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Wednesday 11 May 2022

Kerala Lottery 2022: Akshaya AK-548 lottery result to be declared at 3 pm, first prize Rs 70 lakh

The Kerala Lottery Department will release the results of the Akshaya AK-548 lottery draw at 3 pm today, 11 May. The AK-548 lottery results can be checked by visiting the official website of the Kerala lottery department. The detailed results will be available from 4 pm onwards on the website.

The Akshaya AK-548 lottery draw will be held at Gorky Bhavan near Bakery Junction in Thiruvananthapuram. To make it convenient for the ticket holders, the Akshaya AK-548 lottery results will also be released in the Kerala Government Gazette.

The winner of the first prize will take home an amount of Rs 70 lakh, while the second and third prize winner will get an amount of Rs 5 lakh and Rs 1 lakh, respectively. Winners need to know that a Kerala lottery tax deduction of 30 percent and an agent lottery commission of 10 percent are applicable on the AK-548 prize amount won.

Follow these steps to check lottery results:

Step 1: Go to the Kerala lottery department’s official website
Step 2: Click on Akshaya AK-548 lottery results link
Step 3: The lottery draw results will then be displayed on the screen
Step 4: Ticket holders will then have to match their respective ticket numbers with the results announced.

Here’s how to claim the Akshaya AK-548 prize money:

After the lottery draw results are released, AK-548 ticket holders will need to match their numbers with the results published in the Kerala Government Gazette.

The winners of the Akshaya AK-548 lottery draw will then be required to submit their tickets at the lottery office within 30 days from the announcement of the result. It is to be noted that the winning lottery tickets should be in good condition and not damaged. If the tickets are found to be damaged, then the winner cannot claim the prize money.

The winners will be required to carry a valid identification card along with passport-size photographs when they visit the lottery office to claim the prize.

Winners who have won a prize amount of Rs 5,000 or more in AK-548 lottery will have to go through a verification process at the lottery department’s office. Those who win an amount of less than Rs 5,000 can claim their prize at any authorised lottery shop in the state.
Keywords: Kerala Lottery 2022, Kerala Lottery, Kerala Lottery Draw



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Tuesday 10 May 2022

Madhya Pradesh: Two sisters end up almost marrying each other's groom due to power cut in Ujjain

A bizarre incident came to fore from Ujjain district in Madhya Pradesh where two of three sisters, who were getting married on the same day, ended up being with the wrong grooms as there was power cut at the time of the auspicious muhurat.

There were four marriages taking place in the Ujjain district simultaneously. However, during the festivities and rituals, there was a sudden power failure after which two brides with ghoonghat (covering their face with cloth) sat with the wrong grooms and performed the wedding rituals.

When the power came back right before the brides and grooms were being taken for phere with their wrong match, there was commotion and panic among family members and guests after they realised the blunder.

The families concerned then sat together and after discussions, the right matches took phere again. The priests re-chanted the vows to set the things right.

The incident took place on 5 May in Aslana village in Badnagar tehsil which is around 20 kilometers away from Ujjain.

According to a report by TOI, three baraats – of Rahul of Khirakhedi village, and Bhola and Ganesh from Dangwada village - arrived at Rameshlal Relot's house to marry his three daughters. Also, Relot's son was getting married on the same day and at the same place.

"The family members identified the mistake in some light and immediately fixed it. The priest performed the seven vows ceremony with the right match of bride and groom," the report quoted Lakhan Patel, a villager, as saying.

A report by News18 said that the affected families accused the local administration of inflicting power cuts from 7 pm to 12 midnight daily which is why the brides were exchanged mistakenly.

Locals claimed that the mismatched couples had even taken phere together. The families, however, denied the same saying the pheres were taken by the right matches.

Of the three daughters, Komal was to be married to Rahul, Nikita was to wed Bhola, Karishma was to marry Ganesh. The grooms of Karishma and Nikita came from Dangwada in Badnagar. While Komal’s marriage procession reached her home in the daytime and she got married by evening.

The baraats of Nikita and Komal reached their house around 11 pm when there was a power cut and visibility was poor. During the initial rituals, which started soon after the grooms and their family arrived, the couple got mismatched and Nikita sat with Ganesh and Karishma sat with Bhola to perform puja. The faux-pa was exposed when the couples were bought to mandap for phere and it emerged that grooms are with wrong brides.

