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1. Summary of the historical question
1.1 Before the Masjid, the Mandir
The historical starting point of the Ram Janmabhoomi
issue is the contention that the Babri Masjid structure
in Ayodhya was built after the forcible demolition of a
Hindu temple on the same spot by Muslim soldiers. In the
first part of my book Ram Janmabhoomi vs. Babri Masjid,
a Case Study in Hindu-Muslim conflict,1 I have
dealt
extensively with the arguments given pro and contra this
contention. The case can be summarized as follows.
There is archaeological evidence that a temple, or at the
very least a building with pillars, has stood on the
Babri Masjid spot since the eleventh century. Of course,
because of the structure standing there, the
archaeological search has been far from exhaustive, but
at least of the existence of this 11th century building
we can be certain.2
When the building was destroyed, we do not know
precisely, there are no descriptions of the event extent
anywhere. Mohammed Ghori's armies arrived there in 1194,
and they may have destroyed it. It may have been rebuilt
afterwards, or it may only have been destroyed by later
Muslim rulers of the area. so it is possible that when
Mir Baqi, Babar's lieutenant, arrived there in 1528, he
found a heap of rubble, or an already aging mosque,
rather than a magnificent Hindu temple.
However, it is very unlikely that the place was not
functioning as a Hindu place of worship just before the
Babri Masjid was built. As is well known, fourteen
pillar-stones with Hindu temple ornamentation have been
used in the construction of the Babri Masjid.
Considering the quantity of bricks employed in the
building, one cannot say that these fourteen pillar-
stones were used merely to economize on bricks:
quantitatively, they simply didn't make a difference.
These remnants of Hindu architecture were more probably
use in order to display the victory of the mosque over
the temple, of Islam over Paganism. That was in keeping
with a very common practice of Muslim conquerors, who
often left pieces of the outer wall of the destroyed
temple standing (as was done in the Gyanvapi mosque in
Varanasi, replacing the Kashi Vishvanath temple), or
worked pieces of idols into the threshold of the newly-
built mosque, so that the faithful could tread them
underfoot.
Since the actual practice in the case of the Babri Masjid
conforms to this general pattern, we may infer that in
all probability the Masjid was built in the same material
circumstances in which the pattern normally applied, viz.
just after the demolition of a Pagan place of worship.
This is all the more probable considering that no
alternative explanations for the presence of these Hindu
pillar-stones have been offered, not even by those
historians who would have an ideological and
argumentative interest in doing so.
In methodological terms, our conclusion that the use of
Hindu remnants in the mosque building indicates an
immediately preceding temple demolition because such a
sequence fulfills a common pattern, is based on the
principle of coherence. This principle as a ground for
historical inference does not given absolute certainty,
but at least a good measure of probability. But
conversely, a contention that violates the principle of
coherence without being supported by hard evidence,
thereby becomes very improbable. As we shall see, the
advocates of the Babri Masjid cause, including a team of
25 JNU historians, have disregarded the coherence
principle in central points of their argumentation.
In their well-known and oft-quoted statement on the
Ayodhya controversy, the JNU historians have rejected the
contention that there was a temple on the disputed spot
before the Babri Masjid was built there.3 This is a
wildly improbable contention. There is a general
cultural pattern that would have made people build a
temple there, a very important one.
If you go to Ayodhya and walk to the Masjid/Janmabhoomi,
you will find yourself walking uphill, even after passing
the Hanuman Garhi which itself is on a little hill.
Relative to the flatness of the entire Ganga basin, the
disputed split is quite an elevated place, and it
overlooks Ayodhya. Now, either prince Rama was a
historical character, born in the castle of the local
ruler, which would logically (i.e. strategically) have
been built on this elevation, and then his birthplace
temple would also have to be there. Or we do not assume
Ram's historicity (without necessarily excluding it) and
we also do not assume that he was born there, which is
the JNU historians' position, and then the question is
reduced to whether people would have refrained from
building a temple on this hilltop.
Ayodhya is a place of pilgrimage and temple city of long
standing. The JNU historians themselves cite evidence
that it housed important temples of the Buddhists,
Shaivas and Jains. In such a temple city par excellence,
it is virtually impossible that the geographical place of
honour would have been left unused. The contention that
there was no temple on the Babri Masjid site goes against
all we know of ritual patterns in the lay-out of sacred
places the world over: it violates the principle of
coherence.
