Folks -- I'm happy to answer historical questions on Twitter re the Mughals.
But general tip -- If what you're citing as "evidence" is a cartoon drawing you saw on WhatsApp... you shouldn't need a historian's professional opinion to tell you it is bullshit.
Updating with some questions that have come in with brief answers.
The jizya wasn't in effect for much of Mughal rule. When it was, Brahmin religious leaders (not all Brahmins) were exempt.
Typically, the jizya was collected by a special class of tax collectors drawn from the ulama.
The Mughals had no policy towards Hindus as a whole.
As a result, there's huge variety in Mughal-Hindu relations. But it is worth noting that a lot of Hindus worked for the Mughals, with some upper castes doing pretty well. Rajput lineages often allied with the Mughals.
Aurangzeb probably wasn't equally close to all his sisters since they supported different brothers in the war of succession.
Roshanara backed Aurangzeb.
I would prefer to have specific examples, but that's broadly accurate.
Also, premodern Indians often experienced hardships due to the joint actions of kings. E.g., warring with each other, the Mughals and Marathas both used scorched earth tactics, resulting in civilian deaths.
Much about modern day India, especially in the north, was shaped in part by the Mughals, including cuisine, language (e.g., Hindi), currency, and ruling symbolism (yes, even under Hindu nationalists).
From a Mughal perspective, this was a matter of armed resistance (internal Sikh narratives, largely solidified later, tell a different tale).
Aurangzeb wasn't into forced conversions, but he was heavily into imperial security. Keep in mind, he was head of state, not a religion.
Yes, the Mughals kept lots of records (although not everyday births among their subjects or anything that granular).
But the Mughals had a long, drawn-out ending. Delhi was sacked and burned, a few times. Archives were sold off. In brief, lots was lost and the rest scattered.
Of the many "Aurangzeb persecuted X" claims, this holds the most water, although it still fails to capture his incorporation of Shias (and, at times, defense of them) in imperial administration.
Alright folks, I've got people yelling at me here because they're ignorant about the #Ramayana saga and its evolution over time. A basic review (warning: if you dislike history, stop reading now) --
Image from a Persian Ramayana (yeah, we've got a lot of those) 🧵
Our earliest extant versions of Rama's story are Valmiki's Ramayana and the Ramopakhyana (the Ramayana precis in the Mahabharata). Both were written in Sanskrit and date, roughly, 2,000 years ago.
Valmiki's Ramayana and the Ramopakhyana were fluid texts, so people could add to or change them over time. Also, we rarely have manuscripts of either older than 400–500 years.
Upshot - We have these texts in later redactions. We can recover some of the earlier layers but not all
India’s ASI just produced an 800+ page report on, so far as I know as a Mughal historian of this period, a completely uncontested fact. Namely, there is a destroyed Hindu temple beneath the Gyanvapi Masjid.
Historians agree on this. There is a plethora of evidence.
So, Why is the ASI blabbering on (in a not-fully released report for added ridiculousness) about something we all know?
Because it changes the question and displaces attention from the real issue.
Modi claimed Indian freedom after "1,000 years of slavery."
History review -- British colonialism only lasted 200 years in India, so where's the other 800 coming from?
That would be Indo-Muslim rule under a variety of different dynasties.
Hindu nationalists hate Indian Muslims, and they relentless demonize this religious minority.
In fact, Hindu nationalists like Modi regularly use disinformation attacks on Muslims in Indian history (e.g., they enslaved Hindus) as a dog whistle for hating Indian Muslims today.
Let's run through the 3 lies over which this actor just became the Indian state's most recent political prisoner.
These are all pretty basic things that any South Asia historian could go over (I happen to be, critically, outside of the BJP's Hindu Rashtra at present).
Lie 1: Indian nation was founded when Ram defeated Ravan.
Reality: The Indian nation was founded in 1947. Ram is mythology character and god (sometimes both; sometimes one or the other, depending on text, time period, and believer), said to have lived millennia ago.
Whereas Lorenzen traces a social construct, i.e. the religion of Hinduism, across varied vocabulary, I trace a single term, i.e., "hindu," across diverse meanings.
This is a long, meandering journey over 2 1/2 millennia. Some highlights --
Both articles included “a lot of concrete facts” that HAF “didn’t even contest” or allege as false.
“They didn’t contest that HAF’s treasurer is the son of the National Vice President of the US wing of the RSS...
"They didn’t contest that his family had donated a significant sum to HAF in 2018. They didn’t contest that a co-founder of HAF was formally associated with an affiliate of the RSS....