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Clash of civilizations
#32
The Condition of Hindus under Muslim Rule



Dr. Jadunath Sarkar

The Hindusthan Standard, Kolkata

Puja Annual (Deepavali special) 1950



[Note from Hindu Vivek Kendra: This article was written

in 1950 when one was not accused of being communal merely

because one spoke the truth.]



What was the condition of the Hindus under Muslim rule in

India? This is a very natural question, and in the

present situation of the country the inquiry has a

significance of the deepest practical importance. Every

tree is judged by its fruit; and the ideal Muslim

Government of India, namely, a theocracy administered for

Allah by His agents, showed its unmistakable practical

consequences in the moral, intellectual and economic

condition of the people of this vast sub-continent when

Muslim rule ended and British administration began. When

Wellesley and the Marquis of Hastings established British

paramountcy after overthrowing the six-century old Muslim

domination, what Indian does not blush as he reads in the

history of that conquest, how hopelessly weak our country

was in defence, how abjectly degraded in spirit and

education our people were, and how inefficient and

corrupt the public administration, conducted entirely by

'natives' had become?



True, our Hindu rulers had shown a similar bankruptcy of

capacity at the end of the Hindu period, when youthful

Islam first attacked India. But in that age the Hindu

intellect was still active and it continued to produce

gems of thought and heroes of action even during he early

stage of the expansion of Islamic political sway over the

country. But in the age of Wellesley and Hastings, 1798-

1818, Muslim rule had turned India into a sort of

"Darkest Affica" as regards culture, thought and

character, and we had to take our inspiration for a new

birth of the spirit only by turning to Europe in the 19th

century.



The poison lay in the very core of Islamic theocracy.

Under it there can be only one faith, one people, and one

all overriding authority. The state is a religious trust

administered solely by His people (the Faithful) acting

in obedience to the Commander of the Faithful, who was in

theory and very often in practice too, the supreme

General of the Army of militant Islam (janud). Every

Muslim sovereign claimed to be the Khalif of the Age, and

as such the "Commander of the Faithful" and shadow

(representative) of God - the true sovereign. There could

be no place for non-believers, not even for the heretical

sub-divisions of Islam (such as the Shias in a Sunni

state like that of the Sultans and Padishahs of Delhi) in

its administration. Even Jews and Christians could not be

full citizens of it, though they somewhat approached the

Muslims by reason of their being "People of the Book" -or

believers in the Bible, which the Prophet of Islam

accepted as revealed, though insufficient for salvation,

unless supplemented by his Quran. The Muslim attitude to

these Ahal-i-Kitab is well expressed in the following

verses quoted by AI Badayieni, an orthodox literary

champion of Islam and enemy of the liberal philosophers

Abul FazI and Faizi:



"The water touched by a jew is impure:



But it will do to wash the corpse of a Christian"



Zimmis



As for the Hindus and Zoroastrians, they had no place in

such a political system. If their existence was tolerated

it was only to use them as hewers of wood and drawers of

water, as tax-payers "Khiraj-guzar" for the benefit of

the dominant sect of the Faithful.



They were called Zimmis or people under a contract of

protection by the Muslim state on condition of certain

services to be rendered by them and certain political and

civil disabilities to be borne by them to prevent them

from growing strong. The very term zimmi is an insulting

title like "the Protected Princes" of British India. It

connotes political inferiority and helplessness like the

status of a minor proprietor perpetually under a

guardian; such protected people could not claim equality

with the citizens of the Muslim theocracy. Could the late

Gaikwar Sayaji Rao, as he trembled and hobbled before

George V at the Delhi Darbar of 1912, be called a ruler

bound in equal alliance with the British King, or even

possessed of the same rights as a British peer?



Quote:Thus by the basic conception of the Muslim state all non-

Muslims are its enemies and it is the interest of the

state to curb their growth in number and power.
The ideal

aim was to exterminate them totally, as Hindus,

Zoroastrians and Christian nationals have been liquidated

(sometimes totally, sometimes leaving a negligible

remnant behind) in Afghanistan, Persia and the Near East.

