Temples of Akhand Bharat Destroyed by the Muslim Invaders
Series based on Muslim Historians' work - Part 1
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🪔To date we have been squabbling with seculars and anti-Hindu leftists for the historical accounts and evidence about the temples destroyed in the Akhand Bharat and proofs to prove that hundreds of the Mosques were built on them, using the material of the same destroyed temples.
🪔In this series, we will see how then Muslim historians noted and glorified the gory details of the Muslim invaders destroying Hindu Temples. I will educate the Hindu society and quell the doubts of the seculars about the cultural heritage of the Akhand Bharat and its temples.
🪔How later on liberal leftist academics and historians twisted and appropriated history to glorify those Muslim invaders and looters as great patrons of art and architecture.
1. Futuhul Baldan by Ahmad bin Yahya bin Jabir
The author of the Futuhal Baldan, Ahmad bin Yahya bin Jabir, is known as al-Biladhuri. He lived at the court of Khalifa Al Mutawakkal (AD 847-861) and died in AD 893. His history is one of the earliest and major Arab chronicles. It gives an account of Arab conquests in Syria, Mesopotamia, Egypt, Iran, Armenia, Transoxiana, Africa, Spain and Sindh. The account is brought down to Khalifa Mutasim's reign in AD 842.
In his muslim history compedium, Ahmad bin Yahya bin Jabir, is known as al-Biladhuri mentiones details of the below temple desecrations by the Muslim invaders:
1. Ibn Samurah (AD 653)
His full name was Abd ar-Rahman bin Samurah bin Habib bin Abd ash-Shams. He was appointed
governor of Seistan after the first Arab invasion of that province in AD 650 was defeated and dispersed. Ibn
Samûrah reached the capital of Seistan in AD 653.
On reaching Dawar, he surrounded the enemy in the mountain of Zur, where there was a famous Hindu
temple. Their idol of Zur was of gold, and its eyes were two rubies. The zealous Musalmans cut off its hands and plucked out its eyes, and then remarked to the Marzaban how powerless was his idol to do either good or evil.
An explanation about the Hindu Temple of the Zun
(The kingdom of Kapisha or Kabul (also known as Kabulistan) lay on the north-west of Sindh and consisted of the valley of the Kabul (Kubha) river spreading over the mountains all the way upto the Hindu Kush (Upari Syena) mountains. Hieun Tsang, the well-known Chinese traveller, mentions that the kingdom of Kabul extended over ten dependent states which included Lampaka (Laghman), Nagara (Jalalabad) and Gandhara. Immediately to the south of Kabul was the kingdom of Jabala or Zabul (also known as Zabulistan), comprising the valley of the Helmand river and the surrounding territories on the east and west of the river, extending upto present-day Balochistan (Gedrosia) on the south. In the 7th Century A.D., these two kingdoms formed parts of India both politically and culturally, being Indian in language, literature and religion and ruled over by kings who bore Indian names.” The kingdom of Kabul was ruled by a Kshatriya Hindu king of the ancient Shahi (Turki-Shahi) dynasty founded by Barhatigin. Barhatigin was said to be of Tibetan origin and the Shahi dynasty established by him ruled for about sixty generations, with one of his descendants being Kanik (probably Kanishka), the same who is said to have built the ‘Vihara’ of Purushavar. The king of Zabul was also Hindu and bore the title of Shahi or Shahia. He was related to the Kabul Shahis and was known to the Arabs as “that king of Al Hind who bore the title of Zunbil. Zunbils were also known as Rutbil, Rantbil, Ranbal or Ramal and were renowned for their bravery. In terms of religion and culture, the entire regions of the Kabul river valley and the regions from Ghazna to Kandahar were mainly Buddhist and Hindu. Zunbils got their epithet from the Shaivite god Zun, also known as Zur. The temple of Zun was situated on top of a sacred mountain in Zamindawar of the upper Helmand. Zamindawar or ‘Land Of The Justice Giver’ was a mountainous region located to the north of Kandahar and the temple of Zun was the most revered and important pilgrimage centre of the entire region. The temple had a golden idol of Zun with rubies set as eyes. Zun is said to have been“the northern mountain form of Shiva or ‘an adaptation of Shiva to a local god, introduced from India. It is also said that the worship of Zun might be related to that of the old shrine of the sun-god Aditya at Multan.
- Al Hind: The Making of The Indo Islamic World, Vol. 1 - Early Medieval India and The Expansion of Islam -
7th-11th Centuries, P 112–114 by Andre Wink
- Kitab Ul Hind: Vol. 2, P 11 - Al Beruni Translated by Edward Sachau)
2. Qutaibah bin Muslim al-Bahili (AD 705-715)
He was a general of Al-Hajjaj bin Yusuf Saqafi, the notorious Governor of Iraq under Caliph Al-Walid I
(AD 705-715).
He was made Governor of Khurasan in AD 705 and is renowned in the history of Islam as the conqueror of Central Asia right upto Kashghar, Samarqand (Farghana) the birth place of the Moghul Invader Babur.
Historical accounts say that Kutaibah granted peace for 700,000 dirhams and entertainment for the
Moslems for three days. The terms of surrender included also the houses of the idols and the fire.
temples. The idols were thrown out, plundered of their ornaments and burned, although the Persians used to say that among them was an idol with which whoever trifled would perish. But when Kutaibah set fire to it with his own hand, many of them accepted Islam.
3. Muhammad bin Qasim (AD 712-715)
He was the nephew as well as son-in-law of Al-Hajjaj, who sent him to Sindh after more than a dozen
invasions of that province had been defeated by the Hindus.
The town of Debal (Sindh) was thus taken by assault, and the carnage endured for three days. The governor of the town, appointed by the Hindu King Dahir, fled and the priests of the temple were massacred. Muhammad marked a place for the Musalmans to dwell in, built a mosque, and left four thousand Musalmans to garrison the place. Ambissa son of Ishak Az Zabbi, the governor of Sindh, in the Khilafat of Mutasim billah knocked down the upper part of the minaret of the temple and converted it into a prison. At the same time he began to repair the ruined town with the stones of the minaret.
He then crossed the Biyas (Byas river), and went towards Multan Muhammad destroyed the water-course, upon which the inhabitants, oppressed with thirst, surrendered at discretion. He massacred the men capable of bearing arms, but the children were taken captive, as well as the ministers of the temple, to the number of six thousand. The Muslamans found there much gold in a chamber ten cubits long by eight broad, and there was an aperture above, through which the gold was poured into the chamber.
4. Hasham bin Amru al-Taghlabi
He was appointed Governor of Sindh by Khalifa Al-Mansur (AD 754-775) of the Abbasid dynasty. He led
many raids towards different parts of India, both by land and sea.
He then went up to Kandahar (Nanded, Maharashtra) reaching the Konkan coast by boats and conquered it. He destroyed the temple there, and built in its place a
mosque.
2. Tarikh al-Tabari by Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari
The author, Abu Jafar Muhammad bin Jarir al-Tabari, is considered to be the foremost historian of Islam.
His Tarikh is regarded as Umdatul-Kutab, the mother of histories in Islam.