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Explained: How Raj Thackeray’s ‘Marathi manoos’ pride has become a sticking point ahead of his Ayodhya visit

Raj Thackeray’s upcoming visit to Ayodhya on 5 June has been making news for all the wrong reasons.

A Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) MP has openly declared that he won’t allow the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) chief to enter the city till he tendered a public apology for humiliating north Indians.

Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh, the MP from Kaiserganj Lok Sabha constituency and one of the leaders of the Ram Mandir movement, said, “Will not allow Raj Thackeray, who humiliates north Indians, enter the Ayodhya border.”

“Before coming to Ayodhya, Raj Thackeray should apologise to all North Indians with folded hands,” he said.

As the controversy grows over the Thackeray’s visit to the temple city and his attempt of becoming a new saffron icon, we take a look at the genesis of the issue and why the BJP MP seems adamant on being a roadblock.

Also read: Raj Thackeray: Why the ‘angry man of Maharashtra’ is so active again

Anti-migrant stance

When Raj Thackeray formed the MNS back in 2006, his aim was to prove himself as his uncle Bal Thackeray’s real political heir. When the development plant didn’t work, Thackeray adopted the ‘Marathi manoos’ agenda and took a hard standpoint against migrants, especially those from the North — Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.

In 2008, Raj went on a tirade against those who moved from Uttar Pradesh to Maharashtra and even went after Amitabh Bachchan. In many of his early 2008 rallies, he asserted that the superstar was “more interested” in his home state of Uttar Pradesh rather than Maharashtra.

In another party function, Thackeray was quoted as saying, “Though he (Amitabh) has become a star in Mumbai, his interest is in Uttar Pradesh. That is why he was trying to be an ambassador of UP rather than Maharashtra. That is why though he achieved everything in Mumbai, when it came to elections, Amitabh chose Uttar Pradesh.”

In February 2008, MNS workers clashed with the Samajwadi Party in Mumbai’s Dadar, assaulted taxi drivers from north India, and vandalised their vehicles. Thackeray justified the attacks saying it was a reaction to the uncontrolled ‘dadagiri’ of migrants and leaders from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.

In October of the same year, his party workers beat up North Indian candidates appearing for the all-India Railway Recruitment Board entrance exam. This led to an outrage from Bihar’s prominent leaders — Lalu Prasad Yadav and Nitish Kumar. While Lalu called Raj Thackeray as a “mental case, the latter had spoken to then Maharashtra chief minister Vilasrao Deshmukh, urging him to provide protection to the migrants from Bihar.

Thackeray was then arrested in Ratnagiri, an arrest that ignited violence by his supporters. Irate supporters went on the rampage torching public transport and telling office goers to return home.

Through the years, despite his political losses, he kept up his anti-migrant posturing. In 2012, attributed the rising crime rate in Mumbai to the migrants, mainly north Indians.

He also attributed the high incidence of coronavirus cases in the state to migrant workers.

Maharashtra is the most industrialised state in India which attracts a large number of workers from other states. The places from where these workers come lacked enough testing facilities. During the lockdown last year, I had suggested that migrant workers who returned to their native places should be tested, but it was not done," the MNS chief was quoted as saying.

‘Won’t allow him in Ayodhya’

Raj Thackeray’s reinvention as the new Hindutva icon — in light of the Hanuman Chalisa row raging in Maharashtra — has hit a roadblock after his visit to Ayodhya has hit a snag.

On 17 April, Raj Thackeray at Pune had announced that he would visit Ayodhya on 5 June to seek blessings of Lord Ram.

“On 5 June, I will go to Ayodhya along with other MNS workers to have darshan of Lord Ram. I appeal to other people also to come to Ayodhya,” Thackeray had said in a press conference.

However, Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh, the six-time MP from Kaiserganj has vociferously opposed Thackeray’s visit, demanding an apology for his violent campaign against north Indian migrants in 2008. He said he would not allow the MNS chief to enter Ayodhya on 5 June even if he apologises.

On 9 May, he also called for a meeting of top saints and head priests (Mahants) of all temples in Ayodhya on Tuesday to devise a strategy to stop the MNS chief from entering the city, the Hindustan Times reported.

Singh also requested Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath not to meet Thackeray till he apologised to the North Indians.