The last remnants of the descendants of Alexander's

soldiers, settled in north-eastern Afghanistan, were

ground down to accept Islam and their province's name

changed from Kafiristan to Nuristan (province luminious

with Islam) in our own lifetime.



Whatever tended to strengthen the Hindus would ipso facto

constitute a menace to Islamic predominance. The same was

seen in the late lamented British Indian Empire, when a

Bengali who learnt military science in Mexico or France

immediately became a political suspect and was ever

afterwards shadowed by the CID as a potential traitor.

But the British, while curbing the martial spirit of our

educated classes, did not try to crush the Hindu mind at

its source: they did not forbid the study of Hindu

philosophy and the practice of the Hindu religion, rather

encouraged them and opened the gates of the Temple of

Western Science to us. Not so, the orthodox Muslim rulers

of India.





Part II



Temple Destruction



The temples of the Hindus often served as seats of

learning besides being scenes of religious worship. The

late Sister Nivedita never wearied in her praise of the

vast temples of South India as exactly like the Cathedral

closes of medieval England. Here in, the many cloisters

running along the inside of the boundary walls, the young

students lived and studied and they joined in the arati

in the evening. To strike at the great temples was to

strike at the roots of Hindu learning through Sanskrit,

then the only vehicle of higher education. Instances are

on record of Hindu teachers and preachers being put to

death by Firuz Shah, Aurangzib and other pious Muslim

sovereigns - who are still extolled as model rulers of

the theocracy. In addition, a slow but sure policy was

adopted for removing all temples from the face of India.

Aurangzib at the very beginning of reign (1658) wrote in

his Benares Farman, "According to our Holy Law, long

standing temples should not be demolished, but no new

temple should be allowed to be built." But he himself did

not follow even this limited restraint of the Shariat. In

his letters collected by his "disciple" and "secretary"

Inayetullah Khan, we find one that states: "The temple of

Somnath was demolished early in my reign and idol-worship

there put down. It is not known what the state of things

there is at present. If the idolaters have again taken to

the worship of images, then destroy the temple in such a

way that no trace of the building may be left." On 9th

April 1669, he issued a general order to the governors of

all the provinces of his Empire to demolish the schools

and temples of the infidels and to put down strongly

their teaching and religious practices. (His official

history, Maasir-i-Alamgiri, Persian text, p. 81). How

this order was everywhere carried out throughout his

reign of half a century, can be read in detail with dates

in my History of Aurangzib, Vol. Ill, chapter 34,

appendix V. At the very end of his life, a new temple

built near Murshidabad was demolished under strict

official orders. The letter translated from Persian is

given in my introduction to Bankim Chandra's Sitaram,

Bangiya Sahitya Parishad edition.



It has been urged by this pious Emperor's ignorant

admirers that temples were destroyed only when they were

strongholds of rebels and centres of plots hatched by his

political enemies. A Persian report, written from Delhi

and preserved among the state records of Jaipur, tells us

that Aurangzib had sent an order to the ever-loyal Raja

of Jaipur to demolish a large number of temples in his

dominions, and when His Majesty read the Muhtasib's

report that the order had been faithfully carried out, he

cried out in admiration, "Ah, he (i.e. Raja Ram Singh

Kachhwa) is a khanazad, i.e., a hereditary loyal slave."



So much for his modem apologists. Even in our own days,

Osman Ali Khan, ninety per cent of whose, subjects are

Hindus, rejoiced thus in a ghazal of his own composition

which was published in the periodical Rahbar-I-Daccan

(25, February 1939):



Band naqus hua sunke nara-e-takbir Zalzala a ho gaya

rishta-e-zunnar poi bho.



It means: The pealing of conches and the ringing of bells

have been stopped on hearing the shout Allah-o-Akbar. An

earthquake is shaking the sacred threads (worn by

Hindus).



