[The Marathas first invaded Bengal in 1742. Of their behaviour, the
New Cambridge History of India tells us that “all authorities, both
Indian and European are agreed”. A contemporary writer calls them
“slayers of pregnant women and infants” and Sarkar has recorded their
gang-rape of Hindu women, inexplicably stuffing the mouths of their
victims with dust and breaking their arms and tying them behind their
backs. The only Indian to try and protect his subjects against the
Marathas incidentally, was the Mughal governor Ali Vardi Khan. So much
for Akhand Bharat. But I must say that the Marathas did not behave
differently from any other ruler or warrior community, and the idea of
a unified Hindu sentiment exists only in the imagination of those who
get their history from the movies.]

http://blogs.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/aakarvani/bajirao-the-great-hindu-nationalist-thats-only-in-the-movies/

Bajirao the great Hindu nationalist — That’s only in the movies

December 20, 2015, 12:00 AM IST Aakar Patel in Aakarvani | India | TOI

I think I’ll write about Bajirao Mastani today. I have not seen the
movie, nor do I intend to (only one Gujarati makes the cut as director
of watchable pap and that is neither Sanjay Leela Bhansali nor Sajid
Nadiadwala, but Manmohan Desai, a true master). However, I have read
Bajirao Mastani’s reviews and one of them said to my alarm, that the
film “explores the romantic side of 18th-century Maratha general
Bajirao Ballal Bhat, who fought and won 40 battles against the Mughals
with an aim to create a unified Hindu kingdom or Akhand Bharatvarsha”.

Whoa, hold it right there. First, the Marathas only ever wanted a
Marathi kingdom for themselves. It was not unified, hardly akhand and
never Hindu. The Marathas were despised by other Hindu rulers, and
disliked by non-Marathi Hindus as well, as history shows us.
Bajirao and the Marathas campaigned for one thing alone, and it was
called chauth. It meant a fourth of all revenue from other kingdoms,
no matter what the faith of king and subject, and at collecting this
Bajirao and the rest were efficient.

Maratha extortion caused Jaipur’s Ishwari Singh to commit suicide in
December 1750. Sir Jadunath Sarkar (the Manmohan Desai of our
historians) writes of what followed in his four-volume classic, Fall
of the Mughal Empire: “On 10 January, some 4,000 Marathas entered
Jaipur… (and) despising the helpless condition of a king propped up by
their arms, seemed to have behaved towards Jaipur as a city taken by
storm. Suddenly the pent-up hatred of the Rajputs burst forth; a riot
broke out at noon, and the citizens attacked the unsuspecting
Marathas. For nine hours slaughter and pillage raged.”

***The Marathas first invaded Bengal in 1742. Of their behaviour, the
New Cambridge History of India tells us that “all authorities, both
Indian and European are agreed”. A contemporary writer calls them
“slayers of pregnant women and infants” and Sarkar has recorded their
gang-rape of Hindu women, inexplicably stuffing the mouths of their
victims with dust and breaking their arms and tying them behind their
backs. The only Indian to try and protect his subjects against the
Marathas incidentally, was the Mughal governor Ali Vardi Khan. So much
for Akhand Bharat. But I must say that the Marathas did not behave
differently from any other ruler or warrior community, and the idea of
a unified Hindu sentiment exists only in the imagination of those who
get their history from the movies.*** [Emphasis added.]

What the Marathas did striking north from the south, the Sikhs did in
the opposite direction (they called their extortion ‘rakhi’, or
protection, and it was 10% for all Indians). It is undeniably true on
the other hand that the Marathas were originals.

It is important for this romance between Bajirao and Mastani that she
knew how to ride well because there were no palanquins and howdahs
travelling with the Marathas as there were with the Mughals.

The Marathas were the Mongols of South Asia, always on horseback, and
with no infantry and no giant camp behind. Even the scavengers who
followed them around, the bargis, rode. When the monsoons ended, the
Maratha army, about 40,000 men, rode across the Narmada and Tapi, the
border that marked off the Deccan, and attacked ‘Hindustan’.

Shivaji always organised this on a particular day: Dussehra (Bal
Thackeray continued this tradition of declaring war on other Indians
with his fiery Dussehra speeches). After the death of the peasant
king, power passed to the Brahmin peshwas of whom the best was
Bajirao. As the Mughal fighting ability and finances (the two being
interchangeable) declined after Aurangzeb, the Marathas began
penetrating increasingly into hitherto unknown territory in the north.
It was the young Bajirao, then only in his teens, who determined,
rightly, in one of these raids that the Mughals had gone soft and
could no longer defend the realm.

>From this point on, the Marathas began holding ground instead of just
taking their horses back. It is why we see Marathi names like Holkar
and Scindia and Gaekwad in parts of India they do not naturally
belong. Everyone grabbed what they could and held onto it, there was
no Hindu or Bharat angle to any of it.

Bajirao had one good battlefield victory, against Chin Qilich Khan,
first Nizam of Hyderabad. It was a positional win, meaning the
arrangement of Bajirao’s force gave no space for Khan and he gave up
without much fighting. Like chess. A similar situation came in
Panipat, when Abdali positioned the Marathas out. Bravely, the
Marathas chose to fight and were slaughtered. Scindia (Jyotiraditya’s
ancestor) and Holkar, it may interest the reader, fled the field, and
the man who helped Abdali with supplies ensuring his win was Ala
Singh. Abdali rewarded him by making him Maharaja of Patiala, Captain
Amarinder Singh’s ancestor.

Can you spot any Hindu or nationalist angle to any of it? No, because
it exists only in the movies.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to