Friday, March 24, 2017

Ayodhya-The First Communal Battle Of 1853 & 1855



Before 1992 Mosque demolition Ayodhya was  always been a hotbed  of religious- social conflict. In past it witnessed a major "clash of civilization" styled battle in 1853 and 1855 . 
Oudh Court Scene




The Historical  Setting  The weakened state of the Mughal empire led to an internal power struggle for succession after Aurangzeb's death and allowed for other rulers to take regions that the empire could no longer  defend .
The decline of Mughal empire sparked several Islamic revivalist movement on the subcontinent aimed at explaining the cause of the empire's decline and the path to redemption. Two Islamic revivalist leaders are especially important for understanding the milieu in which Sunni  Muslims of Ayodhya rose to challenge the Hindu presence in the city. Shah Wali Allah of Delhi (1702-62) argued that the Mughal Empire had fallen into decline because its leaders had turned away from the true path of Islam. Restoration lay in reviving their interpretation of pure Islam, modeled after the example of the prophet and his companions. Specifically, reviving Islam required a return to Sharia's law, formulated by freshly applying the words and deeds of the prophet as recorded in the Sunnah. As a member of the Naqsshbandiyah Sufi order, he argued that revival also required reforming sufi practices to exclude the worship of saints' tombs and rituals that incorporated Hindu elements. Wali Allah called for Jihad against threats to the faith, encouraging Muslims to take up arms against innovative practices similarly what Osama bin laden video graphed Jehad inspired messages to his followers.
Shah Wali Allah's agenda paved the way for the creation of a jihad movement of Sunni Muslims under the leadership of Sayyid Ahmad of Bareilly (1786-1831). Like Shah Wali Allah, Sayyid Ahmad was a member of the Naqshbandia order, in addition to two other prominent Sufi orders, the Chisti and Qadiri. Prior to forming his jehadi movement, Sayyid Ahmad was trooper under the pindari chieftain Ahir Khan, which the British defeated in 1818. In that same year, he founded a revivalist movement called "the Path of Muhammad" and asserted that true Muslims should retreat from the current social and political milieu of their surroundings and creat a new polity. In 1826 after organizing a a band of mujahideen, he decalred war against Sikhs in the North-West Frontier (current Pakistan), with the aim of capturing their land and establishing a Muslim stronghold; this offensive , however, ended in failure. In 1830 Sayyid Ahmed defeated the Shia ruler of neighboring  Peshawar, Yar Muhammad Khan, and declared himself the new Muslim Caliph. In 1831 with an army of around six hundred, Sayyid Ahmad tried  again to push the Sikhs out of Hazara and Kashmir but was killed in battle. Surviving members of the path of Muhammad continued to hide out in the northwestern territories and fought against the British in the frontiers wars of 1897-98 before finally being subdued.



 
The Ayodhya Battle and Outcome  
 In 1722 with Nawab Burhan ul Mulk Sa'adat Khan  born in 1680 Nishapur, Khurasan, Safavid dynasty, Persia Shia Muslim Kings emerged and succeeded the Mughal rule of Awadh, a    region that included the cities of Ayodhya, Faizabad and Lucknow. The Nawab's rule maintained political cooperation with various Hindu elites, and Hindu and Muslim leaders visited each others's sacred sites. It was during this time that the presence of different Hindu monastic orders flourished, and from the eighteenth century onward Ayodhya became an important pilgrimage site for Hindus.
The first recorded violence between Hindus and Muslims over Ayodhya occurred between 1853 and 1855.The kingdom of Awadh was under the rule of Shia Nawab Wajid ali shah, who reigned from 1847 until British annexation of the site in 1856.

In 1853 a band of Sunni Muslims in the region, headed by Ghulam Husssain motivated by earlier revivalist Political Islamic movement , rose up against the Shia ruler and marched on Ayodhya, claiming that Hindus had destroyed  a mosque to build the Hindu Hanumangarhi  temple, An order of Naga Sadhus, Hindu warrior monks, defeated the Sunnis and around seventy Muslims were killed and buried in the graveyard next to the Babri mosque. Following hostilities, the Shia nawab king, together with the British, attempted to resolve the dispute by by investigating Muslims claims that Hindus had destroyed a mosque, they concluded that there had not been a mosque on that site prior to the construction of the Babri  mosque.

In 1855 The British investigation , however did not placate the Sunni leader Maulvi  Amiruudiin also known as Amir Ali who called for Jehad against the Hindus of Ayodhya in 1855 and mobilized a band of 2000 muslims. A combined force of British, Nawab and Hindu troops stopped the group en route killing a reported 120 to 700 before finally defeating Amir Ali troops. Amir Ali was assassinated shortly after the attacks, his head was given as a gift to the Nawab king, and his body was buried in the graveyard next to the Babri mosque .The British officially annexed Awadh Shortly after the uprising erected the fence around the mosque and allowed Hindu to worship on a platform outside the fence. 

Ayodhya Graphics