| 'Has Allah told
them to fight all the time?'
(Interview with Kanchi Shankaracharya Jayendra Saraswati - Part I of III) Author: Publication: Rediff Date: July 16, 2003 URL: http://www.rediff.com/news/2003/jul/16inter.htm The Shankaracharya of Kanchi Kamakoti Peetam, Sri Jayendra Saraswati's negotiations with the All India Muslim Personal Law Board over the Ram Janambhoomi-Babri Masjid site in Ayodhya, have run into rough water. In an exclusive interview with Managing Editor Saisuresh Sivaswamy at his Mutt in Kanchipuram, in Tamil Nadu, on Tuesday, the seer explains what went wrong, and how the talks could get back on track. Q.: What is the extent of your, your Mutt's involvement
in Ayodhya? Is it only the temple?
Apart from that we have also set up a small information technology project in Ayodhya, in which both Hindus and Muslims, men and women, participate. We have taken on rent a small place there, hired two teachers to teach them IT, and help them set up on their own by giving them whatever help they may need. One batch is over and the second batch commenced on the 6th of this month. We want to see the people of Ayodhya happy. There is no point in fighting over Ram, Krishna, this god or that, in Ayodhya. Feed the stomach, Swamigal, they say. They are now able to look after themselves, their family, with dignity. Both communities are living with dignity, which is important. Q.: But what about the main problem in Ayodhya?
I am talking about the specific problem over the Ram temple. You and the All India Muslim Personal Law Board had this exchange of letters, which raised a lot of hope all around, and then came your letter dated July 1, in which you raised Kashi and Mathura over which the Board expressed its dismay. Why? Leave their feelings alone. OK, I agree, maybe I need not have mentioned Kashi and Mathura, I don't want them either, but what about the other points in my letter? They have used this as a pretext to ignore the other points mentioned by me. Q.: What else did you say?
We wrote to them that the undisputed and disputed areas, which were separate earlier, have become one, is not in existence anymore. They were separate, which is why we had asked for it, but now there is no separation of disputed and undisputed areas. In the last developments of the last few months the two parts have become one. Q.: What are these developments you referred to?
Q.: On what basis did you ask for the disputed
land?
Two, today, Lord Ram is already seated there, although in a small jhopdi, it is the reality. As of today if you think anyone can move him from there, it is impossible. Just as the undisputed and disputed areas have become one, it is also evident that Lord Ram has occupied the site. If he is moved, there will be mass protests, so he cannot be moved. Even a human being, over twelve years, acquires property, family etc. Also, whether occupied land or unoccupied, if someone has resided in a place for twelve years the law recognizes him as the owner. But we told them, we are not here to claim ownership. It may be yours but we are asking you to give it up in our favour. We can also go the law's way but we are asking you. Next, there are already many mosques in that town, some 20. But only eight have prayers offered there still, the others are in a state of disrepair. No one's come forward to repair them, nor has the government given permission for it. In this situation if you erect another mosque who do you expect to come and pray there? You build a temple or mosque when there are people around. Like, when you build a colony you build a Vinayak temple. But you don't erect a temple just because the land is yours, you build where there is scope for public worship. Similarly there is no need for public worship in a mosque there, where will the people come from? For this reason also you must give in to us, we said. More, we all accept Allah as great, the supreme power. We pray to such a god, in a mosque worthy of him, or in a holy place, or even when you find the time and place. But here is a mosque named after Babar, who came here, fought and won, so you decide, is he of importance, or is Allah of importance? Allah is supreme, but do we rate Babar who came here and fought as equally important? This fact of his war, whenever it was fought in history, will be remembered forever. If you want the ill will to go, remove Babar. Otherwise, his memory will keep coming up, and the problem will keep recurring. Lastly, we all agree that communal harmony is needed. The Wakf Board has given up so much land in so many places, for schools, colleges, etc. It is nothing new. Given that, if you give up this site for the sake of communal harmony, you will come to occupy an exalted position. Because, although only a handful of Muslims may be terrorists they have given the entire community a bad name. Because of them the general perception is that a Muslim is someone who will only fight. But, if you were to think in a spirit of accommodation, you will enhance the reputation of Indian Muslims across the world, as a people who are willing to give in for communal harmony. I had written all this to them, in my last letter. Q.: Which led to the Board digging its heels in.
