street cricketer
Test Debutant
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2015
- Runs
- 15,677
- Post of the Week
- 7
Nobody is asking anyone to take pride..but whitewashing the crimes of one and calling the other outsiders because they dont share your religion is wrong.
There was no real thing as a united India. To the people being killed, everyone from another area was an outsider no matter their religion.
I personally don't view the muslim kings as outsiders, good or bad, ultimately they shaped Indian history and for that they should be remembered as a part of Indian history. But I think religion plays the biggest factor here. Religion forms the central identity of an individual in most societies, at least in our part of the world. You can relate more to a muslim from another city than a hindu or a christian from your own city because he lives the way you live, eats the way you eat, prays the way you pray and there's a lot of commonalities in cultural norms. Religion is a way of living for people in a society and therefore people always feel a bigger connection to those who share their religion.
Indian kingdoms kept warring against each other throughout Indian history, whether hindu or muslim and indeed a lot of lives were lost in the process. But crimes committed by muslim kings appear more "unjust" for a hindu because he feels he is being persecuted for what "he" is rather than what his nationality is, in a war between nations. It's the same for muslims who were persecuted by non muslim kings. Muslims kill muslims in the middle east, yet Israel tends to be the bigger villain because it then becomes an another faith persecuting our faith thing. Both Mughals and Dogras ruled Kashmir and both were foreigners and both weren't remembered fondly for their rule. But the Dogras would always get hated more because it's a hindu king persecuting the muslim population rather than a muslim ruler doing it against a muslim population. It is also for the same reason that a Punjabi muslim would relate more to Abdali than Ranjit Singh despite the latter being Punjabi and the former being an Afghan. He is more likely to forget the atrocities of Abdali than Ranjit Singh because religious persecution tends to affect the psyche of individuals on a deeper level due to the way our society is structured around religion.