Qutub Minar : Distortion of Indian History for Vote Bank Politics – Radhey Shyam Brahmchari – 3b : भारतीय इतिहास का विकृतीकरण

DISTORTION OF INDIAN HISTORY FOR                       MUSLIM APPEASEMENT, Part 3Bradhey shayam 3b qutub

http://www.faithfreedom.org/2009/06/07/distortion-of-indian-history-for-muslim-appeasement-part-3b/ radhey shyam 3b iron pillar

                                                          By Dr Radhasyam Brahmachari

Vandalism                       of Qutb-ud-din:

It                       has been mentioned above that the Qutb Minar is 238 ft                       tall and hence can be seen from a far away place. After                       arriving Delhi in 1193, Qutb-ud-din got extremely                       fascinated by the beauty and grandeur of the pillar and                       immediately went to the place with his men. They enquired                       about the name of the pillar, and someone replied                        “Meru                       Stambha”.[1] In Arabic, the word qutb stands                       for the Pole Star and the interpreter said to Qutb-ud-din                       that the name of the pillar was Qutb                       Minar. So, in this way the word qutb was                       associated with the pillar “Meru Stambha” and it becomes                       evident that, till then, it was not linked with Sultan                       Qutb-ud-din. It may be mentioned here                       that, Qutb-ud-din means the Pole Star of Islam.                        It was nearly 200                       years after the death of Qutb-ud-din, his name was linked,                       for the first time, to Qutb Minar by a Muslim chronicler                       called Shams-i-shiraj [2]

Picture                       of the Iron Pillar in Qutb Complex

Like                       other diabolical Muslim rulers, Qutb-ud-din was also a                       monster iconoclast. During his reign, he demolished                       thousands of Hindu temples. So, his court chronicler                        Hasan                       Nijami, in his Taj-ul-masir,                       writes, “Qutb-ud-din built the                       Jam-i-Masjid in Delhi and adorned it with the stones and                       gold obtained from temples which had been demolished by                       elephants and covered it with inscriptions in Toghra                       containing the divine cammands (of                       Koran)” [3]

In                       1194, Muhammad Ghori launched a military campaign against                       Benaras when Qutb-ud-din accompanied his master to play                       the partner of sodomy. In this context, it may be                       mentioned that in those days, lecherous Muslim rulers used                       to purchase young slaves for doing sodomy. However, after                       occupying Benaras, Qutb-ud-din ordered his troops to                       destroy temples and to narrate that destruction                        Minhaj-us-shiraj                       in his Tabaqat-i-Nasiri,                       writes, “They                       destroyed nearly one thousand temples and raised mosques                       on their foundations”.[4]                        …”Religion                       (i.e. Islam) was established, the road of rebellion was                       closed, infidelity was cut off and foundations of idol                       worship were utterly                       destroyed.“[5]

Picture of Ruins of Buildings                       in Qutb Complex – I      Radhey shyam 3b ruins 1

In                       1196 AD., Kutubuddin Aibak invaded the fort at Gwalior .                       To describe the incident, Minhaz-us-Siraj                       in his Tabakat-I-Nasiri                       writes, “In                       compliance with the divine (i.e. Koranic) injunction of                       holy war (jihad), they drew out their blood-thirsty swords                       before the enemies of religion (i.e.                       Hindus)”.[5]  To describe the                       same incident, Hassan Nizami                       in his Taj-ul-masir                       writes, “The                       army of Islam was completely victorious and one lacks                       Hindus were swiftly dispatched to the hell of fire. … He                       (Kutubuddin) destroyed the pillars and foundations of idol                       temples and built their stead mosques, colleges and                       precepts of Islam”[6].

Picture of Ruins of Buildings  radhey shayam 3b ruins 2                     in Qutb Complex – II

In                       1197, Kutubuddin invaded the fort at Naharwala in Gujrat.                       On the way a battle was fought with the king Karan Singh.                       Describing the incident, Minhaj-us-Siraj                       in his Tabakat-I-Nasiri                       writes, “Nearly fifty thousand infidels                       (Hindus) were dispatched to the hell by the sword and from                       the heaps of the slain, hills and the plain became one                       level”.[7] Regarding the capture of                       the Kalinjar Fort by Kutubuddin in 1202, Minhaz writes, “…                        fifty thousand                       men came under the collar of slavery and the plain became                       as black as pitch with the blood of                       Hindus”.[8]

Picture of Ruins of Hindu                       Temple in Qutb Complex      radhey shyam 3b ruins

In                       a similar manner, Qutb-ud-din conducted a large scale                       destruction in the area, now known as the Qutb Complex.                        He demolished all                       the above mentioned 27 temples, dedicated to 27 Asterisms                       and built the Qutb-ul-Islam mosque with the raw materials                       obtained by the demolition of those                       temples. Even today, one observes the                       entire area of the Qutb Complex strewn with remains of                       demolished buildings and temples.

