Zürcher Nachrichten - India at 75: upending narratives and rewriting history

EUR -
AED 4.350475
AFN 77.000016
ALL 96.454975
AMD 452.047591
ANG 2.120545
AOA 1086.286213
ARS 1725.238026
AUD 1.710479
AWG 2.135258
AZN 2.007664
BAM 1.951672
BBD 2.40163
BDT 145.711773
BGN 1.989397
BHD 0.449557
BIF 3532.68688
BMD 1.184609
BND 1.510131
BOB 8.239571
BRL 6.269424
BSD 1.192242
BTN 109.499298
BWP 15.600223
BYN 3.39623
BYR 23218.339784
BZD 2.398137
CAD 1.618478
CDF 2683.139764
CHF 0.916298
CLF 0.026022
CLP 1027.494776
CNY 8.235107
CNH 8.235012
COP 4347.219511
CRC 590.460955
CUC 1.184609
CUP 31.392143
CVE 110.03271
CZK 24.351003
DJF 212.331747
DKK 7.467676
DOP 75.072465
DZD 154.147531
EGP 55.878723
ERN 17.769138
ETB 185.235695
FJD 2.611648
FKP 0.865278
GBP 0.866695
GEL 3.192536
GGP 0.865278
GHS 13.062424
GIP 0.865278
GMD 86.476639
GNF 10463.043965
GTQ 9.145731
GYD 249.464409
HKD 9.250553
HNL 31.472956
HRK 7.534477
HTG 156.052534
HUF 381.797757
IDR 19913.694806
ILS 3.686918
IMP 0.865278
INR 108.607225
IQD 1562.095668
IRR 49901.661585
ISK 145.008115
JEP 0.865278
JMD 186.857891
JOD 0.839889
JPY 183.519063
KES 153.939966
KGS 103.594234
KHR 4794.938126
KMF 491.612449
KPW 1066.148258
KRW 1730.03927
KWD 0.36358
KYD 0.99369
KZT 599.696388
LAK 25660.935532
LBP 106778.978995
LKR 368.751529
LRD 214.927175
LSL 18.932911
LTL 3.497842
LVL 0.716558
LYD 7.482204
MAD 10.81612
MDL 20.055745
MGA 5328.75048
MKD 61.509887
MMK 2488.068394
MNT 4224.768089
MOP 9.588717
MRU 47.577162
MUR 54.077512
MVR 18.314459
MWK 2067.635018
MXN 20.751444
MYR 4.669768
MZN 75.530403
NAD 18.932592
NGN 1654.756728
NIO 43.877925
NOK 11.494689
NPR 175.200353
NZD 1.973375
OMR 0.457075
PAB 1.192378
PEN 3.986667
PGK 5.10431
PHP 69.772884
PKR 333.562994
PLN 4.217072
PYG 7987.138359
QAR 4.347422
RON 5.089195
RSD 117.152186
RUB 90.544141
RWF 1739.763902
SAR 4.443236
SBD 9.538015
SCR 17.104588
SDG 712.542061
SEK 10.581202
SGD 1.50757
SHP 0.888764
SLE 28.815636
SLL 24840.661178
SOS 681.469978
SRD 45.074975
STD 24519.018157
STN 24.448799
SVC 10.432843
SYP 13101.273866
SZL 18.924811
THB 37.603637
TJS 11.131048
TMT 4.146132
TND 3.425967
TOP 2.852254
TRY 51.525118
TTD 8.095909
TWD 37.508269
TZS 3057.464743
UAH 51.10611
UGX 4263.000384
USD 1.184609
UYU 46.272704
UZS 14577.164634
VES 409.805368
VND 30762.5233
VUV 140.721447
WST 3.211216
XAF 654.588912
XAG 0.015713
XAU 0.000262
XCD 3.201465
XCG 2.148954
XDR 0.814081
XOF 654.575127
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.321978
ZAR 19.247058
ZMK 10662.910096
ZMW 23.400599
ZWL 381.44367
  • RBGPF

    1.3800

    83.78

    +1.65%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.76

    +0.21%

  • GSK

    0.9400

    51.6

    +1.82%

  • NGG

    0.2000

    85.27

    +0.23%

  • BCC

    0.5100

    80.81

    +0.63%

  • RELX

    -0.3700

    35.8

    -1.03%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    25.86

    +1.43%

  • RIO

    -4.1000

    91.03

    -4.5%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.65

    -0.41%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    60.68

    +0.76%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4300

    16

    -2.69%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.05

    -0.17%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.08

    +1.07%

  • AZN

    0.1800

    92.77

    +0.19%

  • BP

    -0.1600

    37.88

    -0.42%

India at 75: upending narratives and rewriting history
India at 75: upending narratives and rewriting history / Photo: Money SHARMA - AFP

India at 75: upending narratives and rewriting history

The palatial family home of India's first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, the freedom struggle stalwart and close confidant of Mahatma Gandhi, is now a museum where loyalists come to pay tribute.