That the Babri Masjid replaced a pre-existent centre of
worship, is also indicated by the fact that Hindus kept
returning to the place, where more indulgent Muslim
rulers allowed them to worship on a platform just outside
the mosque. This is attested by a number of different
pieces of testimony by Western travelers and by local
Muslims, all of the pre-British period, as well as from
shortly after the 1856 British take-over but explicitly
referring to older local Muslim sources. A number of
these documents have been presented by Harsh Narain4
and
A.K. Chatterjee5. That they are authentic and have a
real proof value, is indirectly corroborated by the
attempts made to make two of them disappear, which Harsh
Narain and Arun Shourie independently discovered6.
Most of these sources explicitly declare that the Babri
Masjid had replaced an earlier Hindu temple, and even
specify that it has been Ram's birthplace temple. But
whatever their historical explanation for this unusual
phenomenon of Hindus insisting on worshipping in a
mosque's courtyard, they testify to the existing
practice. And these Hindus were going into a mosque
courtyard for specifically Hindu worship -- not for
common Hindu-Muslim worship of some local Sufi, as you
find in some places, but for separate Hindu worship of
Lord Ram. The JNU historians completely fail to explain
this well attested fact.
The attachment of the Hindus to the Babri Masjid spot
cannot reasonably have originated in the period when the
mosque was standing there. For the sake of argument, we
might opine that perhaps a great miracle happened on the
spot, sometime later than 1528: but in that case, there
would be a tradition saying so. No, the Hindus'
attachment to the spot clearly dates back to pre-Masjid
days, and stems from a pre-existent tradition of worship
on that very spot. Since this near inevitable assumption
is corroborated by all relevant documents and by the
local Hindu tradition, and is not contradicted by any
authentic source giving a different explanation, we might
as well accept it.
However, while the inference that there was a pre-
existent tradition of worship on the spot is necessary
for explaining the Hindus' centuries-long attachment to
the place, it may not be sufficient. There are many
destroyed temples to which Hindus have not kept
returning. They simply built a new temple somewhere
else, and even when Muslim power ended, they stayed with
the new arrangement and forgot about the destroyed and
abandoned temple. If they were so attached to the place,
it is probably not because the erstwhile temple had made
it important, but because the place had an importance of
its own, and retained its special character even
regardless of there being a temple in place or not. This
assumption is coherent with the unanimous and
uncontradicted testimony of Hindu and pre-colonial Muslim
and Western sources, that the place was believed to be
Ram's birthplace.
When in December 1990 the Chandra Shekhar government
asked both parties to collect evidence for their case, a
small group of scholars, on being invited by the VHP,
traced some more strong pieces of documentary evidence.
At the same time, dr. S.P. Gupta and Prof. B.B. Lal came
out with unambiguous archaeological and iconographical
proof that a Vaishnava temple has stood at the site until
it was replaced with the Babri Masjid. By contrast, the
Babri Masjid Action Committee could only muster a pile of
newspaper clippings, articles and book extracts by
partisan writers who gave their anti-Mandir opinion, but
no evidence whatsoever. The Hindu team of scholars had
no difficulty in demonstrating, in a rejoinder, the utter
lack of proof value of the AIBMAC evidence. The VHP
documents Evidence for the Ram Janmabhoomi Mandir and
Rejoinder to the AIBMAC Documents are the definitive
scholarly statement on the Ayodhya dispute.
There is one architectural argument which has not been
used in the VHP evidence bundle, though it seems quite
pertinent to me. The central dome of the Masjid is
slightly deformed, and it is supported by a front wall
that forms a sort of screen before part of the dome. The
reason seems to be that the builders had to adjust the
upper part of the Masjid to the walls and pillars of the
pre-existing Mandir, which they were incorporating rather
than razing them flat and starting totally anew.