BJP in a conundrum

Singh’s opposition to Raj Thackeray’s Ayodhya visit has become a sticking point for the BJP.

The resistance to Thackeray’s visit comes at a time when many political experts have noted that the MNS has been cosying up to the BJP, ahead of the Mumbai civic body elections.

As Kapil Patil, a research assistant with the Department of Civics and Politics, University of Mumbai, noted in a PTI report that Raj Thackeray recently had meetings with BJP leaders — state unit chief Chandrakant Patil, former chief minister Devendra Fadnavis, former Maharashtra minister Ashish Shelar and Union minister Nitin Gadkari.

The Maha Vikas Aghadi government in Maharashtra, an alliance of the Shiv Sena, Nationalist Congress Party and the Congress, has slammed the MNS for working in tandem with the BJP. While the BJP has rejected the suggestion, the party has been supporting Thackeray’s cause in Maharashtra.

With inputs from agencies

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Cyclone Asani update: Red alert in Andhra Pradesh as cyclonic storm changes direction; NDRF teams deployed in state

Severe cyclonic storm Asani has changed its direction and is likely to reach west central Bay of Bengal, close to Andhra Pradesh coast on Wednesday, following which a red alert has been sounded in the state by the Indian Meteorological Department.

"Cyclone warning and a red alert have been given to Andhra Pradesh. Till yesterday, the track was showing a northwest direction but in the last 6 hours, it is moving towards the West-Northwest direction. So, it's very near to our Andhra Pradesh coast," Visakhapatnam cyclone warning centre director Sunanda told news agency ANI.

As many as nine teams have been deployed by the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) in Andhra Pradesh and seven others have been kept on standby. In Odisha, one team has been deployed and 17 have been put on standby, whereas in West Bengal, 12 teams have been deployed and five were on standby.

In view of cyclone Asani, traffic movement on the Kakinada-Uppada beach road in Andhra Pradesh has been suspended. "Pitch road is damaged, we put up two check-posts in our limits to control vehicular movement. Roads are getting damaged. We’re stopping everybody from taking this route," police said.

Warning of heavy rains in Andhra Pradesh

Rains continue to lash most parts of the Kakinada district in Andhra Pradesh Wednesday morning. Dr Nagaratna, Head, Meteorological Centre, Hyderabad, told news agency ANI that heavy to very heavy rainfall warning has been issued along the coastal districts of Andhra Pradesh.

The officials said that cyclone Asani has changed its direction and is going to touch the nearby Kakinada coast after which it will come again to sea between Kakinada and Visakhapatnam.

Telangana's Nalgonda, Suryapet, Bhadradri Kothagudem, Khammam and Mulugu districts are also expected to receive light to moderate rainfall.

Officials from the weather office said that Hyderabad is likely to experience light rains in the next 24 hours and cloudy conditions would persist for the next 48 hours.

Cyclone Asani starts losing steam

Severe cyclone Asani over west central Bay of Bengal moved west-northwestwards with a speed of 12 kmph and has weakened into a cyclonic storm, India Meteorological Department (IMD) told on Wednesday morning.

"It's very likely to move nearly northwestwards for next few hours and reach Westcentral Bay of Bengal close to Andhra Pradesh coast. Thereafter, it's very likely to recurve slowly north-northeastwards, move along Machilipatnam, Narsapur, Yanam, Kakinada, Tuni and Visakhapatnam coasts," India Meteorological Department (IMD) said.

The weather office further said that cyclone Asani will emerge into west central Bay of Bengal off North Andhra Pradesh coasts by Wednesday evening. "Then it is likely to move northeastwards towards northwest Bay of Bengal. It is likely to weaken gradually into a depression by morning of 12 May," it added.

IMD Director General Mrutunjay Mohapatra also said that the severe cyclonic storm will weaken into a cyclonic storm on Wednesday and turn into a deep depression on Thursday.

On Tuesday, Mohapatra said in Bhubaneswar that cyclone Asani has already achieved the maximum stage of intensification and is gradually getting weakened. "After nearing the Andhra Pradesh coast in the evening, the system will change its course and move off and along the Odisha coast," he added.

Meanwhile, light to moderate rainfall occured in Puri and Khurda and few places in north coastal Andhra Pradesh and coastal Odisha, since last night, have been witnessing heavy downpour.

