Destruction Of Hindu Temples By Muslims - Part II
The following
is a continuation of last
week's article, Destruction Of Hindu Temples
By Muslims - Part I. In this article you will
once again notice the Muslim Historians glorify
the crimes committed by the Muslims in India.
As stated and proved in my previous articles
the glorification of such crimes has been
recorded because the Koran promotes and supports
such criminal acts.
The following is a presentation of the literary
evidence available to us. This evidence stated below
is in chronological order with reference to the time
at which a particular work was written.
Name Of The Book:
Diwan-i-Salman
Name Of The Historian:
Khawajah Masud bin Sa'd bin Salman
About The Author: Khawajah Masud bin Sa'd
bin Salman was a poet.
He wrote poems in praise
of the Ghaznavid Sultans-
Masu'd, Ibrahim and Bahram
Shah. He died sometime
between AD 1126 and 1131.
The Muslim Rulers He Wrote About:
Sultan Abu'l Muzaffar Ibrahim (AD 1059-1099)
"As power and the strength of a lion was
bestowed upon Ibrahim by the Almighty, he
made over to him the well-populated country
of Hindustan and gave him 40,000 valiant
horsemen to take the country, in which
there were more than 1000 rais...The army
of the king destroyed at one time a thousand
temples of idols, which had each been built
for more than a thousand years. How can I
describe the victories of the King..."
Jalandhar (Punjab)
"The narrative of any battles eclipses the
stories of Rustam and Isfandiyar...By morning
meal, not one soldier, not one Brahmin
remained unkilled or uncaptured. Their heads
were levelled with the ground with falming
fire..Thou has secured the victory to the
country and to religion, for amongst the
Hindus this achievement will be remembered
till the day of resurrection."
Malwa (Madhya Pradesh)
"..On this journey, the army detsroyed
a thousand idol-temples and thy elephants
trampled over more than a hundred strongholds.
Thou didst march thy army to Ujjan; ..
The lip of infidelity became dry through
fear of thee, the eye of plural-worship
became blind.."
Name Of The Book:
Chach-Namah
Name Of The Historian:
Mohammed Al bin Hamid
bin Abu Bakr Kufi
About The Author: The Persian history was
translated from arabic by
the above mentioned author
in the time of Nasiruddin
Qabacha, a slave of Mohammed
Ghori.
The Muslim Rulers He Wrote About:
Mohammed bin Qasim (AD 712-715)
Siwistan and Sisam (Sindh)
Mohammed bin Qasem wrote to al-Hajjaj, the
governor of Iraq:
"The forts of Siwistan and
Sism have been already taken. The nephew
of Dahir, his warriors and principla officers
have been despatched, and infidels converted
to Islam or destroyed. Instead of idol temples,
mosques and other places of worship have been
built, pulpits have been erected, the Khutba
is read, the call to prayers is raised so
that devotions are performed at sacred hours."
Multan (Punjab)
.."Mohammed Qasem arose and with his
counsellors, guards and attendants, went to
the temple. He saw there an idol made of gold.
and its two eye were bright red rubies.
"..Muhammed Qasem ordered the idol to be
taken up. Two hundred and thirty "mans"
of gold were brought to the treasury together
with the gems and pearls and treasures which
were obtained from the plunder of Multan. "
Name Of The Book: Jamiu'l-Hikayat
Name Of The Historian: Maulana Nuruddin
Muhammed `Ufi
About The Author: The author was born in or
near the city of Bukhara
in Transoxiana. He came to
India and lived in Delhi
for some time in the reign
of Shamsu'd-Din Iltutmish
(AD 1210-1236)
The Muslim Rulers He Wrote About:
Amru bin Laith (AD 879-900)
Sakawand (Afghanistan)
"It is related that Amru Lais conferred the
governorship of Zabulistan on Fardaghan and
sent him there at the head of four thousand
horses. There was a large Hindu place of worship
in that country, which was called Sakawand
and people used to come on pilgrimage from
the most remote parts of Hindustan to the
idols of that place. When Fardaghan arrived
in Zabulistan he led his army against it,
took the temple, broke the idols in pieces
and overthrew the idolators..."
Name Of The Book: Taju'l-Ma'sir
Name Of The Historian: Sadru'd-Din
Muhammed Hasan Nizamii
About The Author: The author was born at
Nishapur in Khurusan. He
had to leave his ancestral
place because of the Mongol
invasion. He came to India
and started writing his
history in AD 1205.
The Muslim Rulers He Wrote About:
Sultan Muhammed Ghuri (AD 1175-1206)
Ajmer (Rajasthan)
"He destroyed the pillars and foundations
of the idol temples and built in their
stead mosques and colleges, and the precepts
of Islam, and the customs of the law were
divulged and established..."
Kuhram and Samana (Punjab)
"The Government of the fort of Kohram and
Samana were made over by the Sultan to
Kutuu-din..He purged by his sword the land
of Hind from the filth of infidelity and
vice, and freed it from the thorn of
God-plurality, and the impurity of idol-worship
and by his royal vigour and intrepidity, left
not one temple standing..."
Meerut (Uttar Pradesh)
"Kutub-d din marched from Kohran and when he
arrived at Meerut which is one of the
celebrated forts of the country of Hind, for
the strength of its foundations and
superstructure, and its ditch, which was
as broad as the ocean and fathomless- an army
joined him, sent by the dependent chiefs of
the country. The fort was captured, and a
Kotwal was appointed to take up his station
in the fort, and all the idol temples were
converted into mosques."