1.2 Methodological Errors
In order to save their contention that the Babri Masjid
was not built on a Hindu place of worship (let alone a
specially sacred place), several Babarwadis have resorted
to questioning the validity of the documents attesting
the Hindu worship in the Masjid courtyard during the
period of Muslim rule. Their claim is that all those
authors, as well as the Hindu worshippers who they
described, were mistaken : they had unknowingly swallowed
a false rumor which from about 1800 onwards the British
had consciously floated in order to create Hindu-Muslim
riots, which they hoped would help them in eventually
annexing Awadh, the state of which Ayodhya was a part.
This hypothesis is quite an amazing construction.
First of all, four of the sources are pre-1800. The
Western travelers William Finch and father Tieffenthaler
visited Ayodhya in 1608 and 1767 respectively. A
document by a Faizabad Qazi proving that Hindus used the
mosque courtyard for worship and wanted to take over the
Masjid itself, and a letter by Aurangzeb's granddaughter
encouraging the Muslims to assert their hold over ex-
Hindu shrines at Varanasi, Mathura and Ayodhya, were
written in the first half of the eighteenth century.
Secondly, the Babarwadis want us to believe that the
local Hindus decided to set up a puja tradition in a
mosque courtyard and thereby constantly risk a lot of
trouble with the Muslim population and rulers, just
because some foreign paleface came to tell them that in
their elaborate Ram tradition one little piece of
information was missing, which he then promptly furnished
: Ram had been born right there on that mosque spot.
This is not at all coherent with all that we know about
religious traditions in general and brahminical
pilgrimage traditions in particular : it arbitrarily
assumed an extreme gullibility, an astonishing lack of
serieux concerning the native sacred tradition among the
very guardians of that tradition, and an uncharacteristic
openness to utterly non-expert foreign opinion (even
today they will have nothing of the chronology imposed on
Indian history by scholars).
Thirdly, that the British concocted a story of temple
demolition and replacement by a mosque, because that
would create riots, presupposes that they had to break a
state of communal harmony, which existed in spite of the
fact that the country was full of demolished temple
demolitions failed to create trouble, why concoct one?
Or why not start with exploiting to the full the trouble-
making potential of the non-concocted temple demolitions?
The postulated rumour is not known to be part of a
British tactic attested anywhere.
But all right, sometimes very improbable and
uncharacteristic scenarios turn out to be true,. So even
while the hypothesis of the British concoction of a Ram
temple destroyed by Babar is grossly incoherent with our
general knowledge relevant to the issue, I would be
willing to consider it if they manage to come up with a
single positive indication : a letter by a British
officer mentioning the creation of this rumour, for
instance. But the 25 eminent JNU historians, quoted by
every secularist in India, and other academics like
Gyanendra Pandey or R.S. Sharma, have not come up with a
single piece of evidence. In the numerous and voluminous
archives of the British Raj that are still extant, they
have not found anything. They have not even come up with
any similar British ruse in any other part of India.
Therefore, the hypothesis that the destruction of a Hindu
temple and its replacement by the Babri Masjid is merely
a rumour created by the British as part of their "divide
and rule" policy, has to be rejected as both extremely
improbable and totally unsupported by evidence.
The British concoction hypothesis is not only untenable.
It is so far off the mark, so totally out of tune with
the known historical and cultural context, so totally
unsuggested by any relevant document, that no unbiased
historian would ever have come up with it. It warrants a
suspicion against the pretended objectivity and
scientific temper of the secularist participants in this
debate.
In methodological terms, we could say that the pro-Babri
case, including the JNU professors' statement, violates
the principle that "entities should not be multiplied
beyond necessity", also know as "Occam's razor". Against
every element in the very coherent hypothesis of the pre-
existent Ram Mandir, they have to invent a counter-
hypothesis, altogether a long string of separate ad hoc
hypotheses, of which it remains to be proven that they
add up to a coherent scenario. What is more, while the
Ram Mandir hypothesis is coherent with well-established
behavior patterns (of general city building, of Hindu
devotion, of Muslim conquest, of British colonial
policy), and postulates little more than that the general
pattern applied in Ayodhya as well, the JNU historians
continually have to postulate uncharacteristic courses of
events.
Thus, in postulating that the Babri Masjid was built on
empty land, they implicitly postulate that the Ayodhya
people for some reason made an exception to the custom of
building something important on the place which by its
elevation was the place of honour in their city. This
special entity which the JNU historians implicitly create
within their theory, and of which they should accept the
burden of tracing the existence in reality.