But why Kashi and Mathura?
Q.: But it is that which apparently created all
the problems.
Q.: Yes, there seems to be a hint of a threat
in your second letter.
When you say, 'if you don't do this I will kill you, harm you' that is a threat, but we are not doing it. To consider well-meaning advice as a threat is the wrong approach. Anyway, let it be, we have no such desire in our minds. In all fairness, their reply should have been to question why I am asking for the disputed area instead of the undisputed area. But they never wanted to know! If they had asked me I would have told them that the two have become one now, both are a problem today. Since the whole land has now become disputed, where do we start from if not the disputed area so that the non-disputed area also comes out? This has to be faced, but no one wants to face it. Q.: So what is the next stage in the negotiations?
Q.: But what do you expect to see from them?
Second, they have announced that no one has the right to give away Allah's land. Even during the various Muslim empires they have given grants to various temples and Mutts, including land. Grants were given to the Sringeri Mutt, our [Kanchi] Mutt, to the Srirangam temple and many others. One of them even built a temple! That proves there's nothing that says Allah's property cannot be given away. Apart from what the Wakf Board owns everything else belongs to Allah. If the world is Allah's property how can they be different with just one piece of land? They have not answered that properly. They had clarifications of my first letter, but no doubts over the second letter. Why? So how did they decide Allah's property cannot be given, how did they decide that we are threatening them? Did I ask anything for myself? Since I mentioned Kashi and Mathura they should have wanted to know what will happen later, who will ask, when, how, shall we talk about it now. Instead of that they decide that Allah's property cannot be given away, so how do they want to solve the problem? The way we say everything is Bhagwan's they believe Allah's property is all over, fine, but how can they say they cannot give only that portion? What, they don't buy and sell shops and houses? Whose property is that, Allah's or theirs? According to the Quran, the world belongs to Allah, not one bit of land here or there. In countries like Pakistan mosques have been razed, only recently one was pulled down, but did you see any protest over it? In Afghanistan and Iraq many were ruined in the war. Such questions should be debated upon and done with. Instead, they say it is Allah's property and get stuck on one point: you raised Kashi and Mathura which we don't like. Finally they say looking at their image, honour, respect, dignity, their consensus, the consensus of all Indians they will consider [my proposal]. They have taken a minority status, and now talk about Indian consensus? Let them then give up the minority status. Q.: The counterpoint to what you say is, why can't
Hindus show their large heart, the oft-repeated line that all faiths are
equal, by giving away the site to Muslims? Why are you stuck on it?
We were discussing this problem, so I went to an Arabic school there to talk to them, putting my prestige aside so that something positive may come about. Communal harmony can come about if both are in agreement. Has Allah told them to fight all the time, don't they have a spirit of give and take? Where can they go apart from India? We all have to live together right here. Q.: Don't you agree Muslims harbour a sense of
grievance over December 6, 1992, when the Babri Masjid was pulled down
by Hindus?
December 6 cannot last forever. How many people must be upset over Babar's mosque in that sacred site? You have been grieving for 10 years, many people have grouses going back hundreds of years. After all he defeated us and built that structure, didn't he? Both sides have grievances, and both sides should get over them, one can't live that way. ============================ Show me another Janmabhoomi and
we will go there
In this, the second part of an exclusive interview with rediff.com Managing Editor Saisuresh Sivaswamy, the Shankaracharya of Kanchi, Sri Jayendra Saraswati Swamigal explains how the Ayodhya issue could be resolved. Q.: Archaeological excavations have been going
on at the Babri Masjid site in Ayodhya, but indications so far are that
a temple was not pulled down to build the mosque. Doesn't it puncture Hindu
claims that Ram's temple was razed to erect the mosque?
To give you another example, you believe that you will get paid after working for 30 days -- isn't that also faith? Setting out to prove faith is an impossible task. Faith is faith, proof is proof. Can you prove there's god? That is faith. Can we prove Allah exists? That is faith. Can we prove Ram exists? That is faith. Because we believe in the Quran we believe in Allah; we believe in the Ramayan, so we believe in Ram. Faith is not to be tested and proved. Q.: My question remains. For long the case was
built up that a Ram temple was demolished to build the mosque. Now it may
so happen that it wasn't the case.
