Hindu Temples: What Happened to Them (2 Volume Set)

Contents

Section I
ISLAMIC ICONOCLASM
1. Hideaway Communalism
Arun Shourie
2. The Tip of an Iceberg
Sita Ram Goel
3. Some Historical Questions
Sita Ram Goel
4. In the Name of Religion
Sita Ram Goel
5. A Need to Face the Truth
Ram Swarup
6. Let the Mute Witnesses Speak
Sita Ram Goel
7. Destruction of Temples in Bangladesh
Section II
RĀMAJANMABHUMI EVIDENCE
8. Rama-Janmabhumi Temple: Muslim Testimony
Harsh Narain
9. Ram Janmabhoomi: Some More Evidence
Abbas Kumar Chatterjee
10. The Ayodhya Debate
Sita Ram Goel
11. Summary of the Ram Janmabhoomi
Evidence
12. Takeover from the Experts
Arun Shourie
13. Not Impartial
B.B. Lal
Section III
HISTORY VERSUS CASUISTRY
14. In the Name of “History”
A.R. Khan
15. Visakha, Säketa, or Ajudhya
   Alexander Cunnigham
16. Party-Line History-Writing
Koenraad Elst
17. Historians Versus History
Ram Swarup
18. History of India: Putting the Record Straight
Sita Ram Goel
19. What the Invaders Really Did
Rizwan Salim

Second Preface

I take this opportunity to record the story of how the first edition of this book came to be compiled and published in April 1990.
The Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP), founded in 1964, had been discussing the question of claiming on behalf of Hindus the Ramajanmabhūmi site at Ayodhya since its first public session in 1966. The issue was placed before the country by the VHP in a largely attended public meeting held at Delhi in 1978. In April 1978, the VHP sponsored Dharma Samsad comprising Sadhus and Mahatmas from all over the country launched a movement to liberate the site. In June 1984, the Ramajanmabhūmi Mukti Yajña was formed which, in turn, held a public demonstration in October 1984, in order to mobilize public opinion in support of its resolve. On 6 October 1984, the VHP called upon Hindus to vote only for those candidates in the forthcoming Lok Sabha elections who were prepared to champion Hindu demands, one of the demands being that a glorious Rama Temple be built at Ayodhya in replacement of the Babri Masjid which had stood at the sacred site since 1528 AD-A Rama- Janaki Rathayatra was taken out by the VHP in 1985, showing the deities behind bars since 1949. And when the locks of the Babri Masjid were opened in February 1986 by an order of the Faizabad District judge, Hindus felt an upsurge of triumph that the liberation of the sacred site was in sight at last.
 (AIBMAC) was threatening throughout 1987-88 to organise As the All India Babri Masjid Action Committee a march on Ayodhya for doing a congregational namaz in and around the Babri Masjid, the VHP announced a Sri Rama Mahayajña to be held at Ayodhya, starting on 11 October 1988. The Yajña continued for five days, till 15 October and more than a lakh of Hindus participated in it. In February 1989, a Maha Sant Sammelan was held at Prayag during the Kumbha Mela proclaiming that a Rama Temple would be constructed at the sacred site after liberating it soon. Finally, on 11 June 1989, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) passed a resolution in its National Executive Committee meeting at Palampur (Himachal Pradesh) that the Party would support the VHP demand in its campaign during the forthcoming Lok Sabha election.
But there was a basic ideological weakness in presentation of the case by the VHP/BJP combine. Firstly, they were asking people, including Muslims, to choose between Babar, the foreign invader, on the one hand and Sri Rama, the national hero, on the other. Thus the Islamic inspiration which had made Babar do what he did, was not being mentioned. At the same time, Sri Rama was being downgraded from the status of an Avatar of Vishnu to that of a mere national hero. What was worse, the combine was proclaiming from the housetops that Islam did not permit the destruction of other people’s places of worship, that namaz offered at a disputed site was not acceptable to Allah, and that Muslims themselves should remove the structure or allow the combine to remove it respectfully to some other spot. Thus they were reinforcing, loud and clear, the modern Islamic apologetics that Islam was a religion of peace and tolerance, without caring to consult or ignoring willfully the tenets of the Sharia comprising the Quran (revelation), the Sunnah (Practices of the Prophet), Ijma (consensus of the Ulama), and Qiyas (analogy). They were also overlooking the record of Islamic iconoclasm all over Bharatvarsa since its advent in the capital of Sakasthan (Seistan) in 653 AD.