"Storm surge owing to the cyclonic storm is likely to inundate low-lying areas of Krishna, East and West Godavari and Visakhapatnam districts of Andhra Pradesh," news agency PTI quoted the weatherman in Kolkata as saying.

Also, fishermen have been warned against venturing into the deep sea till Thursday, as Odisha and West Bengal braced for heavy rain. The Met department said that light to moderate rainfall is likely over districts of Gangetic West Bengal till 12 May.

Heavy rainfall has also been predicted at one or two places over Purba Medinipur, Paschim Medinipur, North and South 24 Parganas and Nadia districts of the state till 12 May morning.

Measures taken by Odisha to brace cyclone Asani

The Odisha government has put five districts - Malkangiri, Koraput, Rayagada, Ganjam and Gajapati - on high alert as the system will come "very close" to land at a place between Kakinada and Vishakhapatnam in Andhra Pradesh.

Apart from this, the coastal districts are also under alert for the eventuality, Special Relief Commissioner (SRC) P K Jena said.

"As Odisha's Malkangiri district is about 200 km from Kakinada in Andhra Pradesh, we have also mobilised rescue teams to the southern districts. They will be prepositioned well before the time of the cyclone passing near Odisha coast," PTI quoted P K Jena as saying.

In Ganjam district, all beaches including Gopalpur have been closed for visitors for two days. Also, the East Coast Railway (ECoR) has put its officials on high alert in the wake of possible heavy rainfall triggered by the cyclone.

Don't Miss: Cyclone Asani: Fishermen out in sea despite warning narrowly escape as boats capsize off Odisha’s Ganjam coast; WATCH

The Odisha government announced that action under Disaster Management Act will be taken against fishermen venturing into deep seas by not heeding the IMD warning.

The decision was taken after six fishing boats capsized in the sea near Chatrapur in Ganjam district on Tuesday but around 60 fishermen swam ashore battling strong winds and sharp waves.

With inputs from agencies

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Petrol, diesel prices today: Fuel rates remain unchanged on 11 May; petrol costs Rs 105.41 per litre in Delhi

New Delhi: Petrol and diesel prices remained unchanged for over a month at a stretch with no change in rates on Wednesday. Earlier both petrol and diesel rates were hiked by 80 paise a litre each, taking the total increase in rates in two weeks to Rs 10 per litre.

Petrol in Delhi now costs Rs 105.41 per litre, while diesel rate is Rs 95.87 per litre to Rs 96.67, according to a price notification of state fuel retailers. In Mumbai, petrol and diesel prices per litre stand at Rs 120.51 and Rs 104.77 respectively.

Rates across the country and vary from state to state, depending upon the incidence of local taxation.

In the last hike, the country saw the 14th increase in fuel prices since the ending of a four-and-half-month long hiatus in rate revision on 22 March.

On the first four occasions, prices were increased by 80 paise a litre - the steepest single-day rise since the daily price revision was introduced in June 2017. On the following days, petrol price went up by 50 paise and 30 paise a litre while diesel rose by 55 paise and 35 paise a litre. It was followed by a hike of 80 paise in a litre of petrol and by 70 paise for diesel.

Prices had been on a freeze since 4 November ahead of the Assembly elections in states like Uttar Pradesh and Punjab — a period during which the cost of raw material (crude oil) soared by about $30 per barrel.

The rate revision was expected soon after the counting of votes on 10 March but it was put off by a couple of weeks.

The increase in retail price warranted by crude oil prices rising during the 137-day hiatus from around $82 per barrel to $120 is huge but state-owned fuel retailers Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd (BPCL) and Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd (HPCL) are passing on the required increase in stages.

Moody's Investors Services last week stated that state retailers together lost around $2.25 billion (Rs 19,000 crore) in revenue for keeping petrol and diesel prices on hold during the election period.

Oil companies "will need to raise diesel prices by Rs 13.1-24.9 per litre and Rs 10.6-22.3 a litre on gasoline (petrol) at an underlying crude price of $100-120 per barrel," according to Kotak Institutional Equities.

CRISIL Research said a Rs 9-12 per litre increase in retail price will be required for a full pass-through of an average $100 per barrel crude oil and Rs 15-20 a litre hike if the average crude oil price rises to $110-120.

