*The verdict on Ayodhya: a historian's perspective
 *Romila Thapar
http://www.hindu.com/2010/10/02/stories/2010100261411700.htm
* It has annulled respect for history and seeks to replace it with religious
faith.*

The verdict is a political judgment and reflects a decision which could as
well have been taken by the state years ago. Its focus is on the possession
of land and the building a new temple to replace the destroyed mosque. The
problem was entangled in contemporary politics involving religious
identities but also claimed to be based on historical evidence. This latter
aspect has been invoked but subsequently set aside in the judgment.

The court has declared that a particular spot is where a divine or
semi-divine person was born and where a new temple is to be built to
commemorate the birth. This is in response to an appeal by Hindu faith and
belief. Given the absence of evidence in support of the claim, such a
verdict is not what one expects from a court of law. Hindus deeply revere
Rama as a deity but can this support a legal decision on claims to a
birth-place, possession of land and the deliberate destruction of a major
historical monument to assist in acquiring the land?

The verdict claims that there was a temple of the 12th Century AD at the
site which was destroyed to build the mosque — hence the legitimacy of
building a new temple.

The excavations of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) and its readings
have been fully accepted even though these have been strongly disputed by
other archaeologists and historians. Since this is a matter of professional
expertise on which there was a sharp difference of opinion the categorical
acceptance of the one point of view, and that too in a simplistic manner,
does little to build confidence in the verdict. One judge stated that he did
not delve into the historical aspect since he was not a historian but went
to say that history and archaeology were not absolutely essential to decide
these suits! Yet what are at issue are the historicity of the claims and the
historical structures of the past one millennium.

A mosque built almost 500 years ago and which was part of our cultural
heritage was destroyed wilfully by a mob urged on by a political leadership.
There is no mention in the summary of the verdict that this act of wanton
destruction, and a crime against our heritage, should be condemned. The new
temple will have its sanctum — the presumed birthplace of Rama — in the area
of the debris of the mosque. Whereas the destruction of the supposed temple
is condemned and becomes the justification for building a new temple, the
destruction of the mosque is not, perhaps by placing it conveniently outside
the purview of the case.

Has created a precedent

The verdict has created a precedent in the court of law that land can be
claimed by declaring it to be the birthplace of a divine or semi-divine
being worshipped by a group that defines itself as a community. There will
now be many such janmasthans wherever appropriate property can be found or a
required dispute manufactured. Since the deliberate destruction of
historical monuments has not been condemned what is to stop people from
continuing to destroy others? The legislation of 1993 against changing the
status of places of worship has been, as we have seen in recent years, quite
ineffective.

What happened in history, happened. It cannot be changed. But we can learn
to understand what happened in its fuller context and strive to look at it
on the basis of reliable evidence. We cannot change the past to justify the
politics of the present. The verdict has annulled respect for history and
seeks to replace history with religious faith. True reconciliation can only
come when there is confidence that the law in this country bases itself not
just on faith and belief, but on evidence.
* ( Romila Thapar is a distinguished historian of Early India.) *
*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
 It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*

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