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Website created
by:
Vinay Lal, Associate Professor of History, UCLA, USA
All material on this site is coyrighted:
Vinay Lal, 2005.
Authors of individual pieces hold the copyrightto their own pieces. However,
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The Fragments of Bamiyan
Vinay Lal
[Originally published in The Little Magazine 2, no. 2 (March-April
2001):23-27.]
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All that is left of the statues of the Buddha at Bamiyan are fragments.
The most recent news suggests that these fragments are perhaps ending
up in the bazaars of Peshawar, where traders are reportedly vying for
the pieces to sell to tourists. A report in the Hindustan Times on 2
April 2001 states that the dealers are convinced that these fragments
"would be prized in the same way as pieces of the Berlin wall."
No one doubts, notwithstanding the immense difficulties of German reunification
and the resuscitation of neo-Hitlerite sentiments among considerable
segments of the German youth, that the Berlin Wall had to come down,
but surely we cannot say the same of the Bamiyan Buddha statues? By
what reckoning did the Bamiyan Buddhas become a Berlin Wall for the
Taliban? Moreover, when walls break into fragments, does it not behoove
us to ask how fragments can create their own walls? Are the stories
that fragments tell necessarily fragmentary?
Writing shortly after World War II, Adorno described the meditations
that make up Minima Moralia as "fragments from a damaged life".
Adorno did not think it merely impossible to write poetry after Auschwitz;
all the grand Enlightenment narratives appeared as so much debris, even
offensive and chillingly optimistic. Not only had war devastated Europe,
but his own civilized countrymen, the intellectual heirs and descendants
of Goethe, Beethoven, Schiller, Kant, Hegel, Novalis, Herder, Schumann,
and Schubert, had descended to the nadir of human experience in dispatching,
with all the energy and ingenuity that a regime enamored of social engineering,
the precise orchestration of life, and bureaucratic efficiency is capable
of, six million Jews, gypsies, homosexuals, and mentally ill people
to their death. Adorno must have thought a good deal of fragments those
days: scarred lives, broken families, shattered buildings, and charred
landscapes stared at him in the face, and -- not less alarmingly --
the lofty hopes which promised the sovereignty of reason and saw the
story of humankind as an increasing progression towards the attainment
of liberty and democracy stood largely in ruins. His contemporary and
fellow theorist, Walter Benjamin, who perished in the war and scarcely
saw the worst of what the troubled project of modernity could sow, had
nonetheless the prescience to declare, "There is no monument of
civilization that is not at the same time a monument of barbarism."
The idea of "fragments" has a chequered history, and in recent
years South Asian intellectuals have furnished some other fragments
of the story. Both Gyanendra Pandey and Partha Chatterjee have reminded
us that the nation has its own "fragments", those sectors
who have been excluded from the enterprise of the modern nation-state,
or are repeatedly thwarted in their attempt to claim the privileges
attendant upon citizenship. Relegated to the periphery, these fragments
-- women, religious and linguistic minorities, Adivasis, the lower castes,
Naxalites, and radical dissenters, among many others -- have at different
times and in varying literatures been known as the oppressed, the excluded,
and the people without history. Thus some scholars have asked whether
Pandey's eloquent article, "In Defense of the Fragment", is
anything more than a postmodern variant of what the Americans call "multiculturalism",
or an eloquent plea to allow minorities and the underprivileged their
rightful place in the political and social life of the nation. It is
sometimes suggested that the avowed attachment to such terms as "fragments"
is a sign of postmodern excess, yet another endeavor to decentre the
grand narratives -- none grander than the idea of the nation-state --
bequeathed by modernity. Yet the customary languages by which we seek
to designate the excluded or -- in the idiom of the day -- the subaltern
classes scarcely convey the resonance that the term fragment does: around
fragments lies the debris of much history. Whatever postmodernism's
disenchantment with the totalizing narratives of nation-state and history
-- history of which Europe is always the central reference point --
it is useful to recall that even the militant Hinduism of the Vishwa
Hindu Parishad thrives on the idea of fragments. The most prominent,
not to mention brazenly provocative, Hindutva websites demonstrate an
extraordinarily keen interest in those Hindu temples which are alleged
to have been destroyed or reduced to ruins by Muslim invaders. The Hindutvavadis
understand, perhaps more than their adversaries, that the more compelling
and cementing narratives are written around tales of destruction, around
the fragments which remain and betoken imagined as much as real histories.
So charmed is the VHP by Hindu temples rendered extinct, mutilated,
or left in ruins that it construes these sites as the sure sign of a
Hindu presence, a reminder of the fact that the Hindu has everywhere
been the victim of more malignant and aggressive religions and ideologies.