India is 85 per cent dependent on imports for meeting its oil needs and so retail rates adjust accordingly to the global movement.

Jet fuel prices on Friday were hiked by 2 per cent - the seventh straight increase this year - to an all-time high, reflecting a surge in global energy prices.

Aviation turbine fuel (ATF) - the fuel that helps aeroplanes fly - was hiked by Rs 2,258.54 per kilolitre, or 2 per cent, to Rs 1,12,924.83 per kl in the national capital, according to a price notification by state-owned fuel retailers.

There was, however, no change in the price of petrol and diesel on Friday. Prior to the second pause in 11 days, auto fuel rates had gone up by Rs 6.40 per litre.

The increase in ATF price came on the back of the steepest ever hike 18.3 per cent (Rs 17,135.63 per kl) effected on 16 March.

Jet fuel prices are revised on the 1st and 16th of every month based on the average international price of benchmark fuel in the preceding fortnight.

Jet fuel, which makes up for almost 40 per cent of the running cost of an airline, has this year surged to new highs.

ATF prices have increased every fortnight since the start of 2022. In seven hikes beginning 1 January, ATF prices have been increased by Rs 38,902.92 kl or almost 50 per cent.

With inputs from agencies

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National Technology Day 2022: Here's why the occasion is marked on 11 May every year

Technology today is an integral part of our daily lives, and considering its contribution to economic growth, the celebration of National Technology Day seems fairly obvious and significant. Marked every year on 11 May, the day reminds Indians of the country's technological advances.

The day celebrates not only scientists and engineers, but anyone who is involved with ideating, innovating, and promoting the dissemination of knowledge and also ensuring that its benefits reach the grassroots level.

Why is the day celebrated?

The National Technology Day is celebrated on 11 May to commemorate the anniversary of the 1998 Pokhran nuclear tests. These tests were a series of five explosions conducted under the guidance of Dr APJ Abdul Kalam at the Indian Army's Pokhran Test Range. The then-prime minister of India, Atal Bihari Vajpayee declared India a nuclear state after the tests, making it the sixth country to join the elite 'nuclear club'.

How is the day celebrated?

The government of India commemorates the day by honouring those who have made significant contributions to the development of new technology.

By recognising the contributions of scientists and engineers, the country highlights the significance of science in our lives and how young people can consider building a career in the field.

The Technological Development Board of the Ministry of Science and Technology honours individuals and groups for their remarkable achievements in the field and bestows medals on them.
The President of India attends the ceremony organised by the department and presents the awards to enterprises, organisations and individuals for their outstanding contributions to the field of science and technology. Many seminars and events are held all over India so that the entire nation recognises the significance of National Technology Day.

This year the theme of the day is yet to be declared. However, given the global epidemic, the prize ceremony and meeting is expected to be held online.

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Monday 9 May 2022

How British conspired with Gandhians, Nehruvians and Marxists to tamper with the DNA of Hindus

The more things change in India, the more they remain the same. These words came to my mind when I met an official heading a top social sciences institute in New Delhi. When I asked him how things have changed in the last eight years in the field of social sciences and research, he, visibly satisfied, started looking for a file on his table. “Two of our recent research works have been acknowledged and appreciated by an institution affiliated with the United Nations,” he said, with his face brimming with pride. He continued to list out other ‘achievements’, which among other things included a couple of research fellows getting selected for the Fulbright Scholar Program!

United Nations… Fulbright… These are all wonderful, but are we doing anything to counter the narrative that mars India and its traditions? Is there any research being done on challenging the colonial-missionary, Marxist-Nehruvian binaries that divide India and Indians through region, religion, caste, gender, race, history, politics, culture? He smiled and asked if I would like to have tea or coffee. I preferred green tea and soon bade him goodbye.

Distraught, I called up a former Delhi University professor. He listened to my complaints, and said, “Oh, you are unnecessarily worried.” He ended his monologue with the oft-repeated Iqbal couplet: “Kucch baat hai ki hasti mitati nahin hamari/ Sadion se raha dushman, daur-e-zaman hamara!”