Q.: Exactly. There are other such sites too in
Ayodhya.
Second, it was the custom to build a mosque on our holy sites. In that sense they seem to be the cause behind our faith (laughs). We know that they had built their mosques on sites important to us. They thus indirectly contributed to our faith growing. Q.: You had said there are enough mosques in Ayodhya,
so there is no need for another. Conversely, isn't it true that there are
enough temples in India and there is no need for another one?
Q.: My earlier question remains. Are further talks
possible?
Q.: Will there ever be a solution to the Ayodhya
problem?
Q.: What is your impression of AIMPLB President
Maulana Rabey Hasan Nadvi, with who you have been interacting?
There are many people like him among Muslims, they must come together and overcome the negative forces. Such people are not there among Muslims alone. They need to be overcome. The good people must stand up and do it, for the sake of communal harmony, nation, unity, for the good of everyone. There is no point being adamant on a point and calibrating your replies on that basis. If you want to, then better to do it face to face. Let's talk about it, and not through the media. Q.: But why have you been communicating through
letters, why not face to face?
They could have formed a subcommittee, decided on a face to face, done that, and then asked for a letter. They could have done that also, but did not. Or, they could have said on receiving the second letter that some points have been raised, let us seek clarifications, talk face to face. If their intention was above board they would have done that. Q.: What about reports that the next round of
negotiations have begun?
============================ 'We erect memorials for Nehru
and Indira, and we can't have one for Ram?'
Sri Jayendra Saraswati Swamigal, the Kanchi Shankaracharya, spoke to rediff.com Managing Editor Saisuresh Sivaswamy for an hour, explaining his stand on the Ayodhya issue, and how it can be resolved. An interview like none other he has granted in recent times. Read on for the concluding segment of an exclusive and informative interview: Q.: Out of the five Sankara Matts (the other four
being in Badrinath, Dwarka, Puri and Sringeri), you have taken the lead
in trying to solve the problem. Are the other four Shankaracharyas with
you in your initiative?
Except, of course, the politician (laughs). Q.: There is also doubt over the status of the
Kanchi Mutt itself. Adi Sankara, goes one belief, founded only four Mutts,
and the Kanchi Mutt is self-proclaimed.
Q.: One thing has always puzzled people. What
is your interest in Ayodhya? Why are you involved in the negotiations?
Q.: But hasn't the issue been politicized?
In fact, when Chandra Shekhar was prime minister he had brought a delegation that included Ali Miyan here for discussions, the Periyavar [the late senior Shankaracharya Chandrasekharendra Saraswati] was alive then, and I was also around. In this town, in this Mutt! He was the man who started the whole thing. But today he suddenly finds me political. Then he needed the Shankaracharya, today when he is out of power he has no need! Q.: Does such criticism hurt you? The Vishwa Hindu
Parishad, for instance, said you, a Saivite guru, was interfering in the
Ram temple issue.
Let me go a step ahead. Many of those on the Ram Janambhoomi Nyas are from Ayodhya. There are members of the Ramnandiya group on the Trust, who are the only ones authorized to do Ram-puja. But they won't look at either Krishna or Narayan, aspects of the same god, such severe Vaishnavites they are. With such people on board how have they asked for Kashi and Mathura? I am asking this for argument's sake, of course. These people talk without knowing the facts well. Q.: How does the prime minister look at the breakdown
in talks, would you know? Is he upset?
Q.: Is he in touch with you through representatives?
Q.: Are you in touch at all with the government?
Q.: There is this perception that you are trying
to solve this issue ahead of the election so that the Bharatiya Janata
Party can go to the people with a favourable report card. Are you playing
the BJP's game?
Q.: Is it true you won't be too pleased if the
BJP were to lose the election and the Congress party wins?
Q.: It sounds like you support the Vishwa Hindu
Parishad's demand for making India a Hindu Rashtra.
Q.: You have completed 50 years of your initiation
as Shankaracharya. Looking back, do you have a sense of something not accomplished?
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