He was born at Amil in Tabaristan in the year AD 839. He was educated in Baghdad and lived in Basra and Kufa as well. He traveled to Egypt and Damascus to perfect his knowledge of Traditions. He spent the last days of his life in Baghdad where he died in AD 922.
Al Tabari mentions in his magnum opus about the ransacking of the Hindu Shahi Kingdom of Kabul by
Yaqub bin Laith (AD 870-871)
He was a highway robber who succeeded in seizing Khurasan from the Tahirid governors of the Abbasid
Caliphate. He founded the short-lived Saffarid dynasty.
He attacked Balkh and Kabul (Afghanistan).
He first took Bamian, which he probably reached by way of Herat, and then marched on Balkh where he
ruined (the temple) Naushad.
On his way back from Balkh he attacked Kabul.
Starting from Panjshir valley, the place he is known to have visited, he must have passed through the capital city of the Hindu shahis to rob the sacred temple, the reputed place of coronation of the Hindu shahi rulers of its sculptural wealth. The Tarikh-i-Sistan records 50 idols of gold and silver and elephants. The wonder excited in Baghdad by elephants and pagan idols (Hindu deities) forwarded to the Caliph by Yaqub also speaks for their high value.
The best of our authorities put the date of this event in 257 (870-71). Tabari is more precise and says that
the idols sent by Yaqub reached Baghdad in Rabi al-Akhar, 257 (Feb.-March, 871).
Pic 1 - Al Tabari's work is translated in more than 40 volumes
Pic 2 - English Translation of Al Tabari's Muslim history
Pic 3 - Tomb of Al Tabari at Baghdad
Pic 4 - Map of 7th Century North India (Akhand Bharat)
3. Tarikh ul hind/ Kitab Ul Hind by Abu Rihan Al Biruni
The author, Abu Rihan Muhammad bin Ahmad al-Biruni al-Khwarizmi, was born in about AD 970-71.
He was an astronomer, geometrician, historian, and logician. He was sent to Ghazni in an embassy from the
Sultan of Khwarizm. On invitation from Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni (AD 997-1030), he entered his service,
traveled to India, and spent forty years in the country, chiefly in the Punjab. He learned Sanskrit and
translated some works from that language into Arabic. His history treats of the literature and learning of the
Hindus at the commencement of the eleventh century.
Abu Rihan Al Biruni mentions below details of the destruction of the Hindu temples by Muslim invaders in his historical compendium on Akhand Bharat:
1. Jalam ibn Shaiban (Ninth century AD)
The Sun Temple at Multan has been described by early Arab geographers like Sulaiman, Masidi, Istakhri and Ibn Hauqal who traveled in India during the ninth and tenth centuries of the Christian era.
The Arab invaders did not destroy it because besides being a rich source of revenue, it provided protection
against Hindu counter-attack. Multan, wrote Masudi, is one of the strongest frontier places of the
Musalmans In it is the idol also known by the name of Multan.
The inhabitants of Sindh and India perform pilgrimages to it from the most distant places; they carry money, precious stones, aloe wood and all sorts of perfumes there to fulfil their vows. The greatest part of the revenue of the king of Multan is derived from the rich presents brought to the idol When the unbelievers14 march against Mûltãn and the faithful do not feel themselves strong enough to oppose them, they threaten to break their idol, and their enemies immediately withdraw.
Al-Biruni records: A famous idol of theirs was that of Multan, dedicated to the sun, and therefore
called Aditya. It was of wood and covered with red Cordovan leather; in its two eyes were two red rubies. It
is said to have been made in the last Kritayuga.
When Muhammad Ibn Alkasim Ibn Almunabih
conquered Multan, he inquired how the town had become so very flourishing and so many treasures had there been accumulated, and then he found out that this idol was the cause, for there came pilgrims from all sides to visit it. Therefore he thought it best to have the idol where it was, but he hung a piece of cow's flesh on its neck by way of mockery. On the same place a mosque was built. When the Sarmatians occupied Multan, Jalam Ibn Shaiban, the usurper, broke the idol into pieces and killed its priests.
2. Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni (AD 997-1030)
The city of Taneshar (Haryana) is highly venerated by Hindus. The idol of that place is called Chakrasvamin, i.e. the owner of the cakra, a weapon which we have already described. It is of bronze and is nearly the size of a man. It is now lying in the hippodrome in Ghazna, together with the Idol of Somanath, which is a
representation of the Mahadeva, called Shiva Linga.
The linga he raised was the stone of Somnath, for soma means the moon and natha means master, so that the whole word means master of the moon. The image was destroyed by the prince Mahmud, may God be merciful to him! - AH 416.
He ordered the upper part to be broken and the remainder to be transported to his residence, Ghaznin, with all its coverings and trappings of gold, jewels, and embroidered garments. Part of it has been thrown into the hippodrome of the town, together with the Chakrasvamin, an idol of bronze, that had been brought from Taneshar. Another part of the idol from Somanath lies before the door of the mosque of Ghaznin, on which people rub their feet to clean them from dirt and wet.
Pic 1 and 2 - Showing Al Biruni's work
Pic 3 - Some of the earliest photos of Somnath temple were taken by Sykes and Nelson in the 19th-century. They show Somnath Hindu temple partly converted into an Islamic Mosque.
Pic 4 - Ghazni fort and Mosque in Afghanistan
4. Tarikh i Yamini / Kitab i Yamini by Abu Nasr Muhammad ibn Muhammad al Jabbar ul Utbi
The author of this history in Arabic was Abu Nasr Muhammad ibn Muhammad al Jabbarul-Utbi. The
family from Utba had held important offices under the Samanis of Bukhara. Utbi himself became
Secretary to Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni (AD 997-1030). His work comprises the whole of the reign of
Subuktigin and that of Sultãn Mahmud down to the year AD 1020. He lived a few years longer. Persian
translations of this history are known as Tarjuma-i-Yamini or Tarikh-i-Yamini.
Al Utubi records in his historical compendium that:
1. Amir Subuktigin of Ghazni (AD 977-997)
The Amir marched out towards Lamghan in Afghanistan, which is a city celebrated for its great strength and abounding wealth. He conquered it and set fire to the places in its vicinity which were inhabited by infidels (Hindus), and demolished idol temples (Hindu temples), he established Islam in them. He marched and captured other cities and killed the
polluted wretches, destroying the idolaters and gratifying the Musalmans.
2. Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni (AD 997-1030)
The Sultan again resolved on an expedition to Hind, and marched towards Narain (Rajasthan), urging his horses and moving over the ground, hard and soft, until he came to the middle of Hind, where he reduced chiefs, who, up to that time obeyed no master, overturned their idols (Temples), put to the sword the vagabonds of that country, and with delay and circumspection proceeded to accomplish his design.
Nardin (Punjab)
After the Sultan had purified Hind from idolatry, and raised mosques therein, he determined to invade
the capital of Hind to punish those who kept idols (Temples) and would not acknowledge the unity of God He marched with a large army in the year AH 404 (AD 1013) during a dark night towards Nardin (Punjab).