Hasti mitati nahin hamari? Really! For a civilisation that lost almost a third of its landmass in the last 100 years, more than it could lose in over a millennium is talking so self-assuredly. Hindus fought hard for every inch till the British became the masters of the subcontinent. No doubt, they lost… they retreated. But they invariably came back to reclaim the lost ground. The brave ancestors of today’s Hindus refused to give up. Unlike what some of our eminent historians would like us to believe, Hindus and Hinduism didn’t survive because the Sultanate rulers and Mughals were liberals. They survived because it was logistically impossible to fight and force into submission a sea of humanity that appeared wave-like, one after another, simply refusing to give in and give up.

The nation is yet to realise the magnitude of the loss in 1947. The Nehruvian dispensation, gung ho on Western secularism, failed to see, from the civilisational perspective, the sudden squeezing of India’s boundaries from the Durand Line to the Redcliffe Line, and a “Chicken’s Neck” being created in the east waiting for a halal-like execution on the choosing of the jihadis. And the Right-wing kept itself mesmerised in the ‘Akhand Bharat’ fantas
Not just the alien and alienating secularism but also the outlandish idea of militant non-violence threatened to genetically deform Hindus forever. A historically flippant idea of Hindus being obsessively non-violent people was injected into their veins. The fact is Hindus under British colonial rule were forced to shed their martial nature. It was a win-win proposition for the British, who could convince everyone about their armed invincibility. And it ensured the Congress is given the credit for India’s Independence when even a slight scratching of the events of the 1940s would suggest its role in all this was, to use then British prime minister Clement Attlee’s expression, “M-I-N-I-M-A-L”. By the early 1930s, the British had mastered the art of handling the Gandhian satyagraha: At the first sign of protest, arrest the top Congress leadership, and let the movement die its natural death!

Just like Nehruvian secularism, making a cult out of non-violence was one of the biggest frauds committed against Hinduism. The British first unarmed the Hindu civilians. And then the colonial-Nehruvian-Marxist intellectuals made a virtue out of it, little realising that it was against the basic civilisational tenet of the Sanatana Dharma, which categorically called for the balance: Obsessive and excessive non-violence was the worst form of violence. Meekly avoiding dharmayuddha was adharma in the Indic scheme of things.

This fraud continues unabated in mainstream history textbooks. So, when we read India’s history, we seem to be jumping through time and spaces — from Gupta to Harsha to Palas, Pratiharas and Rashtrakuta, with the Cholas getting a cursory mention in history’s footnotes. The same pattern is repeated while recording the lootings and massacres of Muslim invaders. It begins with Mohammed bin Qasim attacking India in 712 AD. This is followed by the macabre raids of Mahmud of Ghazni in the early 11th century, climaxing in the plunder of the Somnath temple in 1025 AD. And, finally, the invasion of Mohammed Ghori in 1191 and again 1192. This bits-and-pieces information is what makes for India’s history after the ‘golden’ Gupta period. The idea is to suggest, without saying in as many words, that Indians meekly capitulated to the Islamic attacks.

Even colonial historian Vincent Smith could see through the fallacy of this kind of historiography. He writes in The Oxford History of India: “…But no voice has come from the grave, and the history of the Muhammadan conquest as seen from the Hindu point of view was never written, except to some extent in Rajputana”. And this becomes all the more obvious when one realises that Mohammed bin Qasim’s wasn’t the first Muslim attack on India. Almost half-a-dozen attacks, including through waters, had taken place in the seventh century, and they were singularly unsuccessful.

In sharp contrast to this, by 650 AD, the armies of Islam had overrun the entire landmass comprising today’s West Asia, which included the great Sassanid Empire of Persia, and a large part of Central Asia, including Inner Mongolia, Bukhara and Samarkand. Worse, the victory wasn’t just political but also cultural and religious. Almost all traces of pre-Islamic cultural and civilisational footprints were wiped out forever. In fact, by the time Mohammed bin Qasim was gearing up to invade King Dahir of Sindh in 712 AD, the Islamic forces had succeeded in breaching the Spanish and Portuguese walls.

Within five years of Prophet Mohammed’s death, the armies of Islam had set their eyes on Al-Hind, as India was referred to in the Arab world. Yet, repeated attempts only got them humiliation and defeats. So much so that the first four Caliphs of Islam died without hearing a single victory in Sindh, let alone in Al-Hind. In all this, the Battle of Kikan, fought in 662 AD, holds a special place. In this battle, fought at the Bolan Pass, a small army of local Jats defeated quite comprehensively a much bigger and superior Arab army. On this massive victory, which unfortunately doesn’t find space even in the footnotes of most Indian history textbooks, RC Majumdar writes in The History and Culture of the Indian People, Vol 3, “The Bolan Pass was protected by the brave Jats of Kikan or Kikanan… If there had been a history of India written without prejudices and predilections, the heroic deeds of these brave people, who stemmed the tide of Islam for two centuries, would certainly have received the recognition they so richly deserve.”