For another example, in postulating that the Hindus did
not have a pre-1528 tradition of worship on the
Janmabhoomi spot, they are forced to create within their
scenario a reason why the Hindus suddenly engaged in the
strange behavior of defying the Muslim rulers by
starting a strictly Hindu worship right in a mosque's
courtyard. They implicitly postulate a highly unusual
event that made the Hindus behave so
uncharacteristically. This event is another entity they
create, and of which they should show the historicity.
When you analyze and explicate all the implications of
the secularist historians' version of the Babri Masjid
story, you find that they in fact postulate a great many
unusual entities. And they create them purely in the air
: not a trace of evidence of a reason for leaving the
place of honour in Ayodhya unused, no evidence for an
event that made the Hindus start worship in the till then
unimportant mosque courtyard, no evidence for a British
rumour campaign. If the (explicitly or implicitly)
postulated scenario elements were found to correspond to
a real historical entity or event, then they would not be
a multiplication of entities beyond necessity. But so
far, the anti-Mandir scenario is dependent on a
multiplicity of entities postulated ad hoc, beyond
necessity. Beyond necessity, because there is a coherent
alternative scenario that integrates all the available
information : the Ram Mandir hypothesis.
The argumentation developed by anti-Mandir polemists like
Syed Shahabuddin, Mrs. Surinder Kaur
7, and the
JNU
historians, is simply unbecoming of educated people.
This postulating of very improbable theoretical
possibilities without any coherence is not really the
scholarly defense of an alternative Ayodhya scenario, it
is just a diversionary tactic made up to put the pro-
Mandir people on the defensive. As the historian Sita
Ram Goel has said, it is a typical strategy of unscrupled
lawyers. For instance, in the Indira Gandhi murder
trial, the facts were amply clear, and all that an honest
defense lawyer could do, was to pleas circumstances in
order to avert the death penalty. But no, they
constructed a fantastic scenario, bringing in a
conspiracy involving Indira's son Rajiv, totally
unfounded, but enough to jeopardize the prosecution case
for a little while, by forcing it to prove what it had
considered evident and already sufficiently proven. Of
course, lawyers are paid by clients to try such un-
truthful tactics, so we may perhaps forgive them. In the
case of historians, or even for politicians claiming high
ideals, this is unacceptable.
Incidentally, the same methodological mistake is made,
though less blatantly, in the discussion of Ayodhya's
ancient history. The contention that the Ramayana is
just fictional, postulates a non-typical cultural
phenomenon which needs an explanation, a reason (i.e. a
theoretical entity). After all, what great epic in any
ancient culture is known to have been purely fiction?
Western scholars long thought that Homer's epic on the
Trojan war was pure fiction, until Heinrich Schliemann
started digging and found Troy. So long as no
independent indications for the Ramayana's purely
fictional character are given, it is more logical to
assume that, like most ancient epics, it has a historical
core with a lot of fabulation around it.
But the ancient history is not what concerns us here. It
is far more difficult to get at conclusive evidence
regarding Ram's existence, era, abode etc., but
fortunately it is not important for the political issue
which historians are called upon to help solve. Once it
is established that there was a Ram temple on the spot,
and that there is a genuine tradition that considers it
Ram's birthplace, then the am Janmabhoomi should get
equal respect with other sacred places, like the Kaaba,
of whom nobody asks whether Mohammed's claim that it was
built by Abraham, is at all historical. The question is
only whether it is indeed a Hindu sacred place, not why
it is one.
1.3 Who built Babar's mosque?
An entirely different aspect of the Babri Masjid's
history is whether it really was built by Babar (or his
lieutenant Mir Baqi) at all. The JNU historians have
chosen to cast some doubt on this assumption, which so
far had seemed evident because it is confirmed by the
Persian inscriptions on the building, itself. Another
secularist, Sushil Shrivastava, has made much of the
matter, and opines that the inscriptions are a later
forgery (on the ground that the calligraphic style is
anachronistic), and that the structure was built under
Khwaja-i-Jahan in the fourteenth century8. His
justification for this dating is the architecture of the
building, especially its imperfect domes, which in his
opinion must have been built before the dome architecture
was perfected under the Delhi-based Turkish sultans in
the fifteenth century.
