Commemorating the 168th anniversary of 1857 War of
Independence: LET THE HINDUTVA RULERS NOT UNDO THE GREAT HERITAGE OF JOINT
SACRIFICES
Large sections of
Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs unitedly challenged the greatest imperialist power,
Britain, during India’s First War of Independence which began on May 10, 1857;
the day being Sunday. It was on May 11th that revolutionaries
declared India free of the British East India Company’s rule announced Bahadur
Shah Zafar as the real Mughal Emporer. This extraordinary unity, naturally,
unnerved the Firangees and made them realize that if their rule was to
continue in India, it could happen only when Hindus and Muslims, the largest
two religious communities were divided on communal lines. Urgent steps were
taken to create enmity between these two. This was the reason, that immediately
after crushing militarily this liberation war the then minister of Indian
Affairs Lord Wood, sitting in London confessed:
"We have
maintained our power in India by playing off one part against the other and we
must continue to do so. Do all we can, therefore, to prevent all having a
common feeling."
In order to put this strategy in operation, the White rulers
in league with their Indian stooges came out with the two-nation theory
implying that Hindus and Muslims belonged to two separate nations. The birth of
the two-nation theory was no accident, in fact, it was specifically created to
help the British rulers in creating communal divide and fragmentize the Indian
society on the basis of religions as unity of Hindus and Muslims could prove to
be the death knell of their rule.
One truth, never to be missed, about
this Struggle is that it was jointly led by leaders like Nana Sahib, Bahadur
Shah Zafar, Maulvi Ahmed Shah, Tantya Tope, Khan Bahadur Khan, Rani Laxmibai,
Hazrat Mahal, Azimullah Khan and Ferozshah, a galaxy of revolutionaries who
belonged to different religions. It was a liberation struggle in which Maulvis,
Pandits, granthis, zamindars, peasants, traders, lawyers, servants, women,
students and people from different
castes, creeds and regions rose in revolt against the dehumanized rule of the
East India Company and laid their lives.
On the eve of 163rd anniversary of War of Independence we
need to tell the present flag bearers of Hindu-Muslim brands of communal
politics that the revolutionary army which declared the Mughal King Bahadur
Shah Zafar, a Muslim, India’s Independent ruler on 11th May 1857
comprised of more than seventy percent Hindu soldiers, all armed. These were
Nana Sahib, Tantya Tope and Laxmibai, all Hindus, played vital role in making
Zafar, Badshah; the King once again.
The contemporary documents of the period which are available
even today are replete with instances, not confined to one particular area, in
which Hindus and Muslims could be seen making supreme sacrifices unitedly. The
War of Independence categorically presented one fundamental truth that
Hindu-Muslim separatism or hatred between these two communities was not at all
an issue.
AYODHYA
After independence Ayodhya emerged as a place which caused
rise of immense hatred between sections of Hindus and Muslims. Babri Masjid-Ram
Janmbhoomi dispute played significant role in creating an environment of
violence and mistrust between the two largest religious communities of India.
But in 1857, it was the same Ayodhya where Maulvis and Mahants and common
Hindu-Muslims stood united against the British rule and kissed the hangman’s
noose together. Maulana Ameer Ali was a famous Maulvi of Ayodhya and when
Ayodhya’s well-known Hanuman Garhi’s (Hanuman Temple) priest Baba Ramcharan Das
took lead in organizing the armed resistance to the British rule, Maulana also
joined the revolutionary army. In one battle with the British and their
stooges, both of them were captured and hanged together on a tamarind tree at
the Kuber Teela (now in Faizabad Jail) in Ayodhya.
This region also produced two more great friends, belonging
to different religions who made life hell for the British sponsored armies.
Achchan Khan[5]
and Shambhu Prasad Shukla[6]
jointly led the army of Raja Devibaksh Singh[7]
in the district of Faizabad. Both of them were able to defeat the Firangee army
in many battles. It was due to the treachery again that they were captured. In
order to desist anyone from such companionships between Hindus and Muslims both
these friends were publicly inflicted prolonged torture and their heads were
cruelly filed off.
