"There can be no doubt that the fall of Buddhism in
India was due to the invasions of the Musalmans," writes the author.
"Islam came out as the enemy of the 'But'. The word 'But,' as
everybody knows, is an Arabic word and means an idol. Not many
people, however, know that the derivation of the word 'But'
is the Arabic corruption of Buddha. Thus the origin of the word
indicates that in the Moslem mind idol worship had come to be
identified with the Religion of the Buddha. To the Muslims, they
were one and the same thing. The mission to break the idols thus
became the mission to destroy Buddhism. Islam destroyed Buddhism not
only in India but wherever it went. Before Islam came into being
Buddhism was the religion of Bactria, Parthia, Afghanistan, Gandhar
and Chinese Turkestan, as it was of the whole of Asia...."
A communal historian of the RSS-school?
But Islam struck at Hinduism also. How is it that
it was able to fell Buddhism in India but not Hinduism? Hinduism had
State-patronage, says the author. The Buddhists were so persecuted
by the "Brahmanic rulers", he writes, that, when Islam came, they
converted to Islam: this welled the ranks of Muslims but in the same
stroke drained those of Buddhism. But the far more important cause
was that while the Muslim invaders butchered both -- Brahmins as
well as Buddhist monks -- the nature of the priesthood in the case
of the two religions was different -- "and the difference is so
great that it contains the whole reason why Brahmanism survived the
attack of Islam and why Buddhism did not."
For the Hindus, every Brahmin was a potential
priest. No ordination was mandated. Neither anything else. Every
household carried on rituals -- oblations, recitation of particular
mantras, pilgrimages, each Brahmin family made memorizing some Veda
its very purpose.... By contrast, Buddhism had instituted
ordination, particular training etc. for its priestly class. Thus,
when the invaders massacred Brahmins, Hinduism continued. But when
they massacred the Buddhist monks, the religion itself was
killed.
Describing the massacres of the latter and the
destruction of their vihars, universities, places of worship, the
author writes, "The Musalman invaders sacked the Buddhist
Universities of Nalanda, Vikramshila, Jagaddala, Odantapuri to name
only a few. They raised to the ground Buddhist monasteries with
which the country was studded. The monks fled away in thousands to
Nepal, Tibet and other places outside India. A very large number
were killed outright by the Muslim commanders. How the Buddhist
priesthood perished by the sword of the Muslim invaders has been
recorded by the Muslim historians themselves. Summarizing the
evidence relating to the slaughter of the Buddhist Monks perpetrated
by the Musalman General in the course of his invasion of Bihar in
1197 AD, Mr. Vincent Smith says, "....Great quantities of plunder
were obtained, and the slaughter of the 'shaven headed Brahmans',
that is to say the Buddhist monks, was so thoroughly completed, that
when the victor sought for someone capable of explaining the
contents of the books in the libraries of the monasteries, not a
living man could be found who was able to read them. 'It was
discovered,' we are told, 'that the whole of that fortress and city
was a college, and in the Hindi tongue they call a college Bihar.'
"Such was the slaughter of the Buddhist priesthood perpetrated by
the Islamic invaders. The axe was struck at the very root. For by
killing the Buddhist priesthood, Islam killed Buddhism. This was the
greatest disaster that befell the religion of the Buddha in
India...."
The writer? B. R. Ambedkar.
But today the fashion is to ascribe the extinction
of Buddhism to the persecution of Buddhists by Hindus, to the
destruction of their temples by the Hindus. One point is that the
Marxist historians who have been perpetrating this falsehood have
not been able to produce even an iota of evidence to substantiate
the concoction. In one typical instance, three inscriptions were
cited. The indefatigable Sita Ram Goel looked them up. Two of the
inscriptions had absolutely nothing to do with the matter. And the
third told a story which had the opposite import than the one which
the Marxist historian had insinuated: a Jain king had himself taken
the temple from Jain priests and given it to the Shaivites because
the former had failed to live up to their promise. Goel repeatedly
asked the historian to point to any additional evidence or to
elucidate how the latter had suppressed the import that the
inscription in its entirety conveyed. He waited in vain. The
revealing exchange is set out in Goel's monograph, "Stalinist
'Historians' Spread the Big Lie."
Marxists cite only two other instances of Hindus
having destroyed Buddhist temples. These too it turns out yield to
completely contrary explanations. Again Marxists have been asked
repeatedly to explain the construction they have been
circulating -- to no avail. Equally important, Sita Ram Goel
invited them to cite any Hindu text which orders Hindus to break the
places of worship of other religions -- as the Bible does, as a pile
of Islamic manuals does. He has asked them to name a single person
who has been honoured by the Hindus because he broke such places -–
the way Islamic historians and lore have glorified every Muslim
ruler and invader who did so. A snooty silence has been the only
response.