Text size:

But 75 years after independence, that history is being rewritten across the country as the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) seeks to promote its own Hindu nationalist agenda.

Critics accuse the BJP of upending settled narratives to fit its outlook, promoting the roles of its ideological forebears, and downgrading the contributions of Muslims to Indian history and society.

The BJP ousted Nehru's Congress party at elections in 2014, after the dynasty he founded had dominated Indian politics for decades.

His daughter Indira Gandhi, who grew up in the house, and grandson Rajiv both went on to become prime ministers.

Today, whether the emperor Akbar –- of the Muslim Mughal dynasty that ruled India for 300 years –- won or lost a key battle against a revered Hindu king depends on which textbook is being used.

At the launch of a book on Hindu kings' resistance to the Mughals, home minister Amit Shah -- a key ally of Prime Minister Narendra Modi -- declared: "No one can stop us from writing the truth. We are now independent. We can write our own history."

And the city where Nehru's house stands has been renamed Prayagraj, after being known for 450 years as Allahabad, a moniker bestowed by Akbar.

According to Vinod Mishra, who has worked there for 15 years, the building's visitors illustrate the changing approaches to history.

"Earlier everyone came here in awe and admiration but now many look at the home, his belongings, and quip that he too made a lot of money like other [corrupt] politicians," Mishra told AFP.

Older visitors "still enter each room and reverentially touch the feet of Nehru's portraits", he said, but younger generations are more irreverent.

"It's fascinating to see that he had things like a tennis racket, tea kettle, a shaver and even went to London, which most people still can't afford," said engineering student Amar Yadav, 18.

- 'Imaginary barbaric past' -

Often accused of anti-Muslim rhetoric, BJP leaders have described the Mughals as Islamic invaders, increasing the anxieties of the country's 210-million-odd Muslims.

But they say the authors who dominated historiography after independence from Britain in 1947 glorified conquerors over local kings and achievements.

And they say they over-emphasised Congress's role in the independence struggle, denying the more revolutionary or nationalist figures the BJP reveres their due.

Modi often criticises Nehru -- blaming him for the festering dispute over Kashmir, or losing a 1962 war to China -- to target Congress, still the main opposition party and controlled by the Nehru-Gandhi family.

The BJP's efforts to rewrite the past "aren't just about history but securing its own place in the present for the next few decades", S. Irfan Habib, a New Delhi-based historian told AFP.

"It's dangerous as these books mould young minds who'll grow with a very different understanding of India," Habib said.

"The government in power has full majority and there's nothing much one can do," he added.

Contemporary history is also being reworked, say Indian media: a top official body slashed school textbook content this year.

Among the deletions were the Gujarat riots that killed at least 1,000 people, mostly Muslims, in 2002 -- when Modi was the state's premier.

It was one of India's worst outbreaks of religious violence in recent times, and one removed passage reportedly warned that such events "alert us to the dangers involved in using religious sentiments for political purposes".

- 'Insult to India' -

The states of Haryana and Gujarat have announced the addition of a Hindu holy book to the school curriculum, despite the education system being secular.

A Karnataka textbook incorporated a speech by the founder of the right-wing Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh, the BJP's ideological fountainhead.

Rahul Gandhi, Nehru's great-grandson and a Congress party leader, slammed it as an "attempt to teach children saffronised lessons... an insult to India, which is the cradle of diversity".

Saffron, the sacred colour of Hindu monks' robes, is a part of the BJP flag.

Another book in the same state claimed that Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, a right-wing revolutionary jailed by the British, made regular excursions from his jail cell on the wings of small birds.

Savarkar's biographer Vikram Sampath condemned the "stupid insertion".

He is one of the young historians who support "decolonisation" of Indian history, but want to see quality maintained during revisions.

India was "slowly maturing as a democracy", he said, hoping for a time when "historical characters won't get caught in the slug fest of contemporary electoral politics".

- 'Greatest con job' -

For some, the history textbook changes fit into the ruling party's agenda of appealing to the country's Hindu majority.

The BJP has backed several big-ticket projects including a grand temple corridor in Varanasi, a mega statue to a Hindu warrior king who successfully challenged the Mughals, and a grand temple at the Ayodhya site where zealots destroyed a Mughal-era mosque three decades ago.

Now emboldened right-wing groups have laid fresh claims to several Muslim sites they say were built atop temples destroyed during Islamic rule, raising fears of violence.

Some of them question the contributions of non-Hindu rulers, and the merits of secularism in an overwhelmingly Hindu country of about 1.4 billion people.

"What did the Islamic invasions do for this country in 1,400 years of onslaught?" said Omendra Ratnu, who wrote the book launched by home minister Shah.

"They built three buildings -- Taj Mahal, Red Fort and the Qutub Minar -- and all three are disputed, have Hindu claims," he told AFP.

Mainstream Indian history was a "con job ... by some very crafty and wicked people", he said, adding textbook revisions were "baby steps -- but steps in the right direction".

P.Gashi--NZN