Meanwhile, the Stalinist “historians” led by Romila Thapar and S. Goapl (son of the late President of India, Dr. Radhakrishanan) had jumped into the fray. A letter written by this gang had been published in The Times of India, New Delhi, on 2 October 1986 accusing the daily of “giving a communal twist to news items and even editorial comments”. The “provocation” for their outburst had been provided by two photos which had been front-paged by the newspapers in August and September, 1986. The first photo was of two stones from the Kutub Minar at Delhi depicting defaced carvings of Hindu deities. The editorial comment had said that the stones were found with their faces turned inwards during repairs of a wall of the Minar. The second photo was that of Aurangzeb’s Idgah on the Katra Mound at Mathura standing on the site and built with the rubble of a pre-existing Kesavadeva Temple. The editorial comment was that a Committee had been formed at Mathura for the liberation of Śrīkrishnajanmabhūmi. I was told that the photos had been displayed by Arun Shoruie who had joined The Times of India a few month earlier to take over as Chief Editor from Girilal Jain who had decided to retire soon. His appointment had been approved by Girilal Jain as Jain himself told me.
The Stalinists had proclaimed that the Kesavadeva Temple which had been destroyed by Aurangzeb for rich booty as well as for being a centre of Hindu rebellions, was built at first during the reign of Jahangir and occupied the site of a Buddhist monastery destroyed by Hindus. They had questioned the historicity of Sri Krishna and Sri Rama and contended that, according to a Persian text, the Babri Masjid did not occupy the site of a pre-existing Rama Temple. At the same time, they had accused Hindus of having destroyed Buddhist and Jain monuments and pre-Hindu animist shrines. The letter was in keeping with the concocted history which the Stalinists had been selling for Indian Council of Historical Research, and the National quite some time through the Indian History Congress, the Council of Educational Research and Training, all of which they had come to control progressively during the period of dominance by the Soviet stooge, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, and his daughter Indira Gandhi. Pandit Nehru had gone further and rewritten the history of medieval India in both his Glimpses of World History and The Discovery of India. Several Hindu scholars, including myself, wrote letters to The Times of India refuting the Stalinist canards, A to Z. But Girilal Jain refused to publish them, and thus let the Stalinist accusation stand that The Times of India had become a mouthpiece of Hindu communalism’. I visited Arun Shourie in his office at the newspaper to find out why our letters had been held up. He told me that he had been sidelined and no work was being sent to his desk any longer. A few days later it was announced in the newspaper that Dilip Padgaonkar, a Hindu-baiter to boot, had been promoted to as the Executive Editor of The Times of India. The rumour went round that Padgaonkar and not Arun Shourie was going to succeed Girilal Jain. The rest is history. Fortunately for Hindus, Arun Shourie had meanwhile received an offer to take over as Editor-in-chief of the Indian Express, and joined it after resigning from The Times of India.
Around this time, I had come to share Ram Swarup’s view that the temple issue raised by the VHP provided an excellent opportunity to educate the Hindu intelligentsia not only about the iconoclastic record of Islamic invaders and rulers but about the exclusivist, totalitarian, terrorist and imperialist character of Islam as expounded in the Sharia. If the aggressive theology of Islam remained intact, he said, the temple at Ayodhya will get destroyed again, assuming that the VHP succeeded in restoring it. He asked me as a student of history to put the record straight in its proper context. Neither the VHP nor the BJP, he regretted, had published anything worthwhile about Islamic Iconoclasm in India, not even in Ayodhya.