A stone was found there in the temple of the great Budda on which an inscription was written purporting that the temple had been founded fifty thousand years ago. The Sultan was surprised at the ignorance of these people, because those who believe in the true faith represent that only seven thousand years have elapsed since the creation of the world, and the signs of resurrection are even now approaching. The Sultan asked his wise men the meaning of this inscription and they all concurred in saying that it was false, and no faith was to be put in the evidence of a stone. So, he slayed all the idol worshipers and destroyed the Budhha statue alongside.
Thanesar (Haryana)
The chief of Thanesar was obstinate in his infidelity and denial of God. So the Sultan marched against
him with his valiant warriors, for the purpose of planting the standards of Islam and extirpating idolatry
The blood of the infidels flowed so copiously, that the stream was discoloured, notwithstanding its
purity, and people were unable to drink it The victory was gained by Gods grace, who has established
Islam for ever as the best of religions, notwithstanding that idolaters revolt against it Praise be to God,
the protector of the world, for the honour he bestows upon Islam and Musulmans.
Mathura (Uttar Pradesh)
The Sultan then departed from the environs of the city, in which was a temple of the Hindus. The name
of this place was Maharatul Hind On both sides of the city there were a thousand houses, to which idol
temples were attached, all strengthened from top to bottom by rivets of iron, and all made of masonry
work In the middle of the city there was a temple larger and firmer than the rest, which can neither be
described nor painted.
The Sultan thus wrote respecting it: -
If any should wish to construct a building equal to this, he would not be able to do it without expending an hundred thousand, thousand red dinars, and it would occupy two hundred years even though the most experienced and able workmen were employed The Sultan gave orders that all the temples should be burnt with naptha and fire, and levelled with the ground.
Kanauj (Uttar Pradesh)
In Kanauj there were nearly ten thousand temples, which the idolaters falsely and absurdly represented to have been founded by their ancestors two or three hundred thousand years ago Many of the inhabitants
of the place fled and were scattered abroad like so many wretched widows and orphans, from the fear
which oppressed them, in consequence of witnessing the fate of their deaf and dumb idols. Many of them
thus effected their escape, and those who did not fly were put to death.
5. Diwan I salman by Khwajah Masud bin Sad bin Salman
Khwajah Masud bin Sad bin Salman, was a poet. He wrote poems in praise of the Ghaznavid Sultans Masud, Ibrahim and Bahram Shah. He died sometime between AD 1126 and 1131.
Khwajah Masud records in his compedium Diwan I Salamn that:
Sultan Abu l Muzaffar Ibrahim (AD 1059-1099)
As power and the strength of a lion was bestowed upon Ibrahim by the Almighty, he made over to him
the well-populated country of Hindustan and gave him 40,000 valiant horsemen to take the country, in
which there were more than 1000 rais Its length extends from Lahore to the Euphrates, and its breadth
from Kashmir to the borders of Sistan. The army of the king destroyed at one time a thousand temples of
idols, which had each been built for more than a thousand years. How can I describe the victories of the king...!!!
Jalandhar (Punjab)
The narrative of thy battles eclipses the stories of Rustam and Isfandiyar. Thou didst bring an army in
one night from Dhangan to Jalandhar, Thou didst direct but one assault and by that alone brought
destruction upon the country. By the morning meal not one soldier, not one Brahman, remained unkilled or uncaptured. Their beads were severed by the carriers of swords. Their houses were levelled with the ground with flaming fire Thou has secured victory to the country and to religion, for amongst the Hindus this achievement will be remembered till the day of resurrection.
Malwa (Madhya Pradesh)
Thou didst depart with a thousand joyful anticipations on a holy expedition, and didst return having
achieved a thousand victories On this journey the army destroyed a thousand idol-temples and thy
elephants trampled over more than a hundred strongholds. Thou didst march thy arm to Ujjain, Malwa trembled and fled from thee On the way to Kalinjar thy pomp obscured the light of day. The lip of infidelity became dry through fear of thee, the eye of plural-worship became blind.
You can find a copy of this muslim history work at Govt of India website:
6. Chach-Namah by Muhammad Ali bin Hamid bin Abu Bakr Kufi
This Persian history was translated from Arabic by Muhammad Ali bin Hamid bin Abu Bakr Kufi in the
time of Nasirud-Din Qabacha, a slave of Muhammad Ghuri, who contested the throne of Delhi with
Shamsud-Din Iltutmish (AD 1210-1236).
The translator who lived at Uccha had gone to Alor and
Bhakkar in search of accounts of the Arab conquest. He met a Maulana who had inherited a history written
in Arabic by one of his ancestors. The translation in Persian followed because Kufi found that the Hijaji
Arabic of the original was little understood by people in those days while the work was a mine of wisdom. The Arabic original has been lost. The author remains unknown.
In Chach nama it is recorded that:
Muhammad bin Qasim (AD 712-715)
At Nirun (Sindh)
Muhammad built at Nirun a mosque on the site of the temple of Budhha, and ordered prayers to be
proclaimed in the Muhammadan fashion and appointed an Imam.
Siwistan and Sisam (Sindh)
Muhammad bin Qasim wrote to al-Hajjaj, the governor of Iraq:
The forts of Siwistan and Sisam have
been already taken. The nephew of Dahir, his warriors, and principal officers have been despatched, and
infidels converted to Islam or destroyed. Instead of idol temples, mosques and other places of worship have
been built, pulpits have been erected, the Khutba is read, the call to prayers is raised so that devotions are performed at the stated hours. The takbir and praise to the Almighty God are offered every morning and evening.
Alor (Sindh)
Muhammad Kasim then entered and all the town people came to the temple of Nobhar, and prostrated
themselves before an idol.
Muhammad Kasim enquired:
Whose house is this, in which all the people
high and low are respectfully kneeling and bowing down.
They replied: This is an idol-house called
Nobhar.
Then, by Muhammad Kasims order, the temple was opened. Entering it with his officers he saw an equestrian statue. The body of the idol was made of marble or alabaster, and it had on its arms
golden bracelets, set with jewels and rubies. Muhammad Kasim stretched his hand and took off a bracelet from one of the idols arms.
Then he asked the keeper of the Budh temple Nobhar: Is this your idol?
Yes, he replied, but it had two bracelets on, and one is missing.
Well said Muhammad Kasim:
cannot your god know who has taken away his bracelet?
The keeper bent his head down.
Muhammad Kasim laughed and returned the bracelet to him, and he fixed it again on the arm of the idolwas.
Multan (Punjab)
Then all the great and principal inhabitants of the city assembled together, and silver to the weight of
sixty thousand dirams was distributed and every horseman got a share of four hundred dirams weight. After this, Muhammad Kasim said that some plan should be devised for realizing the money to be sent to the Khalifa. He was pondering over this when suddenly a Brahman came and said, Heathenism is now at an end, the temples are thrown down, the world has received the light of Islam, and mosques are built instead of idol temples. I have heard from the elders of Multan that in ancient times there was a chief in this city whose name was Jibawin, and who was a descendent of the Rai of Kashmir. He was a Brahman and a monk, he strictly followed his religion and always occupied his time in worshipping idols. When his
treasures exceeded all limits and computation, he made a reservoir on the eastern side of Multan, which
was a hundred yards square. In the middle of it, he built a temple fifty yards square, and he made a chamber
in which he concealed forty copper jars each of which was filled with African gold dust. A treasure of three
hundred and thirty men of gold was buried there. Over it, there is an idol made of red gold, and trees are
planted around the reservoir. It is related by historians, on the authority of Ali bin Muhammad who had heard it from Abu Muhammad Hindui that Muhammad Kasim arose and with his counsellors, guards, and attendants, went to the temple. He saw there an idol made of gold, and its two eyes were bright red rubies. Muhammad Kasim ordered the idol to be taken up. Two hundred and thirty men of gold were obtained, and forty jars filled with gold dust This gold and the image were brought to the treasury together with the gems and pearls and treasures which were obtained from the plunder of Multan.
