The campus of Nalanda was inaugurated formally by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 19th June (2024) in the presence of Ambassadors of many countries like Myanmar, Srilanka, Vietnam, Japan, Korea among others. Most of these countries are the ones where Buddhism was spread by the preachers sent by Emperor Ashoka.
Initially, the idea of reviving Nalanda as a premier global university was floated by the then President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam in 2006 and later ratified by Bihar Assembly and UPA Government.
Addressing the inaugural ceremony, Modi stated that the Nalanda University was burnt by foreign invaders in the 12th Century. He was just parroting the popular perception that Bakhtiyar Khilji, the courtier of Muhammad Ghori had burnt it. This perception is an add-on to the other such ‘social common sense’ that Muslim invaders destroyed the Hindu Temples and spread Islam by force.
Incidentally, the propagation of these understandings began with the introduction of communal historiography by the British and later picked up with big gusto by the communal streams, Muslim communalism and Hindu Communalism.
While the propagation of myths by the Muslim League against Hindus is playing havoc in Pakistan, in India, it is RSS which played this up, leading to the hate against Muslims in our society to the extent that Sardar Vallabh Bhai Patel had to write this about RSS:
“All their speeches were full of communal poison. It was not necessary to spread poison in order to enthuse the Hindus and organize for their protection. As a final result of the poison, the country had to suffer the sacrifice of the invaluable life of Gandhiji.”
When Modi was mouthing that Nalanda was burnt by the foreign invaders, this falls in the same category of falsehoods which are used to spread the hatred against Muslims.
Nalanda had a glorious residential university, spread out in a large area in Rajgir Bihar, built by Gupta’s in the sixth century. It was a Buddhist center as archeological evidence shows.
Primarily, it was for study of Buddhist philosophy, in addition Brahminical scriptures, mathematics, logic and health science were also taught. Its tradition of open discussion and logic were so high that it attracted students and scholars from various destinations. It was supported by the Kings, later with the coming of Pala and Senaa dynasty its patronage was reduced and withdrawn. Patronage was redirected to new Universities, like Odantpuri and Vikramshila in particular. This was the beginning of the decline of Nalanda.
Who set fire to the great library housing millions of books, manuscripts and rare collections?
While it is being attributed to Khilji, particularly after the coming of the British, there is no single primary source mentioning this. Khilji’s primary goal was to loot and plunder. Enroute from Ayodhya to Bengal, he did attack Kila-i-Bihar thinking this is a fort with wealth. On the way, he plundered wealth and killed people. Nalanda was not on this route, rather far away from the route, and he had no reason to attack a university.
Most of the primary sources related to history of that time do not mention Khilaji coming to Nalanda. Tabakat-a-Nasiri, written by Minhaj-e-Siraj, has no mention on these lines. Two Tibetan Scholars, Dharmaswamin and Sumpa were keenly studying the history of India, particularly related to Buddhism, in their books also, Khilji is not mentioned as the one who either came to Nalanda or burnt it. Taranath, another well known Buddhist scholar from Tibet also does not mention any such fact.
Nor do the Indian historians Jadunath Sarkar and R C Majumdar endorse Nalanda being destroyed by Khilji. Interestingly, Buddhist structures of importance like Ajanta, Ellora, and Sanchi stupa were also not the subject of ire of the ‘invaders’!
So how Nalanda got burnt and lost its historical importance. Many stories abound apart from the Khilji destroying it, being most prevalent.
Prof. D. N. Jha, the authority on Ancient Indian History in his essay, ‘Responding to a communalist’ in compilation of his essays (Against the Grain, Manohar 2020, pp 185 onwards) gives an excellent summary of the relevant part of the book ‘History of Buddhism in Indian’ by Tibetan monk Taranath.
“During the consecration ceremony of the Temple built by Kakutsiddha at Nalendra [Nalanda] ‘the young naughty Shamans threw slops at tirthika beggars (Brahmins, added)… Angered by this, one of them went for arranging livelihood and the other sat in the deep pit and engaged himself in ‘Surya Sadhana)… He performed a sacrifice and scattered the charmed ashes all around which resulted in the miraculous fire.”
History of Indian Logic p. 516, cited by D R Patil, ‘The Antiquarian Remnant’ in Bihar says that this incidence refers to the actual scuffle between Buddhist and Brahmanical mendicants. The latter propitiated the Sun God, performed a sacrifice and threw the living ambers and ashes from the sacrificial pit to Buddhist temples. This is what led to the burning of the great collection of books at that time.
We also need to register that this was a period when the attacks against Buddhism were coming up as the resurgence of Brahmanism was on course in a big way. After the period of Ashoka, when India became Buddhist in large measure, the notions of equality ruled in a big way.
Due to this, the Brahamanical rituals declined leading to a big dissatisfaction among Brahimins. A bit later, when Ashoka’s grandson, Brihadratha, was ruling, his commander-in-chief Pushyamitra Shung murdered Brihadratha and became the ruler unleashing an anti Buddhist persecution.
All reliable sources point to the fact of Brahmins burning the library as revenge. Bringing in Bakhtiar Khilji fits into the general Islamophobic propaganda against Muslims, and at the same time, hides the true story of persecution of Buddhism during that period.
What we need to preserve from the Buddhist period is a spirit of free debate and logic as the underlying base of education. In present times, our universities are being stifled by the imposition of a culture of obedience and subordination in the matters of academia.
The knowledge cannot be imbibed or developed under such conditions. If we can learn this from the tragic history of the struggle between Buddhism and Brahmanism in India, it will be a crucial aspect of the development of academia in the country.
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