political adversaries. In the early
tenth century, the Rashtrakuta monarch Indra III not only destroyed
the temple of Kalapriya (at Kalpa near the Jamuna River), patronized
by the Pratiharas, but, Eaton writes, ‘took special delight in
recording the fact’.
This and other such evidence clearly suggests, Eaton argues, that
‘temples had been the natural sites for the contestation of kingly
authority well before the coming of Muslim Turks to India’. Hence,
the Turkish invaders, in seeking to establish themselves as rulers,
followed a pattern that had already been established before their
arrival in India. Yet, the iconoclastic zeal of the Muslim rulers of
India must not be exaggerated, Eaton says. He claims that based on
evidence from epigraphic and literary evidence spanning a period of
more than five centuries (1192-1729), ‘one may identify eighty
instances of temple desecration whose historicity appears reasonably
certain’, a figure much less than what Hindutva ideologues today
claim.
In judging these incidents, extreme caution is necessary, Eaton
suggests. These temples were destroyed not by ‘ordinary’ Muslims,
but, rather, by officials of the state. Further, the timing and
location of these incidents is also significant. Most of them
occurred, Eaton says, on ‘the cutting edge of a moving military
frontier’, in the course of military raids or invasions of
neighboring territories ruled by Hindu kings. Once Muslim rulers had
conquered a particular territory and incorporated it into their
kingdom typically such incidents were few, if at all. When Muslim
rulers grew mainly at the expense of other Muslim ruling houses,
temple desecration was rare, which explains, for instance, why there
is no firm evidence of the early Mughal rulers Babar and Humayun,
whose principal adversaries were Afghans, in engaging in temple
desecration, including, strikingly, in Ayodhya. Certain later Mughal
and other rulers are said to have engaged in the destruction of
royal temples and building mosques on their sites in territories
ruled by rebel chieftains. These acts were intended to be
punishments for rebellion, and once rebellions were quelled few such
incidents took place.
Whatever form they took, Eaton says, ‘acts of temple desecration
were never directed at the people, but at the enemy king and the
image that incarnated and displayed his state-deity’. Eaton cites in
this regard a contemporary description of a 1661 Mughal campaign in
Kuch Bihar, northern Bengal, which resulted in the annexation of the
region, makes it clear that Mughal authorities were guided by two
principal concerns: to destroy the image of the state-deity of the
defeated Raja, Bhim Narayana and to prevent Mughal troops from
looting or in any way harming the general population of Kuch Bihar.
Accordingly, the chief judge of Mughal Bengal, Saiyid Muhammad
Sadiq, was directed to issue prohibitory orders that nobody was to
touch the property of the people. Sayyid Sadiq, Eaton tells us,
‘issued strict prohibitory orders so that nobody had the courage to
break the laws or to plunder the property of the inhabitants. The
punishment for disobeying the order was that the hands, ears or
noses of the plunderers were cut’. In newly annexed areas formerly
ruled by non-Muslims, as in the case of Kuch Bihar, Eaton goes on,
‘Mughal officers took appropriate measures to secure the support of
the common people, who after all created the material wealth upon
which the entire imperial edifice rested’.
The theory that politics, rather than simple religious zeal, lay
behind most instances of temple-breaking by Muslim rulers is
strengthened by the fact that, as Eaton points out, once Hindu Rajas
were defeated by Muslim kings and their territories annexed,
pragmatism dictated that temples within the Emperor’s realm remained
unharmed. This was the case even with the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb,
generally projected as the epitome of Muslim iconoclasm. Eaton
quotes an order issued by Aurangzeb to local officials in Benares in
1659 to provide protection to the Brahman temple functionaries
there, together with the temples at which they officiated. The order
reads:
In these days information has reached our court that several
people have, out of spite and rancor, harassed the Hindu residents
of Benares and nearby places, including a group of Brahmans who are
in charge of ancient temples there. These people want to remove
those Brahmans from their charge of temple-keeping, which has caused
them considerable distress. Therefore, upon receiving this order,
you must see that nobody unlawfully disturbs the Brahmans or other
Hindus of that region, so that they might remain in their
traditional place and pray for the continuance of the Empire.
Justifying this order, Aurangzeb asserted, ‘According to the Holy
Law (shari'at) and the exalted creed, it has been established that
ancient temples should not be torn down’. At the same time, he added
that no new temples should be built, a marked departure from the
policy of Akbar. However, Eaton says that this order appears to have
applied only to Benares because many new temples were built
elsewhere in India during Aurangzeb's reign.
Eaton thus seeks to dismiss the notion that various Muslim rulers
in India wantonly engaged in destroying Hindu temples, allegedly
driven by a ‘theology of iconoclasm’. Such a picture, he insists,
cannot, sustained by evidence from original sources from the early
thirteenth century onwards. Had instances of temple desecration been
driven by a ‘theology of iconoclasm’, he argues, this would have
‘committed Muslims in India to destroying all temples everywhere,
including ordinary village temples, as opposed to the highly
selective operation that seems actually to have taken place’. In
contrast, Eaton’s meticulous research leads him to believe that ‘the
original data associate instances of temple desecration with the
annexation of newly conquered territories held by enemy kings whose
domains lay on the path of moving military frontiers. Temple
desecration also occurred when Hindu patrons of prominent temples
committed acts of treason or disloyalty to the Indo-Muslim states
they served’. Otherwise, he notes, ‘temples lying within Indo-Muslim
sovereign domains, viewed normally as protected state property, were
left unmolested’.
This slim volume is a path-breaking book, a passionate protest
against the horrendous uses to which the notion of the ‘theology of
iconoclasm’ has been put by contemporary Hindutva ideologues to
justify murder in the name of avenging ‘historical wrongs’. It
urgently deserves to be translated into various Indian languages and
made readily available at a more affordable price.