In Chach nama there is a very sad account of Hindu King of Sindh Raja Dahir's daughters taking revenge on Muhammad bin Qasim:
Janaki was one of the daughters of King Dahir of Sindh. She was captured along with her sister and sent to
the Khalifa at Baghdad. When the Khalifa invited Janaki to share his bed, she lied to him that she had
already been violated by Muhammad bin Qasim. Her sister supported her statement.
The Khalifa ordered that Muhammad be sewed up in raw hide and sent to his court. Muhammad was already dead when the chest containing him arrived in Baghdad.
Janaki accused the Khalifa of having killed one of his great generals without making proper enquiry.
She said:
The king has committed a very grievous mistake, for he ought not, on account of two slave girls, to have
destroyed a person who had taken captive a hundred thousand modest women like us and who instead of
temples had erected mosques, pulpits and minarets.
7. Jawami ul-Hikayat wa Lawami' ul-Riwayat/ Jami Ul Hikayat by Zahiriddin Nasr Muhammad Aufi
The author of this collection of stories was Maulana Zahiriddin Nasr Muhammad Aufi. He was born in or
near the city of Bukhara in Transoxiana. He came to India and lived in Delhi for some time in the reign of
Shamsud-Din Iltutmish (AD 1210-1236). He traveled to several other places in India. He wrote his work in four volumes relying on his observations and details he noted conversing with individual traders concerning the conditions and life in different countries throughout every chapter, sourcing information from different Persian and Arabic works of history.
Aufi records in his compendium that:
Amru bin Laith (AD 879-900)
It is related that Amra Lais conferred the governorship of Zabulistan on Fardaghan and sent him there at
the head of four thousand horses. There was a large Hindu place of worship in that country, which was
called Sakawand (Afghanistan), and people used to come on pilgrimage from the most remote parts of Hindustan to the idols of that place. When Fardaghan arrived in Zabulistan he led his army against it, took the temple, broke the idols in pieces, and overthrew the idolaters.
8. Tajul Maasir by Sadrud-Din Muhammad Hasan Nizami
Sadrud-Din Muhammad Hasan Nizami was born at Nishapur in Khurasan, Afghanistan. He had to leave his ancestral place because of the Mongol invasion. He came to India and started writing his history in AD 1205. The history opens with the year 1191 and comes down to AD 1217.
Tajul Maasir is first official account of the history of the Delhi Sultanate. Written in Persian by Sadruddin Hasan Nizami, it is the earliest among the historical literature produced in India about the Muslim invaders of the Akhand Bharat.
Hasan Nizami started writing the history by order of Sultan Qutbuddin Aibak. He begins his book with the battle of Tarain (1191 AD) which was an epoch-making event in the history of the subcontinent. It covered the period up to the receipt of investiture by Sultan Shamsuddin Iltutmish in 1229 AD from the Khalifah of Baghdad. The author deals with the formative period of the Delhi Sultanate; he writes the history to a stage when the Sultanate passed from its nebulous state and became a powerful centralized monarchy. He undertook to write the history of the conquests of Muizzuddin Muhammad bin Sam and Qutbuddin Aibak, but after the sudden death of Aibak, he decided to continue his narratives up to the consolidation of the Sultanate by Iltutmish. But Hasan Nizami does not refer to Bakhtyar Khalji's conquest of Bengal at all, though this event had taken place in the lifetime of Sultan Qutbuddin Aibak.
Hassan Nizami recorded in Tajul Maasir that:
1. Sultan Muhammad Ghuri (AD 1175-1206)
At Ajmer (Rajasthan)
He destroyed the pillars and foundations of the idol temples and built in their stead mosques and
colleges, and the precepts of Islam, and the customs of the law were divulged and established at Kuhram and Samana (Punjab).
The Government of the fort of Kohram and of Samana were made over by the Sultan to Kutbu-d din.
He purged by his sword the land of Hind from the filth of infidelity and vice, and freed it from the thorn of God-plurality, and the impurity of idol-worship, and by his royal vigour and intrepidity, left not one temple standing.
At Meerut (Uttar Pradesh)
Kutbu-d din marched from Kohram and when he arrived at Mirat -which is one of the celebrated forts
of the country of Hind, for the strength of its foundations and superstructure, and its ditch, which was as broad as the ocean and fathomless-an army joined him, sent by the dependent chiefs of the country.
The fort was captured, and a Kotwal appointed to take up his station in the fort, and all the idol temples were converted into mosques.
At Delhi
He then marched and encamped under the fort of Delhi The city and its vicinity were freed from idols
and idols-worship, and in the sanctuaries of the images of the Gods, mosques were raised by the
worshippers of one God.
Kutbu-d din built the Jami Masjid at Delhi, and adorned it with stones and gold obtained from the temples which had been demolished by elephants, and covered it with inscriptions in Toghra, containing
the divine commands.
At Varanasi (Uttar Pradesh)
From that place Asni, the royal army proceeded towards Benares which is the centre of the country of
Hind and here they destroyed nearly one thousand temples, and raised mosques on their foundations, and the knowledge of the law became promulgated, and the foundations of religion were established.
At Aligarh (Uttar Pradesh)
There was a certain tribe in the neighbourhood of Kol which had occasioned much trouble. Three
bastions were raised as high as heaven with their heads, and their carcases became the food of beasts of prey. That tract was freed from idols and idol-worship and the foundations of infidelity were destroyed.
At Bayana (Rajasthan)
When Kutbu-d din beard of the Sultans march from Ghazni, he was much rejoiced and advanced as
far as hansi to meet him. In the year AH 592 (AD 1196), they marched towards Thangar, and the centre
of idolatry and perdition became the abode of glory and splendour to destroy all the temples and to establish the mosques.
At Kalinjar (Uttar Pradesh)
In the year AH 599 (AD 1202), Kutbu-d din proceeded to the investment Kalinjar, on which expedition
he was accompanied by the Sahib-Kiran, Shamsu-d din Altamsh. The temples were converted into
mosques and abodes of goodness, and the ejaculations of head-counters and voices of summoners to prayer ascended to high heaven, and the very name of idolatry was annihilated.
2. Sultan Shamsud-Din Iltutmish (AD 1210-1236)
At Delhi
The Sultan then returned from Jalor to Delhi and after his arrival not a vestige or name remained
of idol temples which had raised their heads on high and the light of faith shone out from the darkness of
infidelity and the moon of religion and the state became resplendent from the heaven of prosperity and glory.