It is not difficult to understand that why the same Ayodhya
where blood of both Hindus and Muslims flowed for liberating the motherland in
1857 later became a permanent source of friction between the two communities.
The joint heritage of Ayodhya needed to be erased if the British rule was to
survive. It was meticulously done by the British rulers and their henchmen
turning the heritage of communal unity at Ayodhya upside down. Not
surprisingly, the RSS-BJP rulers are replicating the same.
RAJASTHAN
Kota state (now in Rajasthan) was ruled by a Maharao
subservient to the British. The leading courtier, Lala Jaidayal Bhatnagar, a
great literary figure when found that Maharao was collaborating with the
British he joined hands with the army chief, Mehrab Khan and established a
rebel government in the state. When Kota was captured by the British forces
with the help of stooge neighbouring princes, they together continued fighting
in the region till 1859. Betrayed by an informer both were hanged at Kota on September
17, 1860.
HARYANA
Hansi town (now in
Haryana) presents another heart-warming example of how Muslims and Jains
fearlessly challenged the foreign rule and did not hesitate in sacrificing
their lives together. In this town lived two close friends, Hukumchand Jain and
Muneer Beg. They were known as literary giants and love for mathematics. The
revolutionary government of Bahadurshah Zafar chose them as advisors and
appointed them as commanders in the region of west of Delhi. They led many
successful military campaigns in the area but due to the treachery of Native
rulers of Patiala, Nabha, Kapurthala, Kashmir and Pataudi were defeated in a
crucial battle and captured. The British highly perturbed by this kind of unity
decided to kill them in a most sickening manner. After hanging them on the same
tree in Hansi on January 19, 1858, Hukumchand Jain was buried and Muneer Beg
was cremated against the custom of their respective religions. The obvious
purpose was to make fun of the unity of these two revolutionaries belonging to
two different religions and show hatred towards their comradeship. Another
unspeakable crime committed by the British was that when Faqir Chand, 13 year
old nephew of Hukamchand Jain protested to this treatment he too was hanged,
although there was no sentence passed against him.
CENTRAL INDIA
JHANSI: We all are
familiar with Rani Laxmi Bai's heroic resistance to the British rule and her
death fighting the British forces at Gwalior. She was able to put up such a
great resistance with her Muslim commanders; Ghulam Ghouse Khan (chief of
artillery), Khuda Bakhsh (chief of infantry) both of whom were martyred
defending Jhansi fort on June 4, 1858. Even her personal bodyguard was a young
Muslim lady, Munzar who laid down her life with Rani on June 18, 1858 at
Kotah-ki-Sarai battle in Gwalior.
MALWA: Malwa region
in the then Central Province (now Madhya Pradesh) was another war theatre where
big and crucial battles were fought against the British. The joint command of
Tatia Tope, Rao Saheb (Pandurang Sadashiv), Laxmi Bai, Ferozshah and Moulvi Fazal-ul-
Haq, was able to mobilize a huge rebel army of 70-80 thousand fighters. This
army won innumerable battles against the British. However, in a crucial battle
at Ranod when due to the treachery of stooge princes the revolutionary army led
by Tatia Tope, Ferozeshah and Moulvi was encircled, Moulvi Fazal-ul- Haq stood
as a rock in the way of advancing British troops. He and his 480 companions
laid down their lives on December 17, 1858, but were able to save the main
force which included Tatia Tope, Rao Saheb and Ferozshah. Thus saved by the
supreme sacrifice by Moulvi Fazl Haq and his comrades, Tatia Tope continued to
wage war till the beginning of 1859.
ROHILKHAND
The present day Bareilly, Shahjahanpur, Badaun and Bijnor
was the area which was a strong hold of revolutionaries from the very
beginning. Immediately after the announcement of an independent Indian
government at Delhi on May 11, 1857, Khan Bahadur Khanwas appointed as the
viceroy of Mughal emperor there. Khan soon after assuming charge appointed a
committee of eight members consisting both Hindus and Muslims to conduct the
affairs of the state, his deputy being Khushi Ram. This government forbade cow-slaughter in deference to the sentiments
of local Hindus. Khan and Khushi Ram led troops defeated the British and their
stooges in many battles but were defeated in a crucial battle at Bareilly. Both
of them were hanged with hundreds of their followers outside old Kotwali on
March 20, 1860.