The                       History of the Slave Dynasty:

The                       history books, written by the so called secular                       historians, say that, with the coronation of Qutb-ud-din,                       the Slave Dynasty came to power in Delhi . The name Slave Dynasty was                       coined for the fact that Qutb-ud-din was a slave of                       Muhammad Ghori, and the next ruler Iltutmish was a slave                       of Qutb-ud-din. Many do not know why                       Muhammad Ghori nominated his slave Qutb-ud-din as the next                       king and Qutb-ud-din nominated his slave Iltutmish as the                       next ruler of Delhi . Why both Muhammad Ghori and                       Qutb-ud-din nominated their slaves as the kings after                       their death? The so called secular                       historians say, Muhammad Ghori had nominated Qutb-ud-din                       as the former had no son and Qutb-ud-din nominated                       Iltutmiash as the latter was his son-in-law. But there                       were more important reasons which these dirty historians                       hide.

It                       has been mentioned above that Muhammad Ghori purchased young                       Qutb-ud-din for doing sodomy. At that                       time, Qutb-ud-din was a very good looking Turkish boy                       having a nice physique. Minhaj-us-Siraj,                       has given a detailed narration of early lives of both                       Qutb-ud-din and Iltutmish in his Tabaqat-i-Nasiri. It says that                        Qutb-ud-din, for the first                       time, was sold to a qazi called Faqruddin Abdul Aziz, in                       the slave market at Naishapur (a corrupt of Sanakrit                       Naimusharanya). [9] While staying in the                       house of qazi, Qutb-ud-din studied the Kora, learned horse                       riding and archery.  Later on, a trader purchased                       Qutb-ud-din from the qazi and brought him to Delhi and                       finally Muhammad Ghori purchased Qutb-ud-din from that                       trader.

Gradually                       the lecherous Muhammad Ghori became extraordinarily                       enamoured of Qutb-ud-din and Qutb-ud-din, on the other                       hand, exploited the opportunity and became the care-taker                       of the royal stable which provided him the opportunity to                       join military expeditions. Thus in 1192, he came to India                       and participated in the Battle of Tarai, against Emperor                       Prithwiraj Chauhan. Later on, he took part                       in many other military campaigns and became a mass                       murderer and a terrible iconoclast. So, before leaving for                       Ghazni, Muhammad Ghori left his conquered territory in                       India to the care of his beloved slave Qutb-ud-din, and                        when Muhammad                       Ghori was killed by three brave  Rajput young men in                       1206, Qutb-ud-din declared him the Sultan of                       Hindustan.Thus the foundation of Dehli Sultanate was                       laid.

In                       a similar manner, the next Sultan Iltutmish (or Altamash)                       also began his career as a slave.                       Tabaqat-iNasiri, in this regard, says that                       young boy Altamash looked very nice                       and his envious brothers stealthily sold to a horse                       trader. The said horse trader had brought him to Bukhara                       and sold him to a man called Haji Bukhari and the latter                       sold to another man called Jamal-ud-din                       Chast. According to the narration of                        Tabaqat-i-Nasiri, the buttocks of Altamash were                       fleshy and well built and hence he was extremely                       attractive for the sodomites. So, when Jamal-ud-din Chast                       brought him to Ghazni, the news spread like wild fire                       among the sodomites of the city, including Muhammad Ghori                       who rushed to the spot immediately but became disappointed                       when Chast claimed 100 gold coins as                       the price for Altamash. But the dejected Ghori at once                       issued a notice that, nobody in Ghazni would be allowed to                       buy Altamash.[10]