As a student of history in school and college, I had been taught the history of medieval India in the conventional way, presenting Islam as a great religion and the Islamic invaders and rulers as indigenous Indian princes. Later on, Mahatma Gandhi’s mindless slogan of sarva-dharma- samabhava had prevented me from studying the history and theology of Islam from primary source. But Ram Swarup’s magnum opus, The Word As Revelation: Names of Gods and his subsequent study. Understanding Islam Through Hadis Faith or Fanaticism had made me aware of Islam’s real character. I could now see that there was more to the history of medieval India that the reigns of Muslim dynasties, their rise and fall, the wars they waged, the harems they collected, and the monuments they built, etc. It was by now several years since I had been reading the primary sources in English and Urdu-the Quran, the orthodox Hadis collection, the Hidayah, the numerous histories written by medieval Muslim chroniclers, and Reports of the Archaeological Survey of India about the genesis of many Muslim monuments which dotted the land. I had become fully aware of the holocaust caused by Islam in India for centuries on end through its victims and slaves -the Arabs, the Turks, the Afghans, the Iranians, and the native Hindu converts. I was in a position to compile the record of Islamic iconoclasm and place it in the context of Islamic theology.
But hands were full with several other books. So we decided to commission some competent historians to collect the relevant references form the libraries of the Archaeological Survey of India and the National Museum in New Delhi. Ram Swarup suggested the name of Dr. Ganeshi Lal Varma who had been writing some good pieces in the weekly Organiser. I called upon Dr. Varma and placed the proposition before him. He was hesitant, He said he had specialized in the history of modern India and knew neither Persian nor Urdu. I told him that he had only to material was collected we could sit together, sort it out, and consult reports which were all in English, and that once the put it in the proper context. He accepted the assignment. I took him immediately to the National Museum and the Archaeological Survey of India and introduced him to several friends I had known personally, particularly Dr. S.P. Gupta who was one of the Keepers in the National Museum at that time.
But the next thing we saw from Dr. Varma after a few weeks was an article in the Organiser mentioning the names of a few Muslim monuments which stood at the site of Hindu temples or had been built with temple materials. He had cited a report of the Archaeological Survey of India. and preceded the list with a long introduction regarding who had built those temples and when. Another article in a similar vein followed next week. Ram Swarup was annoyed. The articles, he said, hardly conveyed the message we wanted to convey, namely, that Hindu temples had been destroyed by such and such Muslims ruler inspired by the theology of Islam. He asked me to tell Dr. Varma that either he kept the agreement about collecting material and leaving it to us to put it into shape or his assignment was over. I took it up with Dr. Varma. But he was adamant. He insisted that he had the right to use the material the way he liked and that we could use it later on the way we preferred. I had to decommission him.
Dr. Varma went on collecting more material and writing articles in the Organiser. The List of Muslim monuments he provided in 18 articles came to nearly 350 or more. But as the theology of Islam was not even mentioned, nor the monuments placed in a chronological context, the list made practically no impact on public opinion. The General Secretary of the VHP, Ashok Singhal, was not even aware
placed the proposition before him. He was hesitant, He said he had specialized in the history of modern India and knew neither Persian nor Urdu. I told him that he had only to consult reports which were all in English, and that once the material was collected we could sit together, sort it out, and put it in the proper context. He accepted the assignment. I took him immediately to the National Museum and the Archaeological Survey of India and introduced him to several friends I had known personally, particularly Dr. S.P. Gupta who was one of the Keepers in the National Museum at that time.
But the next thing we saw from Dr. Varma after a few weeks was an article in the Organiser mentioning the names of a few Muslim monuments which stood at the site of Hindu temples or had been built with temple materials. He had cited a report of the Archaeological Survey of India. and preceded the list with a long introduction regarding who had built those temples and when. Another article in a similar vein followed next week. Ram Swarup was annoyed. The articles, he said, hardly conveyed the message we wanted to convey, namely, that Hindu temples had been destroyed by such and such Muslims ruler inspired by the theology of Islam. He asked me to tell Dr. Varma that either he kept the agreement about collecting material and leaving it to us to put it into shape or his assignment was over. I took it up with Dr. Varma. But he was adamant. He insisted that he had the right to use the material the way he liked and that we could use it later on the way we preferred. I had to decommission him.