9. Kamil ut Tawarik / Al-Kamil fi al-Tarikh by Shaikh Abul Hasan Ali Ibn Abu i Karam Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn Abdul Karim ibn Abdul l Wahid as Shaibani also known as Ibn Asir
Ibn Asir was born in AD 1160 in the Jazirat ibn Umar, an island on the Tigris above Mosul. The book
embraces the history of the world from the earliest period to the year AD 1230.
1. Khalifa Al-Mahdi (AD 775-785)
At Barada (Gujarat)
In the year 159 (AD 776) Al Mahdi sent an army by sea under Abdul Malik bin Shahabu Musammai to India. They proceeded on their way and at length disembarked at Barada. When they reached the place they laid siege to it. The town was reduced to extremities, and God prevailed over it in
the same year. The people were forbidden to worship the Buddha, which the Muhammadans burned.
2. Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni (AD 997-1030)
At Rajasthan and Gujarat
So he prayed to the Almighty for aid, and left Ghazni on the 10th of Shaban AH 414 with 30,000
horse besides volunteers, and took the road to Multan. After he had crossed the desert he perceived on one
side a fort full of people, in which there were wells. People came down to conciliate him, but he invested
the place, and God gave him victory So he brought the place under the sway of Islam, killed the
inhabitants, and broke in pieces their images (Deities).
The chief of Anhilwara called Bhim, fled hastily Yaminud daula again started for Somnath, and on his
march he came to several forts in which were many images (Deities) serving as chamberlains or heralds of Somnath, and accordingly he (Mahmud) called them Shaitan. He killed the people who were in these places, destroyed the fortifications, broke in pieces the idols and continued his march to Somnath.
At Somnath (Gujarat)
This temple of Somnath was built upon fifty-six pillars of teak wood covered with lead. The idol itself
was in a chamber Yaminud daula seized it, part of it he burnt, and part of it he carried away with him
to Ghazni, where he made it a step at the entrance of the Jami masjid.
(You can read transalated version of this work of muslim history at the below link:
)jatland.com/home/The_histo…
10. Tarikh-i-Jahan Gusha-i-Juwaini by Alaud-Din Malik ibn Bahaud-Din Muhammad Juwaini
Alaud-Din Malik ibn Bahaud-Din Muhammad Juwaini, was a native of Juwain in Afghanistan, Khurasan near Nishapur. His father who died in AD 1253 was one of the principal revenue officers under the Mongol ruler of Persia. Alaud-Din followed in his father's office. He was with Halaku during the Mongol campaign against the Ismailians and was later on appointed the governor of Baghdad.
He fell from grace and was imprisoned at Hamadan. He was, however, exonerated and restored to his office which he retained till his death in AH 681 (AD 1282). His history comes down to the year AD 1255.
His work mailnly focused on the histopry of the central Asia.
Juwaini recorded in his compedium that
Sultan Jalalud-Din Mankbarni (AD 1222-1231)
At Debal (Sindh)
The Sultan then went towards Dewal and Darbela and Jaisi The Sultan raised a Jami Masjid at Dewal, on the spot where an idol temple stood.
11. To be continued in part 2 of the Series
Please share it with every Sanatani Hindu to awaken the sleeping masses of the Bharat.
I made a small effort to apprise the Sanatani Hindus about what our ancestors went through so that we could pray in a temple even today.
This is my answer to all the seculars and liberals who keep on harping the glories of the Islamic invaders who looted our temples, raped women of the Bharat, butchered children, killed priests, and burnt down our temples.
Be very proud of our Sanatan Lineage.
Sanatan is the light
Dharma is the path
Radhe Radhe
12. Sanatan is calling
It's about time now
To wake up
To reclaim
To rebuild
What was taken away from us.
• • •
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1. From a common cultural zone stretching from southern Afghanistan to India to Java (Indonesia) during the Lower Paleolithic era (prehistoric period), to having Harappan era trade posts in the Proto historical era to the Hindu Kingdoms of the South Asia to the Kushana kings and the Kashmiri Karkota dynasty, the cultural connections between India and Afghanistan and South Asia go long back in the history of human civilisation.
1. Pics are of the remains of Devi Mahisasuramardini found from Ghazni in Afghanistan, and belongs to 4th c. CE. It is now kept in the Kabul Museum).
2. Naag temple inside the lahore fort, Pakistan, was built by sher-e-punjab maharaj ranjit singh.
Real date of construction is unknown but this fort has a historical reference even from 11th century.
3. One of several restored heads of Naga, a deity taking the form of a King Cobra snake in Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism. This one is at the head of the walkway leading to Angkor Wat, Siem Reap, Kingdom of Cambodia.
We have so many crypto Hindus singing eulogies of Muslim rapists, looters, killers made famous in the history books as The Great Moghuls.
Today we will see what Bharat was before these rapists, killers, looters invaded Bharat and tried their best for 350 years to destroy sanatan Dharma and its relics.
Mughals appropriated our culture our temples and even names of our cities and towns.
A country who normalises cultural appropriation will mentaly remain enslaved to it
1. Perur Pateshwar Temple, Tamilnadu
2000 year old
Constructed by the Chola King Karikal
2. The Mahadeva Temple at Itagi in Koppal District of Karnataka of Chalukya style architecture.
Built in 1112 A.D. the Temple’s carvings, sculptures, pillars and tower is an excellent example of Western Chalukyan art and speaks volumes about the skills of the artisans in those days.
🪔Greatest Sages (Rishi's) of Ancient Bharat (India) 🔥
🧵 Part 2
🪔Everything we know in the name of Dharma, Karma and science today has been described by our Vedic Rishis in the Vedas, Upanishads, Puranas and Vedang's.
🪔 For thousands of the year this knowledge has been passed on from one generation to another through "Shruti" and "Smriti" in Gurukul Shiksha.
☀️Let us continue our journey with part 2 of enlightenment through the life and works of the great Rishis of the ancient India: 🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔🪔
🕉️
1. Dadhichi
Rishi Dadhichi was an ancient Rishi who willingly sacrificed his life to help the Devas win over the Rakshasas.
Dadhichi is also rendered Dadhyanga and Dadhyancha.
In the Bhagavata Purana, Dadhichi is described as the son of the sage Atharvan and his wife, Chitti. Atharvan is said to be the author of Atharvaveda, which is one of the four Vedas. Chitti was the daughter of the sage Kardama.
Rishi Atharvan was the progenitor of the Atharva Veda and the first Rishi who initiated the tradition of Fire worship. The names of Dadhichi's wife and son were Suvarcash and Pippalada, respectively. After the death of Dadhichi, when Suvarcash was about to ascend the funeral pyre, she heard an asaririṇi vaṇi (a celestial voice) that informed her that she was pregnant. Suvarcash removed the fetus from her womb with a stone, and placed it near a banyan tree, proceeding to end her life. Her child, Pippalada, became a famous rishi, associated with the Pippalada school of thought in Hinduism, and he is best known for being attributed with the Prashna Upanishad.