At                       that hour Qutb-ud-din came to Ghazni with immense spoils                       he gathered from plundering Gujarat and Nahrwala.                        The                       news of Altamash reached this lecher as soon he set his                       feet at Ghazni and rushed to his master to seek his                       permission to buy Altamash.                       But his master Muhammad Ghori declined. At this stage,                       Jamal-ud-din Chast , at his instigation,                        brought                       Altamash to Delhi and Qutb-ud-din bought                       him.                       It is to be noted here that the sodomite                        Qutb-ud-din,                       like his master Muhammad Ghori, gradually became                       extraordinarily addicted to. Altamash and never hesitated                       to fulfill his any desire.                       In this way, Altamash ultimately asked for the hand of                       Qutb-ud-din’s daughter and Qutb-ud-din fulfilled that                       desire of his beloved slave too.                        Finally,                       Qutb-ud-din nominated his slave cum son-in-law as the                       future Sultan of Hindustan , after his                       death.[10]

It                       has been mentioned earlier that the so called                        secular                       historians portray Qutb-ud-din and Altamash or Iltutmish                       as great admirers of art and                       architecture.                       It                       is left to the reader to assess, from the above                       narrations, how much admiration these cruel killers and                       lecherous vandals could have for art and                       architecture.                      

Qutb                       Minar, a Hindu Architecture:

However,                       we may now turn our attention to the evidence that                       conclusively prove that the pillar, now known as the Qutb                       Minar, was built by the Hindus, long before the arrival of                       the barbaric Muslim invaders in India.                        One                       finds a stone inscription, written in Nagri and placed in                       position in Vikram-Samvat 1504 (1147                       AD).                       It has been mentioned that, Muhammad Ghori occupied Delhi                       in 1192, by defeating Emperor Prithwiraj Chauhan in the                       Battle of Tarai. So                       the said epigraph conclusively proves that the Qutb Minar                       was there, at least 45 years before the arrival of                       Qutb-ud-din in Delhi.[11]                       

To                       reject this evidence, our secular historians say that the                       Qutb Minar was built with the raw materials collected by                       demolishing several temples and buildings and the said                       epigraph had been carried to the Minar along with those                       raw materials. But it has been pointed out earlier that,                        not                       even a single Muslim chronicler has ever mentioned that                       Qutb-ud-din had built the Qutb Minar with the raw                       materials collected from demolished                       temples.                       On the contrary, they never hesitated to mention that                        Qutb-ud-din                       built the Qutb-ul-Islam mosque and the Jam-e-masjid with                       raw materials obtained by demolishing                       temples.                       And hence their argument does not seem to be tenable and                       the said edict proves conclusively that the Qutb Minar                       existed before the coming of Qutb-ud-din in Delhi .                        Furthermore,                       anyone, after inspecting the said edict, would refuse to                       admit that it had been carried to the spot as a raw                       material but carefully installed on the wall of the Minar                       with a definite purpose.[11]                       

It                       has been mentioned earlier that an article by                        Acharya                       Bapu Vankar,                       published in the Itihas Darpan in 1996 contains many                       imformation regarding the history of the pillar, now                       called Qutb Minar. Furthermore,                       Varahamihir Smriti Granth, a book in Hindi, written by                       Kedarnath Prabhakar,                       published in 1974, from  Saharanpur , India ,                       contains real history of Qutb Minar and many other very                       important information.                       It is important to note that the edict of 1147 AD has been                       mentioned in Varahamihir Smriti                       Granth, where it has been said that                        a                       major renovation and repair work of the Minar was                       undertaken in 1147 AD, and the names of the skilled Rajput                       workers, who carried out the job, had been inscribed on                       the epigraph. [12]

In                       the above mentioned work, the author Kedarnath Prabhakar                       writes that Emperor                       Vikramaditya Chandragupta-II (380 AD – 413 AD) built the                       Minar in the fourth century                       AD.                       It is well known that there is another pillar, made of                       iron, just beside the Qutb Minar.                        Regarding                       this Iron Pillar, Kedarnath Prabhakar writes that there is                       an inscription on this Iron Pillar, written Sanskrit,                       using Brahmi alphabet.                       Most importantly, there is mentioning of the Qutb Minar in                       that inscription. Here the Qutb Minar has been called the                        “Prapanshu                       Vishnudhwaj.”                       [13]