Dr. Varma went on collecting more material and writing articles in the Organiser. The List of Muslim monuments he provided in 18 articles came to nearly 350 or more. But as the theology of Islam was not even mentioned, nor the monuments placed in a chronological context, the list made practically no impact on public opinion. The General Secretary of the VHP, Ashok Singhal, was not even aware
that such an authentic list had appeared in the mouthpiece of the Sangh Parivar till I mentioned it to him after the series had been completed. Failure to publicise Dr. Varma’s list was a grave failure on the part of the VHP/BJP combine which on its own had produced no literature at all on the subject of Islamic iconoclasm and which was trying to coax the Muslims out of their cherished mosque by flattering Islam. This failure was to bear fruit later on, and force the combine to drop the Ayodhya card and go on the defensive.
I was busy putting together the material when I saw the Indian Express of 5 February 1989 carrying an article by Arun Shourie-‘Hideaway Communalism’. It told the story of how a book written in Arabic and Urdu by a rector of the Nadawatul-Ulama at Lucknow mentioned several historical mosques which had replaced pre-existing Hindu temples, and how the references to this replacement had been omitted in the English translation of the same book published by the rector’s son, Ali Mian, the present rector and Chairman of the Muslim Personal Law Board. Arun Shourie’s article in a major newspaper was the first of its kind after a long time. It had violated a taboo placed by the mass media and the academia on any unfavourable narration of the history of Islam since the days when Mahatma Gandhi took command of the Indian National Congress and launched his first no-cooperation movement in support of the Turkish Khilafat. The correct thing since that time had been to praise Islam and its heroes, and not to ask any inconvenient questions about its belief system or its deeds or its goals. In fact, Islam had imposed an Emergency on India and enforced it by means of terror, verbal as well as physical. Hindus were free to praise Islam but if they asked any inconvenient questions, they invited not only swear- words form all respectable quarters but also the assassin’s dagger.
I approached Arun Shourie to tell him that I had studied the subject of Hindu temples turned into mosques in depth
HINDU TEMPLES: WHAT HAPPENED TO THEM and detail, and to ask him if I could write an article for his newspaper. He welcomed the idea and invited me to do justice to the subject even if it meant more than one article. Eventually I wrote three articles which were published in the Indian Express on 19 February, 16 April and 21 May 1989. Another article by Ram Swarup about the character of revealed religions, particularly Islam, appeared in the Indian Express on 18 June 1989. He had developed it as a commentary on my first two articles. He also wrote an article showing that ‘secularists’ were writing the history of India on the model set by the Muslim and British historians and that Marx had seen India as a country always ruled by conquerors. This article was published in the Indian Express on 15 January 1989.