DELHI
The revolutionary
army was led by a joint command consisting of Mohammed Bakht Khan, Azimullah
Khan, Sham Singh Dooga, Sirdhara Singh, Ghouse Mohammad, Hira Singh and a
'Doabi Brahmin'. The contemporary British documents show that despite all their
attempts to create communal divide in the ranks of revolutionary army and
residents of Delhi, the Indians stood as one. In order not to let the British
spies succeed in creating communal conflict amongst Delhites, General Bakht
Khan, C-in-C of the revolutionary army prohibited cow slaughter. What kind of
communal amity existed in Delhi under siege can be further known by the fact
that when a huge canon of Shahjahan’s times which was lying unused was taken
out, repaired and made useable, before firing the first canon, in the presence
of Bahadur Shah Zafar and other army officials, Hindu priests performed Aarti,
garlanded it and blessed it with Vedic hymns. Hindu-Muslim unity during the
First Indian War of Independence was not confined to one area or one section of
the population. This unity pervaded the whole country at all stratum. It was a
ground reality and fact of life with which, naturally, women also did not
remain untouched. In a small town, Thana Bhawan, situated in Muzaffar Nagar
district (now in western Uttar Pradesh) 11 brave women belonging to different
religions and castes were hanged together or burnt alive for taking up arms
against the repressive British rule. The names and heroic deeds of some of them
are peerless and unforgettable.
Asghari Begum, 45 years old, belonged to a well-to-do family and was burnt
alive for organizing rebellion in the area. Another revolutionary woman was, 28
years old, Asha Devi, who belonged to a Hindu Gujar family and was hanged.
Another martyred woman was young Bhagwati Devi, born into a Tyagi family of
farmers who fought in many battles against the Firangee rule. 24 year
old, Habeeba, belonging to a Muslim Gujar family, fearlessly fought in many
battles to liberate neighbouring areas from the
British tyranny. She was captured while resisting a British attack and
was executed on gallows in 1857. Another brave woman from this area was named
Mam Kaur who belonged to a family of shepherdess and was hanged at the young
age of 25 years. Bhaktawari another brave woman from the region too laid down
her life fighting the British rulers. 26 years old, Umda was another
gallant woman from this area, born into a Jat Muslim family who sacrificed her
life resisting the British invasion. Raj Kaur born in 1833, hailed from a Sikh
family and made the supreme sacrifice fighting against the British in Thana
Bhawan area only.
The degree of
communal unity among the rebels can further be known by going through the Rebel
Anthem of 1857, penned by Azimullah Khan. It was in Urdu and read:
Hum haeniss ke malik,
Hindoostan hamaaraa/Paak watan hae qaum kaa Jannat se bhee piyaaraa.
[We are its owners,
it belongs to us. It is our holy land, lovelier than paradise.]
Yeh hamaari milkiat
Hindoostan hamaaraa/iss kee roohaniyat se Roshan hae jug saaraa.
[It is our Hindustan,
our owned. The whole world sparkles with its spiritualism.]
Kitnaa qadeem kitnaa
naeem, sab duniyaa se niyaraa/kartee hae zarkhez jisse Gang-o-Juman kee
dhaaraa.
[It is old as well as
new, it is pleasant in the world. Ganga and Jamuna irrigates its alnds.]
Oope rbarfeela parvat
pehre-daar hamaaraa/Neeche sahil per bajta sagar kaa naqqaaraa.
[On top snow clad
mountain guards us. On the lower end you can hear roaring of sea.]
Iss kee khanen ugal
raheensona, heera, paaraa/iss kee shaan shaukat kaa duniyaa maen jaikaaraa.
[Its mines produce
gold, diamond and lead. Its greatness is renowned throughout the world.]
