People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIV
No.
41 October 10, 2010 |
Statement on Ayodhya
Verdict
The
following is the statement
issued by SAHMAT on October 1, 2010
THE judgement
delivered by
the Lucknow Bench of the Allahabad High Court in the Ram
Janmabhoomi-Babri
Masjid Dispute on September 30, 2010 has
raised serious concerns because of the way history, reason and secular
values
have been treated in it. First of all, the view that the Babri Masjid
was built
at the site of a Hindu temple, which has been maintained by two of the
three
judges, takes no account of all the evidence contrary to this fact
turned up by
the Archaeological Survey of India’s own excavations: the presence of
animal
bones throughout as well as of the use of ‘surkhi’ and lime mortar (all
characteristic of Muslim presence) rule out the possibility of a Hindu
temple
having been there beneath the mosque. The ASI’s controversial report
which
claimed otherwise on the basis of ‘pillar bases’ was manifestly
fraudulent in
its assertions since no pillars were found, and the alleged existence
of
‘pillar bases’ has been debated by archaeologists. It is now imperative
that
the site notebooks, artefacts and other material evidence relating to
the ASI’s
excavation be made available for scrutiny by scholars, historians and
archaeologists.
No proof has
been offered
even of the fact that a Hindu belief in Lord Rama’s birth-site being
the same
as the site of the mosque had at all existed before very recent times,
let
alone since ‘time immemorial’. Not only is the judgement wrong in
accepting the
antiquity of this belief, but it is gravely disturbing that such
acceptance
should then be converted into an argument for deciding property
entitlement.
This seems to be against all principles of law and equity.
The most
objectionable
part of the judgement is the legitimation it provides to violence and
muscle-power. While it recognises the forcible break-in of 1949 which
led to
placing the idols under the mosque-dome, it now recognises, without any
rational basis, that the transfer put the idols in their rightful
place. Even
more astonishingly, it accepts the destruction of the mosque in 1992
(in
defiance, let it be remembered, of the Supreme Court’s own orders) as
an act
whose consequences are to be accepted, by transferring the main parts
of the
mosque to those clamouring for a temple to be built.
For all these
reasons we
cannot but see the judgement as yet another blow to the secular fabric
of our
country and the repute of our judiciary. Whatever happens next in the
case
cannot, unfortunately, make good what the country has lost.
The
signatories to the
statement include the following:
Romila
Thapar, K M
Shrimali, D N Jha, K N Panikkar, Amiya Kumar Bagchi, Iqtidar Alam Khan,
Shireen
Moosvi, Jaya Menon, Irfan Habib, Suvira Jaiswal, Kesavan Veluthat, D
Mandal, Ramakrishna
Chatterjee, Aniruddha Ray, Arun Bandopadhyaya,
A Murali, V Ramakrishna, Arjun Dev, R C Thakran, H C
Satyarthi, Amar
Farooqui, B P Sahu, Biswamoy Pati, Lata Singh, Utsa Patnaik, Zoya
Hasan, Prabhat
Patnaik, C P Chandrasekhar, Jayati Ghosh,
Archana Prasad,
Shakti Kak, V M Jha, Prabhat Shukla, Indira Arjun Dev,
Mahendra Pratap
Singh, Ram Rahman, M K Raina, Sohail Hashmi, Parthiv Shah, Madan Gopal
Singh, Madhu
Prasad, Vivan Sundaram, Geeta Kapur, Rajendra Prasad, Anil Chandra,
Rahul Verma,
Indira Chandrasekhar, Sukumar Muralidharan, Supriya Verma, N K
Sharma,
S Z H Jafri, Farhat Hasan, Shalini Jain, Santosh Rai, Najaf Haider, R
Gopinath,
R P Bahuguna, G P Sharma, Sitaram Roy, O P Jaiswal, K K Sharma.