By now the VHP/BJP campaign had become focused wholly on Ayodhya. It was claimed by the combine that Babri Masjid had been built on the ruins of a pre-existing Rama Temple. But they had not published anything to support their claim, and were citing only a tradition of prolonged Hindu efforts to recover the sacred site. On the other hand, Muslims as well as the Stalinists had dismissed the claim as bogus and based entirely on the testimony of British Gazetteers which, they said, had mentioned the destruction of Hindu temples by Muslims in pursuit of their policy of divide-and-rule. Syed Shahabuddin went to the extent of proclaiming publicly that if the pre-existence of a Hindu temple could be proved from pre-British sources, he would himself pull down the Babri Masjid and hand over the site to Hindus. His challenge was accepted by Dr. Harsh Narain whose article was published in the Indian Express on 26 February 1990. He had quoted three authentic Muslim records which admitted in so many words that the Babri Masjid had indeed replaced a Rama Temple. On 27 March 1990, the Indian Express published another article, this time by an IAS officer, A.K. Chatterjee. He had cited to the same effect the testimony of Joseph Tiffenthaler, an Austrian Jesuit, who had toured the Awadh region between 1766 and Shahabuddin went on shifting his ground and indulging in a lot of casuistry in a series of letters published in the Indian Express in response to the evidence provided by Dr. Harsh Narain and A.K. Chatterjee. Now he asked for evidence from Babar’s own time. Hindu scholars, I could see, had walked into a trap-Muslims and Stalinists demanding more and more evidence about a pre-existing Rama Temple and even about the historicity of Sri Rama, and Hindus coming forward with it. It was clear that no amount of evidence could ever satisfy the likes of Shahabuddin and the Stalinist gang. They were playing a well calculated game of keeping Hindus on the defensive, reserving for themselves the right to ask any number of fraudulent questions and making it obligatory for Hindus to go on providing the answers. I, therefore, decided to shift the focus from Ayodhya and revert to what I had done earlier in my articles-marshalling evidence of large-scale Islamic iconoclasm inspired by a belief system. I put together whatever evidence I had collected about Muslim monuments standing on the site and/ or built with the materials of Hindu temples, all over India. From my point of view it was a very small list-only the tip of an iceberg. But it proved formidable for the Shahabuddins and the Stalinists. None of them has even mentioned the list during the last seven years, not to speak of challenging any part of it. I had just completed this article when A. Ghosh (Houston, Texas, USA) sent to me a list of Hindu temples and monasteries destroyed or desecrated by Muslim mobs in Bangladesh in October-November 1989 as a reaction to the Shila Puja Yatra and Shilanyasa ceremony from September 30 to November 1989 performed by the VHP. Hindus were molested, even killed and their properties destroyed on some scale all over Bangladesh.
Meanwhile, the Stalinist gang had come out with a Babri Masjid-Ramjanmabhumi Dispute. The pamphlet was pompous pamphlet-The Political Abuse of History examined by Professor A. R. Khan of the Himachal Pradesh University, Shimla, in an article published in the Indian Express on 25 February 1990. He showed effectively that the Stalinists were making issues out of non-issues and raising controversies where none existed. He also pointed out big holes in the arguments advanced by the Stalinists in so far they were citing as evidence what they had dismissed earlier as myth and hearsay. A chapter from Alexander Cunnigham’s The Ancient Geography of India showed that Ayodhya and Saket referred to the same city and were not two different places as was being argued by the Stalinists The chapter served very well as supplementary to Dr.
Khan’s article.
II
As there was no worthwhile book on the Ayodhya controversy published by the VHP/BJP combine although the controversy had heated up after 1986, I decided to put together whatever documented material was available on Ayodhya in particular and Islamic iconoclasm in general. That is how the first edition of this book came to be published in April 1990. The articles by A.K. Chatterjee and Professor A.R. Khan and the rejoinders to them from the other side could not be included in this edition because the authors could not be contacted in time for their permission. Instead, I included two articles by Jay Dubashi which had been published in the weekly Organiser on 19 and 26 November, 1989. Thus in a sense the first edition was a hurried job.
But soon after this edition was in print a very welcome script, Ram Janmabboomi Vs. Babri Masjid: A Case Study in Hindu-Muslim Conflict was received by me from the Belgian scholar Koenraad Elst. I published it immediately.
 
This book was released in August 1990 by the BIP President LK Advani, in a well attended public meeting. And it made headlines in the press because Advani made the offer that if Muslims agree to the shifting of the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya, he would persuade the VHP to renounce claims to the Krishnajanmabhumi Temple at Mathura and the Viśvanatha Temple at Varanasi. The first edition of Hindu Temples, Volume I was also released at the same time. though Advani was reluctant to do so and had agreed only when pressed by Ram Swarup. At the end of the function, Girilal Jain who had presided came out with the remark that “Hindu tolerance, it seems, is another name for Hindu cowardice”. The audience which was largely form the Sangh Parivar were also painfully surprised by Advani’s offer. It may be noted that he has repeated the offer recently in a meeting of Muslim youth convened in New Delhi by the BJP Yuva Manch led by Uma Bharati.