Dadhichi is also mentioned in the various hymns (Richas–Suktas) of the Rigveda. Dadhichi is a synonym for the highest ideals of self-sacrifice for the general good. It so happened that once the Devas deposited all their weapons with him for safe keeping, promising to return at some fixed time. When they failed to show up and upon observing that the weapons had begun to rust, Dadhichi dissolved them in water and drank the solution. The ingredients of the weapons got deposited in his bones, especially the back bone. Thus, his bones became extremely strong. When the Gods came asking for their weapons, the Rishi told them what he had done, whereupon the Devas requested him to give them his backbone from which an invincible weapon can be crafted by which their formidable enemy, the Rakhsas king Vrittaasur, could be slayed. Dadhichi conceded and gave them his backbone from which was made Indra’s invincible weapon called the Vajra (thunder-bolt). He did not die, but used the sacred ash of the fire sacrifice to remain alive in his hermitage. This fact is established in the Brihajjabal Upanishad of the Atharva Veda tradition, Brahman 6, verse no. 4.
Dadhichi is said to have been the first to leave Daksha's yagna when he realised that Shiva had not been invited out of spite.
The design of the Param Vir Chakra, an Indian military medal, is regarded to be inspired by the sacrifice of this sage.
The Dadhich Brahmins, a Brahmin clan primarily found in Rajasthan, claim to be his descendants.
According to folklore, Dadhimati is the name of the sage's sister, in whose name a fourth century temple exists in Naguar, Rajasthan, called the Dadhimati Mata Temple.
Dadhichi is regarded to have had established his ashram in Misrikh, in Naimisharanya near Lucknow, in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India. Naimisharanya is cited in all of the Puranas as the location of his ashram, which is still in existence.
2. Durvasa
The word ‘Druvasa’ literally means one who is difficult to live with or cope with. He had a great propensity for cursing at the least annoyance and was an embodiment of anger and wrath. On the other hand, when he was pleased, he could bestow the greatest of boons. He is said to be one of the twenty-four Rishis of the famous Gayatri Mantra.
According to Gopal Uttar Tapini Upanishad of the Atharva Veda tradition, verse no. 2, Rishi Durvasa is regarded as an incarnation of Rudra, the angry form of Bhagwan Shiva.
Inspite of this one blight on his character as being ruthlessly short-tempered, he was nevertheless a highly enlightened, erudite, self-and-Brahm-realised Rishi of the highest and the greatest order.
In fact, he is credited with expounding the profound metaphysical concepts that form the backbone of the teachings of the Upanishads in the form of his discourse given to the Gopis, or the milkmaids who accompanied Lord Krishna during his childhood days in Vrindavan, in the Gopal Uttar Tapini Upanishad which is the 27th Upanishad of the Atharva Veda tradition.
The Brihajjabal Upanishad of the Atharva Veda tradition, in its Brahman 7, verse no. 3 asserts that he was one of the great ascetics who were honoured by the title of being ‘Paramhans’—i.e. an ascetic who was highly self-realised, enlightened and wise as well as one who was totally detached from all things concerning this mundane world and life.
He was the third son of sage Atri and his devout wife Anusuiya, born as a fraction or part incarnation of Rudra, the angry form of Bhagwan Shiva.
His mother was Mata Anasuya who was the sister of sage Kapila and was one of the seven most “Pativrata Strees” (the others being - Devi Sita, Devi Draupadi, Devi Tara, Devi Ahilya, Devi Mandodari & Devi Savitri).
This was the probable reason of his inheriting the genes of vehement anger. He is regarded as a human incarnation of Shiva’s arrow by which he had destroyed the three cities called the Tripuras which belonged to the demon sons of Taarakaasur.
Some of the well known incidents related to him are briefly the following:
🪔 He was so pleased with Kunti, the daughter of king Kuntibhoja, for her devoted service that he gave a most powerful and potent Mantra or a secret formula by which she could invite any God she wished and get a son from him. It is believed that the five Pandavas and the hundred Kaurvas around whom the great epic story of Mahabharat is built were begotten by her as a result of this boon she had got.
🪔 On the advice of sage Durvasa, Lord Krishna had smeared his own body, except the feet, with the left-over of the sweet pudding eaten by the sage. As a result of this, Krishna’s entire body, except the feet, had become impenetrable by any weapon, and this proved to be a great boon during the epic war of Mahabharat.
🪔 He completed the half done sacrifice of king Shvetaki and enabled him to ascend to heaven.
🪔 Being of a legendary short temper, once he had shown unwarranted anger against king Ambarisha which back-fired on him and he had to run for cover when the Sudershan Chakra, the discus weapon of Lord Vishnu, pursued him in retribution. Ultimately, it was the generous king who himself had to rescue him from this curse.
🪔 According to the epic Ramayan, sage Durvasa was responsible for Shri Ram abandoning his brother Laxman and the latter’s ultimate demise which resulted in the final curtains being drawn on the story of Ramayana when Shri Ram, unable to bear the pain of his separation from his beloved brother who was so devoted, obedient and faithful to him, left this world by taking Mahasamadhi on the banks of the river Saryu. He was followed by the rest of his family members and the subject of the kingdom of Ayodhya who decided to accompany Shri Ram as it was too much an ordeal for them all to live in this mortal world in the absence of their beloved Sri Ram. Hence, Durvasa got the infamous reputation of being the cause of unnecessary agony and pain to so many innocent souls in this world.
According to some Puranas, Durvasa Muni’s curse on Devraj Indra was an indirect reason for the Samudra Manthana.
🪔 Shraaps given by Rishi Durvasa
Durvasa Muni, in his entire lifetime, cursed Devraj Indra (because his elephant insulted the Rishi), Devi Saraswati (because she laughed at the incorrect recitation of the Vedas by the Rishi), Devi Rukmini (because she drank water without offering him or asking his permission), Devi Shakuntala (because she was failed to notice him), Devi Kandali and many more.
Indra, whom he cursed to lose all his powers, after Indra's elephant Airavata threw down a rather fragrant garland given by Durvasa to Indra.
Saraswati, whom he cursed to be born as a human because she laughed at his incorrect recitation of the Vedas.
Rukmini, whom he cursed to be separated from her husband, Krishna, because she drank water without seeking Durvasa's permission.
Shakuntala, who avoided Durvasa while at the ashrama (hermitage) of Rishi Kanva, which enraged Durvasa rishi, who cursed her that Dushyanta would forget her. Durvasa later clarified that Dushyanta would remember her when she presented his ring (that he had previously given to her) to him.
Kandali, his wife, whom he cursed to be reduced to a heap of dust for excessively quarrelling with him.
Bhanumati, the daughter of Banu, the erstwhile leader of the Yadavas. Bhanumati provoked Durvasa while playing at the garden of Raivata, and in response, Durvasa cursed her. She, later in life, is abducted by the Danava Nikumbha. However, Durvasa clarified (after being pacified) that no harm would come to Bhanumati, and that she would be saved go on to marry the Pandava Sahadeva.
🪔Greatest Sages (Rishi's) of Ancient Bharat
(India)🧵
🪔Our Vedic culture and its Sanatan history is full of great Maharishis and Rishis who left behind an ocean of treasure trove of mystical, spiritual, scientific and metaphysical knowledge unparalleled in the history of the mankind.
🪔Everything we know in the name of Dharma, Karma and science today has been described by our Vedic Rishis in the Vedas, Upanishads, Puranas and Vedang's.