But fragments do not a whole make, as the destruction of the Bamiyan
Buddhas so palpably demonstrates. What histories, counter-histories,
and myths can we, then, write from the fragments that remain of these
Buddhas that, chiseled into the face of a mountain, stood forth in majestic
silence for well over a thousand years? The most sustained modern myth
about such acts of terror -- terror, not the terrorism that becomes
the pretext for yet another display of American self-aggrandizement
and chastisement, for terror it is when beauty is so cavalierly sundered
apart -- is to suppose that they are expressions of feudal rage, a regression
to the barbarism of the pre-modern age and manifestation of the "medievalism"
to which many under-developed nations are still believed to be bound.
This argument is conjoined with the observation that one could not have
expected otherwise from a regime which is sworn to uphold a rigid and
puritanical conception of Islam, though the edict of February 26 --
"These idols have been gods of the infidels" -- handed down
by Muhammad Omar, the supreme commander of the Taliban, appears to furnish,
to those who wish to read it as such, an indictment of Islam as a whole.
Indeed, the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddhas brings with astonishing
ease to many lips the epithet, "Islamic medievalism". If the
dominant stereotypical conception of Islamic fundamentalism, which gorges
on tales of Taliban fanaticism, the evil genius of Osama bin Laden,
Muslim terrorist networks around the world, the contamination of the
noble idea of education in tens of thousands of madrassas, and the relentless
subjugation of women and girls, is to be believed, 'medieval Islam'
is a wholly belabored idea: Islam was always medieval. The 'modern West'
and 'medieval Islam' are supposed to stand in natural and diametrical
opposition to each other.
For all the wide acceptance of the twin ideas of ingrained Islamic fundamentalism
and feudal or medieval rage as the two most constituent elements of
the narrative which seeks to explain the destruction of the Bamiyan
Buddhas, it is heartening to note that some commentators have dismissed
these gross reductionisms. One strategy is to take recourse to other
strands of political commentary: for instance, it is scarcely irrelevant
that the Taliban are under strict sanctions mandated by the American-dominated
Security Council, though many member states of the UN rightly took the
view that the only productive way to engage with the Taliban is to enter
into a dialogue with the regime. These sanctions have doubtless compounded
the Taliban's difficulties, and are seen as particularly onerous and
unjustified at a time when Mullah Omar is credited with having helped
to destroy the poppy (used to make heroin) crop whose eradication was
sought as a precondition for the restoration of normal relations between
the Taliban and the West. Indeed, the area of Afghanistan under Taliban
rule has recently been certified by an UN inspection team as 'poppy
free'. Thus the destruction of the statues is construed as an expression
not only of the Taliban's anger but of its sense of betrayal, its feeling
of isolation, and its profound disappointment that it should not have
been suitably rewarded on the one occasion when it subscribed to some
norms of international political engagement. Two decades ago, realpolitik
bound together Afghanistan and the United States in a modern variation
of 'The Great Game', and one should not be allowed to forget that Ronald
Reagan welcomed the Mujahideen to the White House as "freedom fighters";
at this juncture in history, it is still the relentless zero-sum of
politics which makes the United States and its adversary Afghanistan
look strikingly akin. The fanaticism of the powerful and the fanaticism
of the powerless have much in common.
The fanaticism of the Taliban should by no means be allowed to stand
forth metonymically for the barbarism of the pre-Enlightenment age or
the alleged fanaticism of Islam. In the early seventh century, if the
testimony of the Chinese scholar Hiuen-tsiang is reliable, Bamiyan was
flourishing as a centre of Buddhist learning, and it was home to thousands
of monks settled in several monasteries. Though Kabul and Kandahar were
overrun by the Arabs in the late seventh century, Bamiyan remained under
Buddhist rule for at least another century. The conversion to Islam
among Bamiyan's political elite transpired under the Abbasids. Bamiyan's
two gigantic Buddhas, which were installed at least three centuries
apart, the latter between 500 and 700 AD, were spared by Mahmud of Ghazni.
Subsequent invaders, such as Genghiz Khan, appear to have been less
indifferent, and there seems to be some evidence that he had cannon
fire directed at the Buddhas. Numerous commentators, keen on validating
the commonly held view which ascribes to Aurangzeb a puritanical hatred
for the infidels, have noted that he initiated an assault upon Bamiyan,
but those who wish to bestow ecumenical credentials upon him point to
the fact that notwithstanding his military activity in the Deccan over
two decades, he left untouched the Ajanta and Ellora caves. But in all
of this there is little to substantiate the view that in the destruction
of the Bamiyan Buddhas is writ large the medieval mentality. The recent
bombarding of the National Library at Sarajevo, and indeed the decimation
of nearly the entire city, which was "multicultural" for long
before the capitals of Western Europe acquired a semblance of pluralism
and tolerance, stands forth as testimony to the fact that modernity
has been much less hospitable to diffused, unbounded, and multiple identities
than we have commonly supposed. If the idea of cosmopolitan pasts --
Bamiyan lay on the silk route, and here merged multiple number of ethnic,
religious, and linguistic histories -- is now under assault, and yet
"universal" cities appear to be emblematic of late modernity,
then the burden is to establish how modern cosmopolitanisms differ from
pre-modern cosmopolitanisms. The universalisms of late modernity must
be juxtaposed not with the supposed particularisms of the pre-modern
era, but rather with the less oppressive universalisms of those times
that we mistakenly characterize as pre-Enlightenment.