What reaction this policy naturally provoked among the

Marathas, Sikhs, Jats and Bundelas when the brute force

of the Muslim Government declined in the 18th century is

a well-known tale of Indian History.



Economic Repression



The Emperor Aurangzib (reign 1658-1707) was an orthodox

Hanafi Sunni sovereign and the political exemplar of

Muhammadan writers, past and present. Every regulation of

his Government was determined like that of Firuz Tughlaq

and Sikandar Lodi - by the letter of the Quranic law. He

reimposed the jaziya or tax per head on the Hindus. The

Quran (IX, 29) calls upon the Muslims "to fight those who

do not profess the true faith, till they pay jaziya with

the hand in humility (ham sagkhirun)." This was a poll-

tax payable by Hindus (and also Christians) for

permission to live in their ancestral homes under a

Muslim sovereign. The object of Aurangzib in imposing it

(by a decree operating from 2nd April, 1679), was "to

spread Islam and depress the infidel faith" as his own

Secretary words it.
Quote:The Italian traveller Nicholo Manucci

at the very time noted this fact: he writes, "Many

Hindus, who were unable to pay turned Muslim to obtain

relief from the insults of the tax-collectors, Aurangzib

rejoices that by such exactions these Hindus will be

forced into embracing the Muhammadan faith."



It has been pleaded in our times that the jaziya was a

fair tax paid by the Hindus for exemption from compulsory

military service. But it was only as late as May 10,

1855, when English and French sympathy had to be secured

by the Sultan of Turkey for the war against Russia that a

decree was issued, replacing the jaziya as a tax on the

free exercise of religion by a tax for exemption from

military service in European Turkey. (See Encyclopaedia

of Islam, i, 1052). We should not forget that every

Muslim was exempt from the payment of jaziya even when he

did not serve in the army, nor was called up as a

conscript; and those Muslims who did serve received full

wages for the work.



Besides, the true nature of the jaziya can be clearly

seen from the Quranic commentary on the method of

collecting the tax; it is laid down that the zimmi must

pay the tax personally; if he sends the money by the hand

of an agent, it is to be refused; the taxed person must

come on foot and pay the money standing, while the

receiver should be seated, etc. This explains the Quranic

direction, ham sagkhirun, i.e. "with marks of

humiliation." That these rules were enforced in India is

illustrated by many examples cited in the Persian

manuscript records, Akhbarat.



In addition to the obligation to pay this poll-tax, the

Hindu was subjected to many disabilities by the very

constitution of the Muslim theocracy. He must distinguish

himself from the Muslims by wearing a humble dress, and

sometimes adding a label of a certain colour to his coat.

He must not ride on horse-back or carry arms - though

wearing the sword was a necessary part of the dress of

every gentleman of that age. He must show a generally

respectful attitude towards Muslims - "Natives must salam

every sahib they meet on the road." The Hindu was also

under certain legal disabilities in giving testimony in

law courts, protection under the criminal law, and in

marriage. Finally, in the exercise of his religion he

must avoid any publicity that may rouse the wrath of the

followers of the Prophet.



Can this "depressed" sect be called citizens of the

Muslim state? No, answers that most authoritative work,

the Encyclopaedia of Islam, Vol. I, pp. 958-959.



Under the Canon Law, as followed in Islamic countries, a

man who converts a Muslim to some other faith is liable

to death at the hands of any private Muslim, and so also

is the apostate from Islam. A Muslim murdering a Hindu on

private grounds was not subjected to the choice between

payment of "the price of blood" and death at the hands of

the heir of the murdered man - which was the legal right

of Musalmans aggrieved in such conditions.



So much for the political and legal equality of all sects

in the Islamic theocracy.