A supplementary volume, History Versus Casuistry: Evidence of The Ramajanmabboomi Mandir presented by the Vishva Hindu Parishad to the Government of India in December-January 1990-91 had to be published in July 1991 to complete the documentation on Ayodhya. It carried the Ayodhya Debate arranged by the Chandra Shekhar Government between the VHP scholars on the one hand and the AIBMAC scholars on the other. The Debate was inconclusive because Stalinist “historians” who had been hired by the AIBMAC to present its case could manage to put together only a pile of papers raising irrelevant issues and containing contradictory statements on the subjects they touched. The Stalinist “historians” ran away from the Debate after stating that they needed six months for studying the VHP evidence-a plea which was turned down by the Government. The VHP released a summary of its evidence as well as of the AIBMAC non-evidence on 10 January 1991.
History Versus Casuistry carried the VHP evidence on Ayodhya as well as a detailed commentary on the AIBMAC pile of papers. A syndicated article dated 27 January 1991 by Arun Shourie was also included in it because it offered a telling commentary on how the AIBMAC had continued by the VHP. An interesting item in it was a letter by shifting its ground in the face of solid evidence presented Professor B.B. Lal, the noted archaeologist, which appeared in The Times of India on 1 March 1991 in response to an intemperate attack made on him by Irfan Habib in an address to the Aligarh Historians Group. Another addition to this volume was the articles by Professor A.R. Khan and A.K. Chatterjee together with rejoinders by the Stalinist “historians” and Syed Shahabuddin. Finally, an article by Koenraad Elst was added to show that the Stalinists were not dealing with history but following a party line dictated by their hostility to Hindus and Hinduism.
III
This Second Edition carries the material contained in the first Edition except the two articles by Jay Dubashi which have since been published in a separate book by him, The Road to Ayodhya (Voice of India, 1992). It also includes all the material contained in History Versus Casuistry except the first two chapters which have been published by the Vishva Hindu Parishad as a booklet. But the articles taken from the two separate publications have been arranged thematically in three sections-Islamic Iconoclasm, Ramajanmabhumi Evidence, and History Versus Casuistry. It is felt that the new arrangement develops the argument from facts to framework.
In the end I should like to thank Arun Shourie for suggesting the name of the series when Volume I was ready for publication. The name has been carried to Volume II which was published in late 1991 and has since seen a Second Enlarged Edition in 1993. It presents massive historical evidence of Islamic iconoclasm in India for eleven hundred years as also the theology which inspired the barbarism. More volumes may follow if I am free to devote the time needed to sort out the evidence I have collected about the geographical spread of the iconoclasm from Transoxiana to Tamil Nadu and from Seistan to Assam.
New Delhi
26 December 1997
Sita Ram Goel

PREFACE

A court order in 1986 threw open for Hindu worship the gates of the temple-turned-mosque at the Ramajanmabhumi at Ayodhya. Hin- dus were overjoyed, and started looking forward to the coming up of a grand Rama Mandir at the sacred site. But they were counting without the stalwarts of Secularism in the Nehruvian establishment. It was not long before a hysterical cry was heard-“Secularism in danger!”
The Marxist-Muslim combine launched a two-pronged campaign. On the one hand, they proclaimed that Muslims had destroyed no Hindu temples except those few which were stinking with hoarded wealth or had become centres of local rebellions, and that Islam as a religion was never involved in iconoclasm. On the other hand, they accused the Hindus of destroying any number of Buddhist, Jain and Animist shrines in the pre-Islamic days.
As a student of India’s history, ancient as well as medieval, I could see quite clearly that they were playing the Goebbelsian game of the Big Lie. But they could not be countered because they had come to dominate the academia and control the mass media during the heyday of the Nehru dynasty. Most of the prestigious press was owned by Hindu moneybags. But they had placed their papers in the hands of the most brazen-faced Hindu-baiters.