Though we are often reminded of Mohammed bin Qasim’s successes in Sindh, what is quietly sidestepped is the fact that these successes were short-lived. By the 10th century, Arab travellers to India would mention only two small Arab principalities in India — Multan and Mansurah. Interestingly, these two tiny states could survive, especially the assault of the unrelenting Pratiharas who were hell-bent on getting back the sacred Hindu city and its famous idol of the Sun God, through indulging in ‘non-Islamic’ acts. The 10th century Arab traveller Abu Ishaq al-istakhri writes, “When the Indians make war upon (Multan) and endeavour to seize the idol, the (Mussalmans) bring it out, pretending that they will break it and burn it. Upon this the infidels will retire, otherwise they would destroy Multan.”

So, an idol saved one of the two Muslim principalities in India. Sandeep Balakrishna, in his book Invaders and Infidels, quotes historian Ram Gopal Mishra as writing: “Thus after three centuries of unremitting effort, we find the Arab dominion in India limited to two petty states of Multan and Mansurah. And here too, they could exist only after renouncing their iconoclastic zeal and utilising the idols for their own political ends. It is a very strange sight to see them seeking shelter behind the very 'budds' they came here to destroy.”

In fact, it took almost 500 years for a Muslim Sultanate to get a foothold in Delhi and, as Balakrishna writes eloquently, “for almost a full century after it was established, the Sultanate made no new additions to its territory in mainland India”. Balakrishna continues, “From 1206 to 1526, it comprised a total of five dynasties, with only one powerful sultan emerging from each dynasty… Each such dynasty inevitably became extinct within a few years of the death of its most powerful sultan.”

The same phenomenon, though to a varying degree, is perceptible during the Mughal era too when the ‘empire’ looked shaky till Akbar made the strategic alliance with the Rajputs — and the moment Aurangzeb went back to the old Islamic ways, the empire collapsed like a pack of cards. Aurangzeb died in 1707 AD and within 50 years the Mughal ‘empire’ found itself confined to the area from “Delhi to Palam”!

This, however, doesn’t mean all was good with the Indic civilisation then. It definitely showed a chink in its armour which allowed the invaders to sneak in and cause unprecedented havoc. But Indians didn’t lose war because they were not brave enough. They lost because they were just too brave enough. It was the Prithviraj phenomenon that pushed them to the precipice of defeat. First, Hindus didn’t really know their new enemy well. These invaders were unlike the invaders of the past: The Hindu ethics of war were vastly different from the Islamic if there were one among the latter. Traditionally, Hindus preferred what was referred to as Dharmavijayi (where the vanquished ruler is allowed to retain his kingdom by acknowledging the formal suzerainty of the victor). The other two modes of warfare were: Lobhavijayi (where the conqueror takes away the wealth of the defeated ruler but spares his life) and Asuravijayi (where the vanquished also loses his life). The Hindu system of warfare held Asuravijayi as the most contemptible form of warfare.

The war methods pursued by Muslim invaders were invariably worse off than even the Asuravijayi form of Hindu warfare. Could Hindus have fought them with this idealistic way of warfare? For a Muslim invader, the end mattered the most. Hindus, little realising the nature of their new adversary, kept obsessively focusing as much on the means as on the ends. Prithviraj Chauhan made that vital mistake when he let Ghori escape in 1191. Ghori came back a year later better prepared and with a bigger army — and the rest is history.

India’s tragedy is it’s still awaiting its history to be told from its own perspective. Unfortunately, it remains a distant dream despite a nationalist government in power at the Centre for the past eight years. The current dispensation seems to be preoccupied with tending to the physical aspect of the nation and nationhood, which is a good thing otherwise. But without the mind being released from the confines of coloniality, a healthy body may mean very little. And, for all the resources being allocated and spent in the name of scholarship, Indians may still be looking Westward for legitimacy and that occasional pat on the back. United Nations… Fulbright…

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