SAHMAT
THE LATEST FROM BABRI MASJID EXCAVATIONS
HOW OFFICIAL ARCHAEOLOGISTS
CLUTCH AT STRAWS TO PLEASE THEIR SAFFRON MASTERS
On 12 March 2003 the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) began its excavations at the Babri Masjid site, Ayodhya, in accordance with the directions of the High Court, Lucknow Bench. These excavations were undertaken with a view to finding out whether there are any remains of a Hindu temple beneath the ruins of the Babri Masjid, destroyed on 6 December 1992.
According to the report submitted by the ASI to the High Court on 28 April, as many as 33 trenches (each 4 m x 4 m) had by then been excavated to various depths within the area of Babri Masjid and the adjacent Ram Chabutra (these two covering an area of roughly 41 m x 24 m.), as well as outside of it.
The report on the excavations submitted by ASI cast gloom among supporters of the Saffron Brigade who had been led to expect that the official archaeologists would be able, post facto, to justify the 1992 demolition of the mosque through digging out stone-slabs, pillars, images, etc., of a pre-existing splendid Rama temple. The ASI’s report nowhere even mentions the word "temple" or "shrine", which it was supposed to look for. Yet if its report is disappointing for the VHP supporters, it is clear from the way the ASI has drafted its report, with motivated suggestions and wilful omissions, that its (saffronised) heart is in the right place, and though what it can clutch at are only straws, it is determined to clutch at them all the same.
Three finds on which it lays great stress, with words like "interesting", "significant", etc., need particularly to be scrutinized.
The report is so badly worded that it is not clear whether all these eleven "bases" have been found in the 14 trenches dug in the southern portion of the site. This may, however, be presumed, for it is, then, stated that "the same type of structural bases have been found in the northern area also." How many, is strangely left unstated. Moreover the northern bases are not of "the same type" at all. For they have a sandstone block [not "calcrete"] at the top having "encasing of sandstone slabs /pieces on its four sides." In other words, these are quite differently made; and the technique of sandstone blocks encasing brickbats suggests a firm Muslim affiliation.
The ASI report does not assert that the "structural bases" stand in any alignment, except to say that they are located at 3.30 to 3.50 m. (centre to centre) from each other – again, characteristically omitting to make clear whether they mean the "bases" on the northern side only, or those on the southern side as well.
We, finally, come to the curious term "structural bases", What structure could a 4-course of brickbats, presumably only mud-bonded, of no great length and width (these measurements being not "significant" enough to be mentioned in the report), topped by a "calcrete" or sandstone block, support? What kind of structure could be put upon so flimsy a base?
It would seem to anyone not tied to saffron expectations that the so-called "bases" in the southern area (brick-bat base with "calcrete" tops) could only have supported wooden posts carrying thatched roofs (chhappars) over shops and hovels along possibly a lane (so a possible rough alignment). Some of these could belong to a time before the Babri Masjid was built, and so such (but not all) are "sealed" by the Masjid floors. Others were made while the Mosque’s original floors were being laid out. Those in the northern side are obviously of a different sort (as shown above) and are possibly of a later time. No temple-structure is in any case involved here. What is especially important in interpreting these "structural bases" is to relate their positions to the Mosque wall. In the 15th-century Lal Darwaza Masjid, Jaunpur, "square pilasters" were provided for on the external walls for rows of shops alongside the walls. And B.B. Lal’s associate K.V. Soundara Rajan told Frontline that Lal’s "pillar bases" were really bases for wooden posts for shops ranged along the wall of the Babri Masjid.
The ASI’s report practically exhausts all its space in raising the three issues we have examined above, in the apparent hope of providing some sop to its masters at Delhi and to the VHP. At the same time it takes much care to overlook the evidence that definitely negates the existence of a pre-existing temple.
First, it never mentions that in all layers and pits down to considerable depths, and much below the Babri Masjid floors, pieces of glazed ware, associated with Muslims, and never used in temples, are met with in practically every trench. These are accompanied, as universally and down to similar depths, by animal (usually goat/sheep) bones with cut-marks. No greater evidence for the absence of a temple can be found than these. Finer artifacts have been practically absent from the finds, suggesting strongly that before the Masjid was built it was the site of a large poor Muslim habitation.
Secondly, while it mentions encountering, within Ram Chabutra at beyond 4 metres, "stratified deposits… which belong to the early two or three centuries of the Christian era", the Report nowhere divulges the fact that so far in all the 33 trenches not a single find has been found that could be attributed to either the (pre-Muslim) Gahadavala period (11th-12th centuries AD) when, according to the VHP’s claims, a grand Rama ("Vishnu-Hari") temple was built here, or to any period going back to 300 AD. Uptill now no Brahmanical temple has been discovered anywhere in India, datable to a time before 300 AD. Thus of the period in which a Hindu temple could have been built at the Babri Masjid site the ASI team has been able to get nothing – whether in the shape of potsherds or coins or any other datable artifact. One looks invain in the ASI’s report for any recognition of this simple fact.
Whatever then be the ASI’s manipulations in the text of its Report, one simple fact stands crystal clear: there was no Hindu temple beneath the Babri Masjid.