Ayodhya - The Case Against the Temple
by Koenraad Elst (Author ALERT)
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ProductID: 9404 - Hardcover - 238 Pages (Year: 2002)
Voice of India ~ ISBN: 81-85990-75-1
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Indiaclub.com Editorial
This book, the author says in preface, is his last contribution to the literature on what is known in India as “communalism”, meaning the conflict between the different religions, principally Hinduism and Islam.
His first book in this sphere of interest was ‘Ram Janmabhoomi vs. Babri Masjid: A Case Study in Hindu-Muslim conflict (1990)’. It served a good purpose, viz. to break the false impression that the world of scholarship including western Idologists was united in certifying that the Hindu claim to the disputed site in Ayodhya was historically unfounded. In the subsequent years, evidence has been pilling up in favor of the Hindu claim. Coming full circle, he has included in this book a compilation of papers on various aspects of the Ayodhya debate written by him between 1995 and 2002. Its main focus is the argumentation and view of Hindu-Muslim history offered by the anti-temple party.
In references to the question whether there really was a Hindu temple at the Ayodhya site later covered by the Babri Masjid, the focus is invariably on the case made by the Hindu side, viz. that there was a temple, and that different types of evidence confirm this. The standard question is: is this evidence for the temple demolition scenario valid? Have they succeeded in proving the existence of the temple? By contrast, the ‘opponents’ of the temple hypothesis are but very rarely asked to put their evidence on the table.
The non-temple argumentation is confined to two types of evidence: arguments from silence, and attempts to find fault with pieces of evidence offered by the temple party. Criticism of the pro-temple argument is usually directed against a straw man, not against the actual argumentation as presented by pro-temple scholars. A number of much-acclaimed anti-temple publications bravely announce in the introduction or on the cover that they will demolish every argument given (or “concocted” and “maliciously propagated”) by the temple party, but then fail to address or even mention the main statements of the pro-temple party. The most powerful non-official books by pro-temple scholars are simply never mentioned, let alone discussed. Even the official argumentation offered by the scholars mandated by the Vishva Hindu Parishad during the Government-sponsored debate is generally ignored.
Future historians will include the no-temple argument of the 1990s as a remarkable case study in their surveys of academic fraud and politicized scholarship. With academic, institutional and media power, a new academic-journalistic consensus have been manufactured denying the well-established history of temple demolition by Islamic iconoclasm to the Babri Masjid-Ram Janmabhoomi site; at least among people with prestige and influence but no first-hand knowledge of the issue. But the facts will remain the facts, and their ongoing suppression is bound to give way as new generations of scholars take a fresh look at the data.
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Table of Contents
Foreword
1. The Ayodhya debate: focus on the "no temple" evidence
2. Ashoka and Pushyamitra, iconoclasts?
3. The Both Gaya temple controversy
4. Harsha of Kashmir, a Hindu iconoclast?
5. Vandalism sanctified by scripture
6. The details about "Hindu iconoclasm"
7. Why did Aurangzeb demolish the Kashi Vishvanath temple?
8. From Ayodhya to Nazareth
9. Ayodhya and the Supreme Court
10. Mohammed Habib’s history-rewriting
11. The Ayodhya evidence debate
12. About the Hindu critique of monotheism
13. Postscript: a lasting solution
Bibliography
Index
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About the Author
Dr. Koenraad Elst grew up in a Catholic family in the Dutch-speaking part of Belgium. After a brief juvenile flirt with Marxism he was drawn to exploring the spiritual domain, especially through Asian philosophies and disciplines like Aikido, Taijiquan and Yoga.
While doing research in Indian philosophy at Benares Hindu University, he started taking an interest in the ongoing Rushdie and Ayodhya controversies and the larger debate on secularism. He published several books on the historical Ayodhya file. He earned his doctorate in 1998 at Catholic University Leuven with a dissertation on the Ideological development of Hindu nationalism.
A married man and father of four, he is currently working as a free-lance scholar and columnist.
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