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   | Did Muslims and Hindus 
interact during Muslim rule? By Maqbool Ahmed Siraj   (The writer can be reached at maqbool_siraj@rediffmail.com 
and debunkmyth@yahoo.co.in) Ramayana was translated into Persian at the behest of emperor Akbar. Long after 
Akbar, the Mughal court continued the tradition of cultural blending.
 
 Hindus and Muslims did not live like frozen cubes all through the span of 650 
years of Muslim rule in India. Lively intercourse pervaded all sectors of 
existence, social, political, intellectual and cultural.
 
 The protagonists of cultural nationalism today make out a case for purging the 
national life of any traces of composite culture that developed in the Indo-Gangetic 
plains during the 650 years of Muslim rule. This has necessitated them to 
fabricate a history of cultural suppression of Hindus in the medieval India. 
Alongside has emerged a project to project a homogenized Hindu cultural identity 
by underplaying the fissures and contradictions within them and ignoring the 
cultural variety.
 
 A closer examination of the history reveals that Muslim developed a profound 
cultural understanding of Indian ethos, customs, mythology and literature 
inasmuch as Ramayana became the most translated book in Islamic languages like 
Arabic, Persian and Urdu.
 
 It is hard to share the sense of amazement of some non-Muslims when they hear 
that Ramayana was translated into Persian at the behest of emperor Akbar. 
Ramayana is not the only book that was transferred to Persian. Akbar ordered 
several of Sanskrit classics to be translated. A committee of scholars with 
cross-lingual expertise had been constituted by the Mughal court to oversee 
important translation assignments. Bearded maulvis trained in Sanskrit engaged 
in discourse with saffron robed Persian scholars. It included worthies such as 
Naqeeb Khan, Mulla Abdul Qadir Badayuni, Mulla Sheri and Sultan Haji Thanesari. 
It rendered Mahabharath into Persian and titled it Razm Namah (literally the 
Saga of theBatlefield). The royal ateliers were directed to illustrate and gild 
its pages. Ramayana was translated by Mulla Abdul Qadir Badayuni a year later. 
Atharva Veda was translated by Haji Ibrahim Sirhindi. Translation of Lord 
Krishna’s biography, Harbans was undertaken by Mullah Sheri. Badayuni took up 
the task of Singhasan Batisi into Persian and titled it Khurd Afza in Persian. 
The famous Sanskrit treatise Rajataringini by Kalhana was translated by Maulana 
Shah Mohammad Shahabadi. It may be recalled that it was originally commissioned 
by Kashmiri sultan Zainulabedin. The famous Sanskrit folktales Panchtantra were 
rendered into Persian by Mulla Hussain Waiz and was named Kaleela wa Dimna. 
Akbar found the morals of the stories too inspiring and found that the Waiz’s 
translation was deficient in transferring the essence. He then ordered its 
review by his noble courtier Abul Fazal who ultimately came up with a simple 
rendering and titled as Ayyar e Danish.
 
 Malik Mohammad Jaisi (b. 1498) wrote Padmavath during the reign of Sher Shah (in 
1542) and later authored Akhravat and Chitra Rekha. Padmavath is of no less 
literary value than Ramayana.
 
 Abul Fazl’s elder brother Faizi translated famous Sanskrit work Leelavath into 
Persian and the Persian book Zeech Jadeed Mirzai into Sanskrit. On the 
translation board of these two works were Gangadhar, Kishen Jyotishi, Fatehullah 
Khan Shirazi and Abul Fazal.
 
 Akbar himself wrote poetry in Hindi and took the pseudonym of Rai Karan. His 
famous couplet:
 Jako jas hai jagat mein, jagat sarai jahi, Tako japon saphal hai, kahe Akbar 
sahi.
 
 Akbar’s court bristled with Hindi and Sanskrit poets and scholars. Among whom 
Raimanohar Mol, Raja Mukund Singh, Rai Jagannath, Raja Todermal and Raja Man 
Singh were prominent. The list is endless. The general encouragement accorded to 
Indian languages led to blossoming of Hindi as a lingua franca. Leading Hindi 
poets like Haridas, Surdas, Tulsi Das, Ras Khan, Nandas, Kabir Das, Raheem 
Khankahnan, Chaturbhuj Das, Chechet Swami, Parmanand Das, Govindswamy were 
products of this age. Joining this poetic galaxy was emperor’s own son, Prince 
Sultan Daniyal. Emperor Jehangir has lauded his brother’s Hindi poetry in his 
chronicle known as Tuzk e Jehangiri.
 