Delhi
"He then marched and encamped under the
fort of Delhi...The city and its vicinity
were freed from idols and idol-worhips,
and in the sanctuaries of the images of the
Gods, nosques were raised by the worshippers
of one God.
Kutub-d din built the Jami Masjid at Delhi
and adorned it with stones and gold obtained
from the temples which had been demolished
by the elephants, and covered it with
inscriptions in Toghra, containing the
divine commands."
Varanasi (Uttar Pradesh)
"From that place (Asni) the royal armi
proceeded towards Benares which is the
center of the country of Hind and here they
destroyed nearly 1000 temples,
and raised mosques on their foundations
and the knowledge of the law became
promulgated, and the foundations of religion
were established.."
Aligarh (Uttar Pradesh)
"There was a certain tribe in the
neighbourhood of Kol which had..occasioned
much trouble..Three bastions were raised
as high as heaven with their heads, and their
carcases became the food of beasts of prey.
That tract was freed from idols and
idol-worship and the foundation of infidelity
were destroyed"..
Bayana (Rajasthan)
"When Kutub-d din heard of Sultan's march
from Ghazna, he was much rejoiced and
advanced as far as Hansi to meet him..
In the year AH 592 (AD 1196), they marched
towards Thangar, and the center of idolatry
and perdition became the abode of glory
and splendour.."
Kalinjar (Uttar Pradesh)
"In the year AH 599 (Ad 1202), Kutub-d din
proceeded to the investment Kalinjar, on
which expedition he was accompanied by the
Sahib-Kiran, Shamsu-d din Altmash... The
temples were converted into mosques and
abodes of goodness, and the ejaculations
of bead counters and voices of summoners to
prayer ascended to high heaven, and the
very name of idolatry was annihilated.."
Sultan Shamsu'd-Din Iltutmish (AD 1210-1236)
Delhi
"The Sultan then returned from Jalor to
Delhi..and after his arrival 'not a vestige
or name remained of idol temples which had
raised their heads on high; and the light
of faith shone out from the darkness of
infidelity..and the moon of religion and
the state became resplendent from the heaven
of prosperity and glory."
Name Of The Book: Kamilu't-Tawarikh
Name Of The Historian: Ibn Asir
About The Author: The author was born in
AD 1160 in the Jazirat ibn
Umar, an island on the
Tigris above Mosul.
The Muslim Rulers he Wrote About:
Khalifa Al-Mahdi (AD 775-785)
Barada (Gujrat)
"In the year 159 (AD 776) Al Mahdi sent
an army by sea under Abdul Malik
bin Shahabu'l Musamma'i to India..They
proceeded on their way and at length
disembarked at Barada. When they reached the
place they laid siege on it..The town was
reduced to extremities and God prevailed
over it in the same year. The people were
forbidden to worship the Budd, which the
Muhammadans burned."
Name Of The Book: Tarikh-i-Jahan-Kusha
Name Of The Historian: Alaud-Din Malik ibn
Bahaud-Din Muhammed Juwaini
About The Author: The author was born a native
of Juwain in Khurasan near Nishapur.
He was the Halaku during the Mongol
campaign against the Ismai'lians
and was later appointed the governor
of Baghdad. He fell from grace
and was imprisoned at Hamadan.
The Muslim Rulers he Wrote About:
Sultan Jalalud-Din Mankbarni (AD 1222-1231)
Debal (Sindh)
"The Sultan then went towards Dewal and
darbela and Jaisi... The Sultan raised
Masjid at Dewal, on the spot where an idol
temple stood."
Name Of The Book: Mifathu'l-Futuh
Name Of The Historian: Amir Khusru
About The Author: The author, Amir Khusru was
born at Delhi in 1253. His father
occupied high positions in the reigns
of Sultan Shamsu'd Din Iltutmish
(AD 1210-1236) and his successors.
Reputed to be the dearest disciple of
Shykh Nizamuddin Auliya, he became the
lick-spittle of whoever came out
victorious in the contest for the throne
at Delhi. He became the court poet of
Balban's successor, Sultan Kaiqbad.
The Muslim Rulers he wrote About:
Sultan Jajalu'd-Din Khalji (AD 1290-1296)
Jhain (Rajasthan)
"The Sultan reached Jhain in the afternoon
of the third day and stayed in the palace
of the Raya..he greatly enjoyed his stay for
some time. Coming out, ho took a round of
gardens and temples. The idols he saw amazed him
.. Next day he got those idols of gold smashed
with stones. The pillars of wood were burnt
down by his order... A cry rose from the temples
as if a second Mahmud has taken birth. Two
idols were made of brass, one of which
weighed nearly thousand "mans".He got
both of them broken, and the pieces were
distributed among his people so that they
may throw them at the door of Masjid
on their return to Delhi."
Sultan Alaud-Din Khilji (AD 1296-1316)
Vidisha (Madhya Pradesh)
"When he advanced from the capital
of Karra, the Hindus, in alarm,
descended into the earth like ants. He
departed towards the garden of Behar
to dye that soil with blood as red as tulip.
He cleared the road road to Ujjain of vile
wretches, and created consternation in
Bhilsan. When he affected his conquests
in that country, hew drew out of the river
the idols which had been conceled in it.
Devagiri (Maharshtra)
"But see the mercy with which he regarded
the broken-hearted, for, after seizing
the rai, he set him free again. He destroyed
the temples of the idolaters, and erected
pulpits and arches for mosques. "