Aayaa Firangee door
se, essaa mantar maaraa/loota donon hathoon se piyaaraa watan hamaaraa.
[The British came
from far away, played trick. Our dear land was looted with both hands.]
Aaj shahidon ne
tumko, ahl-e-watan lal-kaaraa/Todo ghulamee kee zanjeeren barsao angaaraa.
[Martyrs are calling
you, countrymen. Break shackles of slavery, spit fire.]
Hindoo-Mussalmaan-Sikh
hamaaraa bhai piyaaraa-piyaaraa/yeh hae azaadi kaa jhanda isse salaam hamaaraa.
[Hindu-Muslim-Sikh
are our dear brothers. This is the flag of independence, salute to it.]
CONTEMPORARY BRITISH NARRATIVES
William Russell, was sent by The Times, London aS war
correspondent to cover the ‘Mutiny.’ In one of his reports dated, March 2,
1858, while underlining the unity among the ranks of rebel army he wrote:
"All the great chiefs of Oudh, Mussalman and Hindu, are
there, and have sworn to fight for their young king, Birjeis Kuddr [sic],
to the last. Their cavalry is numerous, the city is filled with people, the
works are continually strengthened. All Oudh is in the hands of the enemy, and
we only hold the ground we cover with our bayonets."
Another senior British officer, Thomas Lowe who led British
attacks on Jhansi, Kalpi and Kanpur admitted that,
"the infanticide Rajput, the bigoted Brahmin, the
fanatic Mussalman, and the luxury loving, fat-paunched ambitious Maharattah
[sic], they all joined together in the cause; the cow-killer and the
cow-worshipper, the pig-hater and the pig-eater, the crier of Allah is God and
Mohommed [sic] his prophet and the mumbler of the mysteries of
Brahma."
Fred Roberts (became the Commander- in-Chief of the British
armed forces in India later) was one of the leading British military commanders
who led the British army to recapture Lucknow. In one of his letters, from the
Lucknow front dated Nov 25, 1857, while rejoicing victory on that day at
Sikander Bagh, Lucknow could not miss out the fact that even in the face of
death the rebel army consisting of both Hindus and Muslims did not lose heart
and stayed glued to each other. When Fred entered the Sikander Bagh he found
nearly 2000 rebels on the ground dead or dying.
"I never saw such a sight. They were literally in
heaps, and when I went in were a heaving mass, some dead, but most wounded and
unable to get up from the crush. How so many got crowded together I can’t
understand. You had to walk over them to cross the court. They showed their
hatred even while dying, cursed us and said: ‘if we could only stand, we would
kill you.’"
Throughout the War of Independence every hook and corner of
the country was replete with such instances of fearless fighters, supreme
sacrifices and strong bond of unity amongst people belonging to different
religions. Such glorious instances of unbreakable Hindu-Muslim unity did really
happen 168 years back. It can be verified even today by a simple perusal of the
contemporary British archives, personal collections, diaries and narrations.
Given these realities of history, it is not difficult to understand why a
divide between Hindus and Muslims was necessitated, who were instrumental in
accomplishing it and who benefited out of this divide. The survival of the
British Empire in India depended on the successful execution of this strategy
of divide and rule. The flag-bearers of the politics of two-nations in the past
and communal politics today are the ones who helped the British to execute this
evil design. We should never ignore the fact that communalism was a ploy of the
British who feared the end of their Empire in India if Hindus and Muslims
continually stood united. On the eve of 167th anniversary of the great
rebellion, we must rise to take pledge of never betraying the shared heritage
and shared martyrdoms of the First Indian War of Independence and not let the RSS-BJP rulers of India undo it.
[All references and quotes presented in this article are
based on contemporary documents.]
Shamsul Islam
Link for some of S.
Islam's writings in English, Hindi, Urdu, Marathi, Malayalam, Kannada, Bengali,
Punjabi, Gujarati and video interviews/debates:
http://du-in.academia.edu/ShamsulIslam
Facebook: shamsul
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@shamsforjustice
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