🪔For thousands of the year this knowledge has been passed on from one generation to another through "Shruti" and "Smriti" in Gurukul Shiksha.
⏳Let's start our invoking journey to know about these great harbingers of the Sanatan Dharma and Vedic knowledge: ☀️
1. Uddyakak Aaruni
He was the son of sage Arun Anupveshi, and belonged to the kingdom of Panchaal. He is one of the more important sages mentioned in the Upanishads. He was the father of another great sage named Shwetketu and had taught his own son the profoundly esoteric secrets of that by knowing which all that is unknown becomes known. (Refer Chandogya Upanishad of the Sam Veda tradition, 6.). He was a disciple of the sage Dhaumya. He was such a faithful and obedient disciple that once when his teacher had asked him to stop the water that had breached the embankments of his field during a heavy downpour, Aaruni lay down on the ground himself to block the breach as all his other efforts to stop the leakage had failed. The Guru (teacher) Dhaumya was exceedingly pleased at his devotion to duty, his sincerity and obedience, and therefore he blessed him that he would acquire all knowledge even without studying them formally, that he would get immense renown, glory and majesty, and that he would be especially blessed by the Bhagwan and accepted as his devotee. It is since then that Aaruni became famous as ‘Uddyakak’ one who fastened or bound the embankment. He had participated in the great metaphysical debate held in the court of the wise and enlightened king Janak of Videha in which sage Yagyavalkya had defeated all the assembled Brahmins. Aaruni had himself asked Yagyavalkya a question about who the Antaryaami (the one who resides in one’s inner self and knows everything, even one’s secret thoughts) was, and the latter replied this in a comprehensive manner. (Refer Brihad Aranyak Upanishad of the Shukla Yajur Veda tradition, Canto 3, Brahman 6.) He was very humble and readily acknowledged his limited knowledge of the fathomless unknown. This is proved by the fact that he had no second thoughts in requesting king Pravaahan, the son of king Jaivali, to teach him the ‘Panch Agni Vidya’ or the metaphysical knowledge about the five holy Fires. (Refer Chandogya Upanishad of the Sam Veda tradition, Canto 5, sections 3-10; Brihad Aranyak Upanishad of the Shukla Yajur Veda tradition, Canto 6, Brahman 2.) The Brihajjabal Upanishad of the Atharva Veda tradition, in its Brahman 7, verse no. 3 asserts that he was one of the great souls who had acquired a spiritual stature equivalent to the Gods as a result of wearing the sacred ash of the fire sacrifice.
2. The name Aruni appears in many of the Principal Upanishads, in numerous verses. For example:
In sections 3.7 and 6.2 of the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, in a dialogue where Aruni is relatively a minor participant.
In sections 6.1–16 and 5.3 of the Chandogya Upanishad, as a major dialogue between Aruni and his son Svetaketu, a dialogue about Atman and Brahman that contain ideas foundational to the Vedanta school of Hindu philosophy.
The dialogue sets the context of the son, who goes to a Vedic school for twelve years of studies, is conceded that he has learnt the books (Vedas). Aruni, the father enquires and presses Svetaketu whether at school, he pondered and understood the nature of existence, what is truth, what is reality, the meaning of life and self-knowledge, and the relationship between oneself, other beings and the universal self.
In verse 1.1 of the Kaushitaki Upanishad, where the scion of Gangya invites Aruni, but he sends his son to the event. This verse is notable for the conversation therein that suggests the full name of Aruni to be Uddalaka Aruni Gautama, and the mention of him as one of the characters in a group event that hosted "Vedic studies in the hall of sacrifice" (yajna).
In the Katha Upanishad, which opens with the story of Vajasravasa, also called Aruni Auddalaki Gautama. The theme discussed in the dialogues of the Katha Upanishad is also Atman and Brahman.
Sage Aruni is revered in the Hindu tradition, and like many of its revered ancient scholars, later era scholars from the earliest times attributed or named their texts after him. Some of these treatises include:
Arunisruti, also called Uddalaka Sruti, likely a medieval era theistic text that has been lost to history, and one cited by Madhvacharya.
Aruni Upanishad, also called Aruneya Upanishad, is one of the oldest renunciation and monk life-related Sannyasa Upanishads of Hinduism.
The Aruni Upanishad states that bookish and ritual knowledge is irrelevant, the true pursuit of knowledge is the meaning, the essence and the import of Vedic ideas, one has the right and duty to abandon the worldly life in the singular pursuit of spirituality.
New U.S. BIOLOGICAL RESEARCH LAB IN AFRICA
In the last week of October 2023, specialists from the US Army Research Institute of Infectious Diseases arrived in Kenya. It was obviously classified, but it is clear that their main goal is to establish military-biological facilities in the region.
In Africa, the U.S. funds biolaboratories in Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Nigeria, South Africa, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, and Uganda.
The Bioweapons Convention has no impact on the work of "civilian" biological laboratories, which is why the US always uses proxy USAID to establish such labs under the guise of the public health initiatives
In Kenya, USAMRU-K (US Army Medical Research Unit in Kenya) was established in 1973 in the capital Nairobi. The Belgian media were the first to sound the alarm about the ongoing activities of the center. Belgian journalists revealed the selection of children aged 5 to 17 months from low-income families for vaccine trials. Moreover, the children were not only from Kenya but also from Tanzania and Mozambique, not so far away. At the time, the Kenyan press published an article about the center being an incubator of 16 extremely dangerous pathogens.
The US Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA), the US National Security Agency, and the US Department of State are the clients of the alleged US government dual-use biological research activities in Africa
That is why 30 microbiologists from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Navy’s 3rd Medical Research Unit arrived in Kenya as early as October this year.
Biological laboratories, which will be assigned biosafety level four, play an important role in implementing this policy by enabling research on specific agents of deadly diseases such as Ebola, which has a 90 per cent mortality rate, as well as Marburg, Lassa, anthrax, cholera, malaria, yellow fever and chikungunya.
Washington is focused on testing and producing vaccine samples and rapid diagnostic systems that will collect genetic material from people on the African continent.
What’s the benefit of this?
The collection of genetic information will create a database of exposure to different pathogens based on the ethnicity of people in Africa.
Research in Kenya is being conducted by the US military for the fifth time this year, with similar work taking place between 5th and September 23, 2023.
Such disregard for Africans characterizes the usual approach of the US to organizing the production of biological warfare weapons. Developing countries are seen as a global testing ground for bioweapons, the development of which is then used around the world. For example, US military microbiologists in Lamu County (Kenya) have collected bats, fleas, ticks, and other insects capable of spreading dangerous infectious diseases.
The Americans organize their research with the official aim of developing tools to combat infectious diseases, identifying new viral and bacterial pathogens that can be transmitted from bats to humans, causative agents of brucellosis, leptospirosis, plague and coronaviruses. The fact is that the activity of American laboratories is closed to the international community and is beyond the control of the UN.
But in reality, this research is a precursor of the US BIOWEAPON PROGRAM, which might be used against the populations of the non cooperative regimes across the globe.
1. The lies
On December 11, the 2023 Meeting of States Parties to the Convention on the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BTWC) begins in Geneva. Within the framework of the same meeting last year, in September 2022, Russia initiated a Consultative Meeting in accordance with the fifth article of the Convention, and in early November provided questions about the violation of the BTWC by Ukraine and the United States to the UN Security Council.