Part III



Women's Fate



What most wounded the hearts of the non-Muslims -

Christians and Jews, as much as Hindus - was the lot of

non-Muslim women under Muslim sway. Whatever may have

been the theory, in practice everywhere it amounted to

this that conversion of the victim to Islam sanctified

the seduction or abduction of non-Muslim women. Kinglake

in his Eothen gives an illustration of it from Turkey as

late as 1830-40: In the city of Nablous, a Muslim Shaikh

of great wealth and local influence had accidentally seen

a beautiful young Christian girl, recently married to a

Christian youth, and plotted to "gratify his passion by

inducing her to embrace his own creed: if he could get

her to take this step, her marriage with the Christian

would be dissolved, and then there would be nothing to

prevent him from making her his own wife... The Shaikh

was a practical man;... he sent no tracts, not even a

copy of the holy Quran. An old woman acted as missionary.

She brought her a whole basket, full of arguments -

jewels, and shawls and scarves. Poor Mariam (the

Christian bride)! She put on the jewels and took a calm

view of the Mahomedan Religion in a little hand-mirror -

she could not be deaf to such eloquent earrings, and the

great truths of Islam came home to her young bosom in the

delicate folds of the Cashmere (shawl); she was ready to

abandon her faith." (Chapter 25).



Similar cases were known in Mughal India and have been

tried in British law courts too, owing to the convenient

doctrine that conversion to Islam dissolves a woman's

previous lawful marriage.



Of the forcible abduction of Hindu women by powerful

grandees and even by Nawabs, which went unpunished and

was not even treated as "cognisable" by the then police

and judiciary, examples are frequent in the histories and

travel-reports of that time. It will be enough to say

here that the French Chief of Chandemagore, M. Jean Law,

who came to fight the English for Siraj-ud-daula, but

arrived too late (after Plassey had been fought), tells

in his Memoire that the young nawab used to ride to any

village where his servants reported the existence of a

beautiful young woman, and then get her abducted and

placed in his harem. This was in 1757.



About the same time Shuja-ud-daula, the Nawab Wazir of

Lucknow, took a fancy on a young Khatri virgin whom he

had seen during his ride, and after getting her abducted

by his servile tools and ruining her turned her out of

his harem. The story is told without any blush by the

historian of his house, Sayyid Ghulam Ali Naqavi in his

Imad-us-Sadat.



The parda system was introduced among the free Arab women

after the incident of Zainab. It has become a rigid

institution among Hindus and Muslims in Northern India,

where Muslim rule was most extensive and lasted longest.

The fact that parda is not observed among the Hindus of

Madras, Maharashtra, Kerala and the Mongoloid fringe

(except among a few rich families that pretend to be

Rajputs) clearly indicates how it originated in North

India during Muslim rule.



Seduction or abduction sanctified by the recital of the

Kalima was only one among the various devices practised

for increasing the number of Muslims by hook or crook.

Public service except of the lowest kind was denied to

the Hindus who were vastly in the majority and usually

superior in capacity. It is recorded by Abul Fazi that

the Muslims of his time called Akbar an apostate from

Islam, a kafir chiefly because he had sought to unite the

nation by granting toleration to all religions (Sulh-i-

kul, peace to all) and by including highly competent

Hindus among his umara or upper nobility of office.

Conversely Aurangzib is admired by many even today, for

having "by one stroke of pen" dismissed all the Hindu

clerks and imposed discriminating custom duties on the

Hindus merchants, while allowing the goods of his co-

religionists to pass free.



In Western Rajputana there is a sect called Bishnois who

are a branch of the Vishnu-worshippers, but have many

nonconformist tenets and practices and do not honour the

Brahmans as priests. Aurangzib wrote to his local

governor there to prevent them from amalgamating with the

orthodox or regular Hindus, but to try every means of

bringing them over to Islam by inducing them to drop

their remaining Hindu rites and beliefs. His orders to

this effect have been preserved among the Persian records

of the Jaipur State. Thus under Islamic theocracy,

religion ceased to be a concern of the human soul in its

quest for the Creator but degenerated into a mere

instrument of political gerrymandering.