The most unkindest cut of all, however, came from the Vishva Hindu Parishad and the Bharatiya Janata Party. They were doing noth- ing towards debunking Secularist lies about Hinduism vis-a-vis Bud- dhism and Jainism. But they were trumpeting from the house-tops that Islam did not permit the destruction of other people’s places of wor- ship, and that namaz offered in a mosque built on the site of a temple was not acceptable to Allah! They were laying the blame for the de- struction of the Ram Mandir not on Islam as an ideology of terror but on Babur as a foreign invader!
The only ray of light in this encircling gloom was Arun Shourie, the veteran journalist and the chief editor of the Indian Express at that time. On February 5, 1989, he frontpaged an article, Hideaway Com- munalism, showing that while the Urdu version of a book by Maulana Hakim Sayid Abdul Hai of the Nadwatul-Ulama at Lucknow had ad- mitted that seven famous mosques had been built on the sites of Hindu temples, the English translation published by the Maulana’s son, Abul Hasan Ali Nadwi (Ali Mian) had eschewed the “controversial evi- dence”. He also published in the Indian Express three articles written geous defiance of the ban imposed by Islam and administered by Secu- by me on the subject of Islamic iconoclasm. This was a very cours larism, namely, that crimes committed by Islam cannot even be whis pered in private, not to speak of being proclaimed in public. projected series-Hindu Temples: What Happened to Them. It was a Finally, VOICE OF INDIA published in April, 1991 Volume I of a
collection of relevant articles by Arun Shourie, Harsh Narain, Jay Dubashi, Ram Swarup, and myself. An important part of the volume materials of Hindu temples. This list became famous all over the coun- was a list of 2000 Muslim monuments built on the sites and/or with the try as soon as it came out.
Meanwhile, the evidence I had collected regarding Islamic icono- clasm could already cover several, and much bigger volumes. VOICE OF INDIA published in May, 1991 Volume II of the series. It was de- voted exclusively to Islamic evidence, historical as well theological. It was received very well, particularly by the world of scholarship. Only the prestigious newspapers and periodicals in this country ignored it completely; they did not even acknowledge it in their “Books Re- ceived” column. But an extensive review written by the Belgian scholar, Koenraad Elst, was published by VOICE OF INDIA in 1992 under the title Negationism in India: Concealing the Record of Islam.
This second edition of Volume II is a thoroughly revised and somewhat enlarged version of the first edition. Its main merit is that the lengthy chapters in the earlier edition have been divided into smaller ones, and placed under several well-defined sections. A new Appendix on the meaning of the word “Hindu” has been added. And the Appen- dix which carries the Questionnaire For the Marxist Professors, has been considerably expanded by inclusion of correspondence between myself and Professor Romila Thapar, the doyen of Marxist historians.
I take this opportunity to point out that the subject of this volume is not so much the destruction of Hindu temples as the character of Islam- an imperialist ideology of terrorism and genocide masquerading as a religion, in fact, as the only true religion. It is high time for Hindus to see Islam not with its own eyes but from the viewpoint of the great spiritual vision which is their inheritance.
New Delhi
25 March 1993
SITA RAM GOEL

CONTENTS

Section I
THE TIP OF AN ICEBERG
1. The Dispute at Sidhpur
2. The Story of Rudramahalaya
3. Muslim Response to Hindu Protection
Section II
SUPPRESSIO VERI SUGGESTIO FALSI
4. The Marxist Historians
5. Spreading the Big Lie
Section III
FROM THE HORSE’S MOUTH
6. The Epigraphic Evidence
7. The Literary Evidence
8. Summing up
Section IV
ISLAMIC THEOLOGY OF ICONOCLASM
9. Theology of Monotheism
10. The Pre-Islamic Arabs
11. Religion of Pagan Arabia
12. Monotheism Spreads to Arabia
13. Meaning of Monotheism
14. The Bible Appears in Arabic
15. Muhammad and the Meccans
16. The Prophet Destroys Pagan Temples
Section V
APPENDICES
1. Muslim Dynasties in India’s History
2. Was the Ka’ba a Siva Temple?
3. Meaning of the Word “Hindu”
4. Questionnaire for the Marxist Professors Bibliography
Index
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