The Russian Federation provided necessary documents which evidenced financial, scientific, technical and personnel support from the United States to the dangerous research on the territory of Ukraine. The laboratories there carried out operations with components of biological weapons, and where studies of pathogens of particularly dangerous and economically significant infections were carried out.
Within the meeting of the UN Security Council, Moscow asked 20 questions about the violation of the requirements of the Convention by Kiev and Washington. As a results, Moscow did not receive any clear answers to its questions.
Hiding behind the wording of article X of the Convention, Washington and Kiev described military biological research as “cooperation for peaceful purposes.
2. The Poison
The President of Ukraine coordinates the actions of the national special services to organize an anti-Russian provocation using toxic substances. Kiev is trained by Western patrons, who had earlier attempted such provocations in Syria.
The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) has engaged the Ukrainian company Realab specialized in the import of chemicals and precursors. In October-November of this year, it purchased a “small batch” of triethanolamine, and a nitrogen-containing sodium compound produced by the US company Honeywell Research Chemicals in Germany.
The armed forces of Ukraine intentionally infected water sources, including drinking water, food supplies and animal feed with pathogenic biological agents.
In November 2023, specialists of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation, together with the Rosselkhoznadzor, established the deliberate nature of the outbreak of African swine fever in the village of Chernihiv, Zaporozhye region. As a result of the deliberate contamination with the African swine fever pathogen on the territory of the agricultural enterprise, more than 7 thousand pigs were slaughtered.
🪔Mohan Das Karam Chand Gandhi
who was not a Mahatma.
1️⃣A look at the eccentric ways of Mohan Das Karam Chand Gandhi which destroyed our Sanatan culture and left deep scars of the horizons of the Hindu Society forever.
2️⃣A man who divided Bharat into parts because of his frivolous yet vengeful politics of nonviolence along with personal likes and dislikes.
3️⃣We are sons and daughters of the revered "Bharat Mata" and there is no place for a person who slept naked with young women throughout his life to be named "Rashtra Pita" or even to be named "Mahatma" as eulogized by the Rabindra Nath Tagore.
4️⃣ We will explore what motivated Mohan Das Karam Chand Gandhi to create his own cynic philosophy of the sex and abstinence (Brahmcharya which was not) and how he will have his way through despite very strong criticism heaped on his experiments with sex by some of his very close allies and followers.
1. The Indian who was not an Indian
When Mohan Das Karam Chand Gandhi landed in South Africa to defend a very corrupt Muslim businessman Dada Abdullah at the behest of one his references in Rajkot India, It was a breath of fresh air to his almost dead legal career as a barrister.
Since his english days He has seen the advent of the Theosophical society in England at one firebrand lady at its helms, Annie Wood Bessant who would went on to became first woman president of the INDIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS some 30 Years later on.
In England Gandhi was introduced to the writings of the Tolstoy the literary giant from then U.S.S.R. Gandhi started a letter correspondence with him about his opinions about the topics which Gandhi held in great esteem about his beliefs and and his utopia of a just society.
Gandhi was greatly influenced by three literary works which shaped his strange experiments of 1. Ahinsa/ Non Violence 2. Brahmacharya/ Sex / Celibacy ( as touted by Gandhi himself) 3. A casteless socialist society 4. A secular society
1. Unto the last written by John Ruskin - This book led Gandhi to formulate his concept of volunteer poverty and minimalist life with a commune type living which he forced on all his followers for the rest of his life
2. Kingdom of God is within you - Tolstoy
This work of the Tolstoy gave Gandhi his own concept and explanation of the God as he was an atheist who had his own explanation for Hindu vedic epics like Ramayan, Mahabharat, Gita Hindu society. He became a staunch opposer of the idol worship as practiced in the Hindu Society of the India
3. The Kreutzer Sonata - Tolstoy
Tolstoy created a concept of sexual abstinence in this book which included married couples also. As Tolstoy crticised and abhorred the sexual perversions of the elites of the Russian society and held the belief that sexual instincts are the soul cause of the everything banal in the society as marital sex is only a mean for the progination and nothing else. So married couples shall practice celibacy and refrain from the sexual relations with each other.
Gandhi picked up this concept in letter and spirit to apply it as a cover for the all his sexual escapades in the name of his "EXPERIMENTS WITH BRAHMACHARYA" to test his brahmacharya by sleeping naked with his women disciples.
In later part of the thread we will see how these three literary works were used by Gandhi as his thesis for shaping in ideological tyranny and his pervesion of the experiments with Brahmacharya.
Gandhi himself mentioned about the impact of these three literary works on his ideology, political philosphy and his commune living experiments.
2. An unwelcome visitor
When Gandhi formed Natal Indian congress in 1894 with the support of his Muslim businessman patrons of the Natal and Johannesburg region, he was hailed a force to reckon with in the fight of the rights for the indentured Indian slaves. There Gandhi came in contact with Esoteric Christian Union and its missionaries who wanted to reconcile all religions into one by saying that all religions strive for the same goal that is to embrace the divine. This was used as Gandhi for his concept of the "Sarv Dharm Sadhbhav" secular philosphy which lead to so many Hindu genocides in India due to his muslim appeasement policies as the "Super President" of the Indian National Congress post his return to India in 1915.
First experiment of his "Brahmacharya" / Sex started in South Africa with the establishment of a commune in Phoenix near Durban which became first of many experimental labs/ communes Gandhi established in South Africa and India.
uring his South Africa sojourn, Mohan Das karam Chand Gandhi met two persons in 1904, who would influence his politics of Satyagrah and non voilence, his experiments of celibacy as well as his relationship with his own wife and sons.
First person Gandhi met was a young 21 Year Henry Polak who was a copy editor of a newspaper named "The Critic".
He and Gandhi met in a vegetarian restraunt Ada Bissicks ' s vegetarian teahouse
on Rissik Street, across from Gandhi ' s law office on Rissik Street close to the Government Courts in Johannesburg.
Gandhi and Polak wil have long discussion s on literature maily the work of the Leo Tolstoy which had a profound impact on Gandhi.
Polak also introduced Gandhi to English Writer John Ruskin's essay "Unto the Last" which a a typical socialist critique of then Lassaze Faire economy and
working conditions of the workers.
Second person Gandhi Met in 1904 was Hermann Kallenbach, a jew from Prussia (Now Germany) who was an architect by profession. He was raised in Konigsberg whih is known as Kaliningrad, Baltic Russia. Their he was trained in body building under the Eugen Sandow who is called father of the modern body building.
It was Herman Kallenbach who introduced Gandhi to his full time personal secretary in South Africa, Sonja Schlesin who was also a jew like Herman Kallenbach. She remained associated with the law firm of Gnadhi in South Africa throughout his sojourn in South Africa.
Gandhi launched a news paper "Indian Opinion" in 1904 to raise issues of the Indian Diaspora in South Africa. He asked Henry Pollak to join as its editor and a young Pollak moved in with Gandhi family to live in a spacious rented house.
Pic 3 - Gandhi with Kallenbach sitting on right side
Pic 4 - Henry Pollak