The strict theory of the Shariat, however, did not always

and everywhere prevail in Muslim India; such uniformity

of pressure was impossible in this vast continent of a

country. In practice, the Hindus were left to toleration

of a sort and freedom in business in villages and remote

corners, where the mullas did not penetrate and even in

cities when the ulema slept under a just Sultan. The two

creeds touched each other at the very top and at the very

bottom only. As T. W. Arnold remarks: "In mysticism they

found a common basis for religious thought. In Kashmir a

Muhammadan ziarat frequently marks the site of a Hindu

Tirtha; it is then stated to be the tomb of a saint

(Pir)... Such survivals from Hinduism are more marked in

villages and country districts remote from the influence

of the Ulema. Here the Muslims still continue to worship

the tutelary godlings of the village and join the Hindu

festivals."



In addition, some mixed sects were formed, which

attempted to bring about a reconciliation between Muslims

and Hindus; but they were dissenting bodies, and stood

clearly removed - like outcasts - from the vast orthodox

bodies of the two sects. The worst mischief done by the

dominance of Islam in the state was its reaction in

brutalising the Hindu character. Hinduism in many places

lost its liberal tolerant character, which sees God in

every being and admits that every religion, if sincerely

practised, will lead to salvation. "Just as the water of

the Ganges, flowing through a hundred mouths, all enters

the ocean, so the different paths of salvation prescribed

by the different scriptures of the world all lead to

God." (Kalidas). Hindus now learnt to retaliate and pay

the ruling bigots in their own coins. The Jaipur Raja

(bout 1660-100) reconverted some former Hindus from Islam

by Suddhi. Shivaji's general Netaji Balkar had been

forced by Aurangzib in 1646 to embrace Islam as Muhammad

QuIi, but in 1676 the great Maratha king "made him Hindu

again by Prayashchitta." When the pealing of conches in

Hindu temples was obstructed, a Rajput raja forbade the

chanting of the Azan or the Muslim call to prayer. One

jaziya-collector's beard were plucked in Berar, another

of these harsh officers was beaten to death in Rutlam.



The Sikhs retaliated for the desecration of their temple

by the Muslims and the slaying of cows in Amritsar

(1762): when they returned in full force they compelled

their Muslim prisoners to work in chains under the lash

and cleanse the temple and wash the ground with hog's

blood. The mere murder of an infidel (such as a Hindu or

European Christian officer) is considered a pious deed by

the Pathan ghazis of the North-West Frontier Province

(like the murder of Lord Mayo). By a most deplorable

reaction, whenever such a murderer was convicted and

hanged by the British courts, for some years a tuft of

dry grass used to be placed on the navel of the corpse

and set fire to, before it was buried, to ensure that his

soul "went to hell by way of fire". In the late 18th

century a body of Sikh horsemen came to Delhi and

demolished a mosque in Rikabganj as an act of vengeance.

In Lord Robers' Afghan Campaign the Gurkhas (and Sikhs?)

treated the Pathan dead in the same way till stopped by

British orders. (See Ashe's Afghan War.)



Such was the condition to which the Hindus were reduced

by Islamic theocracy. Did the dominant sect profit by

this policy? What was the moral and intellectual

condition of the faithful at the end of Muslim rule in

India? They were even more unhappy and helpless than the

Hindus to face the moving modern world. Look outside for

the reason of it.



Palestine, the holy land of the Jews, Christians and

Islamites, had been turned into a desert haunted by

ignorant poor diseased vermin rather than by human

beings, as the result of six centuries of Muslim rule.

(See Kinglake's graphic description). Today Jewish rule

has made this desert bloom into a garden, miles of sandy

waste have been turned into smiling orchards of orange

and citron, the chemical resources of the Dead Sea are

being extracted and sold, and all the amenities of the

modern civilised life have been made available in this

little Oriental country. Wise Arabs are eager to go there

from the countries ruled by the Shariat. This is the

lesson for the living history.
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Clash of civilizations - by Guest - 08-07-2004, 05:36 AM
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Clash of civilizations - by dhu - 06-23-2006, 09:52 AM
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