But I am on the other point. Once they occupied
academic bodies, once they captured universities and thereby
determined what will be taught, which books will be prescribed, what
questions would be asked, what answers will be acceptable, these
"historians" came to decide what history had actually been! As it
suits their current convenience and politics to make out that
Hinduism also has been intolerant, they will glide over what
Ambedkar says about the catastrophic effect that Islamic invasions
had on Buddhism, they will completely suppress what he said of the
nature of these invasions and of Muslim rule in his Thoughts on
Pakistan, but insist on reproducing his denunciations of
"Brahmanism," and his view that the Buddhist India established by
the Mauryas was systematically invaded and finished by Brahmin
rulers.
Thus, they suppress facts, they concoct others,
they suppress what an author has said on one matter even as they
insist that what he has said on another be taken as gospel truth.
And when anyone attempts to point out what had in fact happened,
they raise a shriek: a conspiracy to rewrite history, they shout, a
plot to distort history, they scream.
But they are the ones who had distorted it in the
first place -- by suppressing the truth, by planting falsehoods. And
these "theses" of their's are recent concoctions. Recall the
question of the disappearance of Buddhist monasteries. How did the
grand-father, so to say, of present Marxist historians, D. D.
Kosambhi explain that extinguishing? The original doctrine of the
Buddha had degenerated into Lamaism, Kosambhi wrote. And the
monasteries had "remained tied to the specialized and concentrated
long-distance 'luxury' trade of which we read in the Periplus. This
trade died out to be replaced by general and simpler local barter
with settled villages. The monasteries, having fulfilled their
economic as well as religious function, disappeared too." And the
people lapsed!
"The people whom they had helped lead out of
savagery (though plenty of aborigines survive in the Western Ghats
to this day), to whom they had given their first common script and
common language, use of iron, and of the plough," Kosambhi wrote,
"had never forgotten their primeval cults."
The standard Marxist "explanation" -- the economic
cause, the fulfilling of historical functions and thereafter
disappearing, right to the remorse at the lapsing into "primeval
cults". But today, these "theses" won't do. For today the need is to
make people believe that Hindus too were intolerant, that Hindus
also destroyed temples of others....
Or take another figure -- one saturated with our
history, culture, religion. He also wrote of that region --
Afghanistan and beyond. The people of those areas did not destroy
either Buddhism or the structures associated with it, he wrote, till
one particular thing happened. What was this? He recounted, "In very
ancient times this Turkish race repeatedly conquered the western
provinces of India and founded extensive kingdoms. They were
Buddhists, or would turn Buddhists after occupying Indian territory.
In the ancient history of Kashmir there is mention of these famous
Turkish emperors -- Hushka, Yushka, and Kanishka. It was this
Kanishka who founded the Northern School of Buddhism called
Mahayana. Long after, the majority of them took to Mohammedanism and
completely devastated the chief Buddhistic seats of Central Asia
such as Kandhar and Kabul. Before their conversion to Mohammedanism
they used to imbibe the learning and culture of the countries they
conquered, and by assimilating the culture of other countries would
try to propagate civilization. But ever since they became
Mohammedans, they have only the instinct of war left in them; they
have not got the least vestige of learning and culture; on the
contrary, the countries that come under their sway gradually have
their civilization extinguished. In many places of modern
Afghanistan and Kandhar etc., there yet exist wonderful Stupas,
monasteries, temples and gigantic statues built by their Buddhist
ancestors. As a result of Turkish admixture and their conversion to
Mohammedanism, those temples etc. are almost in ruins, and the
present Afghans and allied races have grown so uncivilized and
illiterate that, far from imitating those ancient works of
architecture, they believe them to be the creation of super-natural
spirits like the Jinn etc. ...".
The author? The very one the secularists tried to
appropriate three-four years ago -- Swami Vivekananda.
And look at the finesse of these historians. They
maintain that such facts and narratives must be swept under the
carpet in the interest of national integration: recalling them will
offend Muslims, they say, doing so will sow rancour against Muslims
in the minds of Hindus, they say. Simultaneously they insist on
concocting the myth of Hindus destroying Buddhist temples. Will that
concoction not distance Buddhists from Hindus? Will that narrative,
specially when it does not have the slightest basis in fact, not
embitter Hindus?
Swamiji focussed on another factor about which we
hear little today: internal decay. The Buddha -- like Gandhiji in
our times -- taught us first and last to alter our conduct, to
realise through practice the insights he had attained. But that is
the last thing the people want to do, they want soporifics: a
mantra, a pilgrimage, an idol which may deliver them from the
consequences of what they have done. The people walked out on the
Buddha's austere teaching – for it sternly ruled out props. No
external suppression etc., were needed to wean them away: people are
deserting Gandhiji for the same reason today -- is any violence or
conspiracy at work ?
The religion became monk and monastery-centric. And
these decayed as closed groups and institutions invariably do.
