http://www.thecitizen.in/index.php/NewsDetail/index/4/10996/Manipulation-of-History-for-Social-Engineering-Of-Nationalism-and-Opium-Addicts

Manipulation of History for 'Social Engineering': Of Nationalism and Opium
Addicts!
*RAM PUNIYANI
<http://www.thecitizen.in/index.php/ByLine/index/4/Opinion/RAM-PUNIYANI>**Wednesday,
June 14,2017*

The agenda of Hindu nationalism is to polarize the communities along
religious lines and to subjugate the lower castes within its gambit.

The first major target of this politics was to demonize the Muslim kings as
foreigners, aggressors, who tried to convert the non Muslims, and due to
whom the caste differences came up.

Their second obsession has been to glorify Aryans and uphold Hindu
mythology as history. Lately newer forays are being made to promote
Brahmanical values through their icons as well as to instill new icons to
co-opt Dalits and OBCs.

One recalls that to instill Brahmanical norms BJP President Amit Shah
greeted the people with a tweet on the occasion of Onam saying that this
festival marks the birth of Vaman, the fifth avatar of Vishnu (September
2016). At the same time RSS mouth piece Kesari carried an article which
said that there is no reference or description in mythology books which can
support the story that Mahabali was pushed to the netherworld by Vamana.
According to their version there is no mention of Mahabali’s annual
homecoming in the Malayalam month of Chingam.

This is very much in contrast to the common understanding that Onam, a
harvest festival is celebrated to mark the popular King Mahabali’s visit.
Pongal has assumed a syncretic dimension in Kerala while the RSS effort is
to give it an upper caste tilt by revoking Vishnu Avatar Vaman, who tried
to push Mahabali into netherworld.

There is yet another dimension to the use of history in contemporary times
by the RSS combine. In their newly renovated BJP office in UP there is a
portrait resembling the Rajput king Maha Rana Pratap, but in reality the
portrait is that of an eleventh century king Suhel Dev. Maharaja Suheldev,
is a little-known king, whom both Pasi and Bhar communities own. Over a
period of time how has Suhel Dev come to find a place amongst BJP icons? In
Baharaich in UP Amit Shah had unveiled a statue of Suheldev and launched a
book about him. He is being presented as a National hero who fought for
independence. A train has also been started in his name, Suheldev Express.

To add to this UP Chief Minister Adiyanath Yogi, has announced (June 2017)
that Suhel Dev’s statues will be installed in the Ambedkar Park along with
existing statutes of Chatrapati Shahu, Jotirao Phule, Ambedkar, Kanshiram
and Mayawati. The park built by the Mayawati Government will now have the
statues of icons of other castes as well. While Mayawati had overdone the
installing of statues, still this was an attempt to give Dalit identity an
honorable place in public memory. The present move comes with propagating a
version of History which suits Hindu nationalism. For instance it is being
propagated that Suhel Dev took on Salar Mahmood (Ghazi Miyan), a nephew of
Mahmood Ghazni, who had come to the region to settle, seeing its beautiful
environment.

As per Prof Badri Narayan (Fascinating Hindutva, Sage) the popular
narrative is that Suhel Dev, was tyrannical against Muslims and Dalits. On
insistence from the local people Salar Mahmood took on Suhel Dev and in the
battle both the kings died. The dargah of Ghazi Miyan is visited by both
communities as it is believed that prayers here will help the afflicted get
rid of disease, with a bath in the lake a cure for leprosy!

In contrast, the story being popularized by RSS affiliates is that Ghazi
Miyan was a foreign aggressor and Suhel Dev, to protect the Hindu religion,
engaged with him in a battle, losing his life in defense of the Hindu
religion. There was a mention of this king in Prime Minister Narendra
Modi’s speech (August 2016). He hailed Suhel Dev as a king who protected
cows and also used cattle in warfare by placing these in front of his army.

Here again the popular narrative that spoke of communal amity and harmony
arising from the popularity of Ghazi Miyan’s tomb for all has been shifted
to a pro-Hindutva angle in the framework of Hindu versus Muslim.

In case of Suhel Dev there is a twofold strategy, on the one hand to
present him as a Hindu icon against Islam and secondly, to add to him on
the icon of Pasi-Rajbhar communities for electoral and social goals. The
goal is to create icons from each sub caste from among Dalits, irrespective
of whether they contributed to Dalit uplift or not. This is to divide Dalit
unity. This also adds a king to the number of icons they are trying to
bring up.

We need to remember that kings presided over a system of society based on
hierarchy, in contrast to the icons whose statues have been placed in
Ambedkar Park. These icons had done something to liberate the Dalit
community from caste slavery, to add to their struggles for equality in
society. Kings are being brought forward mainly for identity politics.

Since history is so important to this nationalism, they will go to any
extent to glorify the Hindu kings. The political system of kingdoms is not
something which we can uphold today. Still for sectarian nationalism the
political structure and values of feudal times, the period of kingdoms is
what they want to restore To take matters forward Rajasthan’s education
minister Vasudev Devnani states that in the Haldighati battle, it was Rana
Pratap who won. So far what was happening was giving an interpretation of
events; now with likes of Devnani even the events can be mauled to suit
subjective political goals!

Eric Hobsbawm correctly stated that ‘history is to nationalism what poppy
is to an opium addict!’

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