 It is also a fantastic fallacy of history to attribute founding of a new faith, 
‘Din e Ilahi’ to emperor Akbar. Akbar himself was unlettered. Death of his 
erudite father Babur early in the childhood did not allow him to attain 
education. But what he missed by pedagogy, he tried to attain through proximity 
to a wide ranging ulema and scholars. Governance of a country of as vast a 
diversity as India imparted a rare catholicity to his outlook. Be it Purkottham 
Brahman or Sheikh Tajuddin, Portuguese missionaries or Zoroastrian delegation 
from Navsari in Gujarat, all had free access to the emperor’s court. Their daily 
discourses, debates and arguments cast diverse influences on the emperor. All 
this led to Akbar developing a basic belief in the commonness of all religions 
but never to the extent of heresy against Islam and coercing his citizen to 
follow a new faith. Nevertheless, several apocryphal accounts have blended with 
history to prove that Akbar founded Din e Ilahi1. Firmans like ban on cow 
slaughter owed itself more to the respect for the sensitivities of Hindu 
subjects who worshipped cow as well as on advice of royal hakeems that cow beef 
caused several ailments and was not desirable from health point of view. Along 
with cow, the ban extended to buffalo, horses and camels too. His commandments 
with regard to appreciation of light (charagh afrozi) have been exaggerated to 
mean sun worship. The essence of Akbar’s catholic outlook was Sulhe kul or 
‘general consensus’ among all religions on certain human values.
 
 Long after Akbar, the Mughal court continued the tradition of cultural 
blending.
 
 Ramayana was translated into Persian in a poetic style by Sheikh Saadullah 
during the tenure of Jehangir and was titled as Rama wo Seeta.2 Famous Sanskrit 
work Padmavat was rendered into Persian in 1617. Chitravalli, the Hindi poetry 
collection by poet Usman is creation of Jehangir’s age. Sheikh Nabi Hindi of 
Mhow compiled his Hindi poems in a book Gyan Deep, which is sufi-cum-romantic 
poetry.
 
 
 Hindi poet Jagannath Pandit Raj was the most favourite poet of Shah Jehan on 
whom he conferred the titled of Kavi Rai. He appointed Hindi poet Sundar as poet 
laureate who later compiled Sundar Shringar. It was during Shah Jehan’s tenure 
that Maulana Abdur Rahman Chishti penned the dialogue between Mahadev and 
Parvathi and built up an analogy with Adam and Eve, the first ancestors of human 
beings according to the Islamic and Christian theology. He made a poetic 
translation of Geeta into Persian.
 
 Dara Shikoh, the third son of Shah Jehan, wrote Majmaaul Bahrain wherein he 
tries to close the gap between Islam and Hinduism and considers them two springs 
from the same source. Mughal literary activity did not confine itself to on 
literary masterpieces. Dara Shikoh developed a deep understanding of rural 
ambience and compiled a book of farming tips tieled Nuskha dar Fanni Falahat 
(The Art of Agriculture)3.
 
 Hindu-Muslim interaction went beyond literature and gave rise to several 
syncretic movements like Kabir Panthis, blending elements of faith and culture 
of both Hinduism and Islam. On a larger plane, even Sikhism and Arya Samaj 
represent the trend. But there are even less heard variants such as Sultani Jats 
of Jalandhar. They are known so as they are devotees of Sultan Sakhi Sarwar, a 
sage whose mausoleum is in Shahkot, now Pakistan. They eat only Halal meat. They 
are mostly peasants and smoke on huqqa. They set up Sultan ziyarat outside their 
villages. They clean this on Thursday evenings and light up lamps. This may not 
be pleasing to the ears of followers of Salafi Islam or other puritanical 
movements4.
 
 Till 1947 they used to take out jatra to Shahkot’s mausoleum every year. 
Partition discontinued this tradition. During Sikh rule, the Sikh governor of 
Multan banned it and levied Rs. 100 as fine on every one who attempted at going 
on a jatra. But the practice could not be curbed. It continued to be in practice 
till Ludhiana and Jalandhar Gazetteers were started to publish.
 
 Cultural interaction extended beyond the Hindi heartland. Sultan Nasir Shah 
(1282-1325) was fond of Bangla language. When he found that classical literary 
masterpieces were absent in Bangla, he commissioned the translation of 
Mahabharat and Ramayana in Bangla language. Sultan Hussain Shah appointed 
Maladhar Basu to translate Bhagwat Puranas in Bangla. Hussain Shah’s 
commander-in-chief Praful commissioned the second translation of Mahabharat. He 
appointed Jayasri Karan on the project.
 
 Hindutva or Muslim zealots may be interested in projecting the ancient and 
medieval history into neat compartments of Hindu and Muslim history. But people 
have absorbed influences from each other’s faith, cultures, customs, ethos and 
habits. It is why one needs to look at South Asian Islam as it has been lived 
out, rather than from the doctrinal prism.
 
 
   Notes and references 
 1-Accounts of a Portuguese Father in 1594 (Akbar died in 1606 after 50 years of 
rule) merely mention rumours about Akbar’s intention to found a new faith. Din e 
Ilahi does not find any mention among the chronicles of his age which are a 
legion. Famous chronicler Abul Fazal has titled his firmans as Aayeen e 
Rahnumaii (Constitutional Guidance). The term Din e Ilahi was first used in 
Dabistan e Mazahib, which was compiled nearly 70 years after emperor’s death.
 
 2-Makhtutat e Farsi, India Office Library, Vol. 1
 
 3- Nuskha Dar Fanni-Falahat (The Art of Agriculture) by Dara Shikoh and 
translated by Razia Akbar has been published by Asian Agri-History Foundation, 
47-ICRISAT Colony-I, Brig. Sayeed Road, Secunderabad-500 009 in 2002.
 
 4-Sheikh Mohammad Ikram, Aab-e-Kausar, Adabi Dunia, Matiamahal, New Delhi, 1991
 
 
 
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