Ambedkar himself alludes to this factor -- though he puts even this
aspect of the decay to the ravages of Islam. After the decimation of
monks by Muslim invaders, all sorts of persons -- married clergy,
artisan priests -- had to be roped in to take their place. Hence the
inevitable result, Ambedkar writes: "It is obvious that this new
Buddhist priesthood had neither dignity nor learning and were a poor
match for the rival, the Brahmins whose cunning was not unequal to
their learning."
Swami Vivekananda, Sri Aurobindo and others who had
reflected deeply on the course of religious evolution of our people,
focussed on the condition to which Buddhist monasteries had been
reduced by themselves. The people had already departed from the
pristine teaching of the Buddha, Swamiji pointed out: the Buddha had
taught no God, no Ruler of the Universe, but the people, being
ignorant and in need of sedatives, "brought their gods, and devils,
and hobgoblins out again, and a tremendous hotchpotch was made of
Buddhism in India." Buddhism itself took on these characters: and
the growth that we ascribe to the marvelous personality of the
Buddha and to the excellence of his teaching, Swami Vivekananda
said, was due in fact "to the temples which were built, the idols
that were erected, and the gorgeous ceremonials that were put before
the nation." Soon the "wonderful moral strength" of the original
message was lost "and what remained of it became full of
superstitions and ceremonials, a hundred times cruder than those it
intended to suppress," of practices which were "equally bad,
unclean, and immoral...."
Swami Vivekananda regarded the Buddha as "the
living embodiment of Vedanta", he always spoke of the Buddha in
superlatives. For that very reason, Vivekananda raged all the more
at what Buddhism became: "It became a mass of corruption of which I
cannot speak before this audience...;" "I have neither the time nor
the inclination to describe to you the hideousness that came in the
wake of Buddhism. The most hideous ceremonies, the most horrible,
the most obscene books that human hands ever wrote or the human
brain ever conceived, the most bestial forms that ever passed under
the name of religion, have all been the creation of degraded
Buddhism"....
With reform as his life's mission, Swami
Vivekananda reflected deeply on the flaws which enfeebled Buddhism,
and his insights hold lessons for us to this day. Every reform
movement, he said, necessarily stresses negative elements. But if it
goes on stressing only the negative, it soon peters out. After the
Buddha, his followers kept emphasising the negative, when the people
wanted the positive that would help lift them.
"Every movement triumphs," he wrote, "by dint of
some unusual characteristic, and when it falls, that point of pride
becomes its chief element of weakness." And in the case of Buddhism,
he said, it was the monastic order. This gave it an organizational
impetus, but soon consequences of the opposite kind took over.
Instituting the monastic order, he said, had "the evil effect of
making the very robe of the monk honoured," instead of making
reverence contingent on conduct. "Then these monasteries became
rich," he recalled, "the real cause of the downfall is here... some
containing a hundred thousand monks, sometimes twenty thousand monks
in one building -- huge, gigantic buildings...." On the one hand
this fomented corruption within, it encoiled the movement in
organizational problems. On the other it drained society of the best
persons.
From its very inception, the monastic order had
institutionalized inequality of men and women even in sanyasa,
Vivekananda pointed out. "Then gradually," he recalled, "the
corruption known as Vamachara (unrestrained mixing with women in the
name of religion) crept in and ruined Buddhism. Such diabolical
rites are not to be met with in any modern Tantra..."
Whereas the Buddha had counseled that we shun
metaphysical speculations and philosophical conundrums – as these
would only pull us away from practice -- Buddhist monks and scholars
lost themselves in arcane debates about these very questions. [Hence
a truth in Kosambhi's observation, but in the sense opposite to the
one he intended: Shankara's refutations show that Shankara knew
nothing of Buddha's original doctrine, Kosambhi asserted; Shankara
was refuting the doctrines which were being put forth by the
Buddhists in his time, and these had nothing to do with the original
teaching of the Buddha.] The consequence was immediate: "By becoming
too philosophic," Vivekananda explained, "they lost much of their
breadth of heart."
Sri Aurobindo alludes to another factor, an
inherent incompatibility. He writes of "the exclusive trenchancy of
its intellectual, ethical and spiritual positions," and of how "its
trenchant affirmations and still more exclusive negations could not
be made sufficiently compatible with the native flexibility,
many-sided susceptibility and rich synthetic turn of the Indian
religious consciousness; it was a high creed but not plastic enough
to hold the heart of the people..."
We find in such factors a complete explanation for
the evaporation of Buddhism. But we will find few of them in the
secularist discourse today. Because their purpose is served by one
"thesis" alone: Hindus crushed Buddhists, Hindus demolished their
temples... In regard to matter after critical matter -- the
Aryan-Dravidian divide, the nature of Islamic invasions, the nature
of Islamic rule, the character of the Freedom Struggle -- we find
this trait -- suppresso veri, suggesto falsi. This is the
real scandal of history-writing in the last thirty years. And it has
been possible for these "eminent historians" to perpetrate it
because they acquired control of institutions like the ICHR. To undo
the falsehood, you have to undo the
control.