Kedarnath                       Prabhakar also writes that this                       Great Creation of Emperor Vikramaditya was erected by                       exemplarily killed Rajput workers under the direct                       supervision of legendary astronomer Varaha                       Mihir.                       And in the great ashrama he established at Indraprastha                       (original name of Delhi ), called Mihiravali, there were                       27 temples on one side and on the other side,                        he                       built another temple dedicated to Kalkadevi. These 27                       temples were about half a mile away from the pillar                       Vishnudhwaj, which Qutb-ud-din                       demolished.[14]                       On the western side of the pillar, on a hillock, there was                       the Kalkadevi’s temple. The spot is now known as Surajki                       Thikri. He also writes that, that                        Emperor                       Vikramaditya erected a similar pillar in Gandhar (today’s                       Afghanistan ) and its name was                       Vedhmaru.                       For want of skilled Rajput workers, Varahamihir built this                       pillar with bricks and mortar.                        It                       is now known as Minar-e-Jam and Giasuddin bin Sam Ghori,                       the elder brother of Muhammad Ghori, in the name repair                       and renovation, removed all the Hindu signs and                       inscriptions from the                       Vedhmaru                       and gave it Islamic look by adding Koranic inscriptions on                       it.[15]

In                       this context, it should be mentioned that, though the Qutb                       Minar does not contain any edict by Qutb-ud-din or                       Iltutmish, it                       bears a stone epigraph by the above mentioned Giasuddin                       Ghori.                       So, it may be speculated that,                        in                       the name of renovation and repair, Giasuddin Ghori removed                       all Hindu signs and inscriptions from the Vishnudhwaj, and                       gave it a purely Islamic look by ornamenting it with                       Koranic inscriptions.

There                       is another stone edict on the wall of the Qutb-ul-Islam                       mosque that reads, in Sanskrit,

sūryyameru                       pthwī                       yantrai                       mihirāvalī yantre

using                       same Brahmiscript as used in the inscription on the Iron                       Pillar. Scholars believe that this edict originally was on                       one of the 27 temples that Qutb-ud-din had demolished and                       brought to the Qutb-ul-Islam mosque as raw material.                        However, the text                       of the edict conclusively proves that the place was, once                       upon a time, known as Mihiravali and it was used for                       making astronomical observation, particularly for the sun,                       using instruments.

I                       have written a book in Bengali titled                        Mithyar                       Aborane Delhi Agra Fatehpur                       Sikri                       (History of Delhi Agra and Fatehpur Sikri under the Shroud                       of Falsehood) and I use to talk to my students about                       distortions of Indian history during leisure times. In one                       occasion, a group of my students went to visit Delhi ,                       Agra and some other places of historical importance, as a                       part of an educational tour. On their return they came to                       me and said, “Sir,                       what you have written in your book is absolutely correct.                       We have discovered many Hindu symbols in every palace, in                       every fort and monument. But you have missed a very vital                       point in your book. We have discovered, with the help of a                       torch light, an image of Lord Ganesh, in the Qutb Minar,                       which you should mention in future edition of your                       book.”                       Perhaps the reader would admit that, it was not possible                       for either Qutb-ud-din or Altamash to                        install                       an idol of Lord Ganesh in the Qutb                       Minar,                       had they been the author of the same.

References:

[1]                       The word Meru stands for                       the (North) Pole and the word Sthambha stands                       for a Pillar

[2]                       P N Oak, Islamic                       Havoc in Indian History, Published by A Ghosh                       (1996), p-120

[3]                       H. M. Elliot and J. Dowson, The History of India , as told                       by its own historians (in 8 Volumes),                       Low

Price                       Publications, New Delhi (1996) II, 222.

[4]                       H. M. Elliot and J. Dowson, ibid,II, 223.

[5]                       H. M. Elliot and J. Dowson, ibid,II, 227.

[6]                       H. M. Elliot and J. Dowson, ibid,II, 215.

[7]                       H. M. Elliot and J. Dowson, ibid,II, 230.

[8]                       H. M. Elliot and J. Dowson, ibid,II, 231.

[9]                       H. M. Elliot and J. Dowson, ibid,II, 299.

[10]                       H. M. Elliot and J. Dowson, ibid,II,                        320..

[11]                       R. C. Majumdar (Gen Ed), History & Culture of the                       Indian People (in 12 Volumes), Bharatiya                       Vidya

Bhavan,                       Mumbai (1996), VI, 669.

[12]                        Kedarnath Prabhakar,                       Varahamihir Smriti Granth, Saharanpur (1974),                       127.

[13]                       Kedarnath Prabhakar, ibid, (1974), 157.

[14]                       Kedarnath Prabhakar, ibid, (1974),                       146-147.

[15]                       Kedarnath Prabhakar, ibid,  (1974),                       152..

(To                       be continued ……………)

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