Of course, this architectural anachronism, it at all
substantiated, can easily be explained in other ways,
starting with the general fact that architectural
innovations spread only gradually. Moreover, Mr.
Srivastava's somewhat unexpected theory leaves its
proponent with the task of explaining how and why the
mosque came to be associated with Babar. On the other
hand, it would take the last bit of force out of the
(already discredited) argument that Babar cannot have
demolished a temple on that spot as sources of the Moghul
period do not mention the temple demolition : the "Babri
Masjid would have been a long-accomplished fact by the
Moghul period, but it could just as much have replaced a
Hindu temple under an earlier ruler".
In fact, the two contentions that the Mosque was built
before Babar, and that it was built on a forcibly
demolished temple, have been combined by R. Nath. when
he read in the Indian Express that pages of his own book
History of Mughal Architecture had been included in the
pro-Babri and anti-Mandir evidence of the BMAC, presented
to the government of India on December 23, 1990, he sent
in a reply, in which he stated that he was completely
sure that the Masjid had been built on a temple, and that
inspection on the spot had confirmed him in this
conviction. On the other hand, he argued that the mosque
cannot have been built by Babar or Mir Baqi, because in
their brief stay in this area they had to wage a
difficult struggle against the Pathans, and had no time
for building mosques. Rather, the earlier Muslim rulers
of the area could have demolished the temple and replaced
it with the mosque. Mir Baqi at most renovated it, and
does not claim more than that this happened under
Babar's reign (rather than at Babar's command, though
this translation is disputed).
But theories about the exact date of the Babri Masjid
construction are not really to the point, except in so
far as they can or cannot be coordinated with other
data. At any rate, the Muslim habit of destroying Hindu
temples and replacing them with mosques, often using some
of the temple materials as a display of victory over
Paganism, has remained unchanged during the entire Turko-
Afghan and Moghul period. Whether the temple was
destroyed by Mohammed Ghori in 1194, or by Babar, or by a
ruler in between these two, or even by more than one of
them (since Hindus were tireless rebuilders if given a
chance), this all makes no difference to the facts
pertinent for the Hindu case: one, there was a temple
there since at least the eleventh century, attested by
archaeology : two, the use of temple materials in the
Babri Masjid entirely fulfills a set pattern of temple
destruction followed by replacement with a mosque; three,
Hindus continued to worship on the spot to the extent
possible, as witnessed by travelers and locals,
something they would never have done except on a
specially sacred spot and in continuation of a pre-Masjid
tradition.
In keeping with the internationally accepted standards of
methodology and inference in scientific history-writing,
we may conclude that all the indications available
confirm the traditional belief, consensually held by the
local Muslims as well as Hindus, that the Babri Masjid
was built in replacement of a Hindu temple where Ram
worship used to take place.
In fact, this conclusion is merely a restatement of what
was a matter of consensus until a few years ago. This
time it is supported by a bundle of evidence, but it had
been known all along. It is only recently that
politically motivated academics have manufactured doubts
concerning this coherent and well-attested tradition.
And it is not on the strength of arguments, but
exclusively through their grip on the media, that they
temporarily managed to create the impression that the
Hindu case was built on myth and concoction.
As Lenin, Goebbels and other masters of lies knew, it is
sufficient to repeat a big lie often enough, to make it
pass as truth. So, the truly outstanding feature of the
Leftists' and Muslim fanatics' campaign of distortion has
been its shameless persistence. No matter what hard
evidence they got confronted with, the Romila Thapars and
R.S. Sharmas just kept on lambasting the Hindu side for
distorting history and concocting evidence and for
merely bluffing in the face of "incontrovertible
evidence that no Ram temple ever stood on the site".
While they had not given any such evidence nor replied to
the pro-Mandir evidence (they have kept on willfully
ignoring B.B. Lal's affirmation of strong archaeological
evidence, and have not addressed the massive documentary
evidence at all)9, they kept up the offensive and
absurdly accused the other side of not facing the
evidence. The way the anti-Mandir falsehoods have been
given wide currency in 1989-91 will make an interesting
case study for future scholars. A classic in propaganda.
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