It is not less significant, since much is often made of Islam's supposed
irrationality, that all the Muslim states have emphatically repudiated
the Taliban's actions, and even Saudi Arabia, which fancies itself as
the guardian of an authentic and orthodox Islam, declared itself unequivocally
opposed to the destruction of the Buddhas. The Arab group in UNESCO
termed the Taliban's action "savage". Nothing in the Sharia,
or in the pronouncements of various Islamic schools of law, encourages
the destruction of monuments which are not the sites of religious worship
and cannot therefore be construed as "idols". Most poignantly,
the call to jihad, which is described by the Taliban as having furnished
it with the warrant to take action at Bamiyan, has been stripped of
its endearing promise. The authorized translation of the Holy Quran,
published by the King Fahd Holy Quran Printing Complex, states that
the essence of jihad consists in abiding by a "true and sincere
faith, which so fixes its gaze on Allah that all selfish or worldly
motives seem paltry and fade away". It warns against the vulgarization
of the concept by explicitly opposing "mere brutal fighting"
to "the whole spirit of Jihad", and calls upon the believer
to wage jihad against himself or herself, so that one can learn to listen
to the voice of Allah or (in the idiom of Gandhi) to the "still
inner voice" within. Yet, despite this lofty conception of jihad,
the onus appears to have been placed upon Islam to exonerate itself.
This "act of vandalism", editorialized the Times of India
(4 March 2001), "is likely to be detrimental to the larger interests
of the entire Islamic world unless the governments and clergy of those
countries speak out strongly against the Taliban." Well-intentioned
as is this sentiment, it is a marvel that Islam should be called upon
to demonstrate its innocence. No one took it as axiomatic that when
the Bosnian Muslims were being butchered, and the monuments of their
culture were razed to the ground, that Christianity had to endeavor
to save its name by publicly and repeatedly disassociating itself from
the actions of its self-appointed emissaries. Though the editorial appears
to be understandably generous in pronouncing that the "Taliban
is not defending the true faith; it is grievously undermining it",
there is a presupposition that Islam, perhaps more than any other faith,
is always on the brink of falling into a fanatical mode.
What interpretive and ethical framework remains, then, for understanding
the madness that has transpired to efface the gentle colossus that stood
at Bamiyan? One has heard the phrase "brotherhood of fundamentalists":
the destruction of the Babri Masjid and the Bamiyan Buddhas can be distinguished
in some respects, but fervent secularists do not doubt that the advocates
of Hindutva, the Taliban, Zionists, and the evangelical Christians in
Kansas who succeeded in having creationism placed alongside evolutionism
as an account of the origins of the universe in school textbooks are
all molded from the same clay. They see in the tragic events of Bamiyan
the insistent and maniacal unfolding of fundamentalism. Though the gross
inadequacies of this view are all to evident, just as secularism remains
impenitent about its own intolerance for competing worldviews, the comparison
between the Hindutva advocates and the Taliban is illuminating in some
respects. Traditionally, one mark of distinction between religion and
politics was to describe the former as "self regarding" and
the latter as "other regarding", but what is striking is how
far the Taliban and Hindutvavadis are concerned with the religion of
others rather than with their own faith. Many of the most zealous spokespersons
for Hindutva give the distinct impression of being less interested in
Hinduism than in Islam, and the Taliban's destruction of the Bamiyan
Buddhas betrays a similar anxiety. It is not so much the admixture of
religion and politics, of which no less a person than Gandhi was a firm
proponent, that is problematic as much as the transformation of religion
into "other regarding" and politics into "self regarding".
What the Taliban have disowned is the pluralistic pasts of both Afghanistan
and Islam. It can reasonably be argued that Afghanistan is much more
than its present Islamic existence, though perhaps the more arresting
formulation is that woven into the Islam of Afghanistan (not to mention
neighboring Pakistan) are all the previous strands of Afghanistan's
history. Islam in Pakistan and Afghanistan is afflicted with profoundly
disabling anxieties about authenticity, cosmology, and identity; it
persists, not always self-consciously, in seeing itself as a second-hand,
inferior version of the Prophet's religion as it is housed in Mecca
and Medina. This Islam has almost nothing of the confidence of Indonesian
(and especially Javanese) Muslims, who have embraced the Ramayana and
the Mahabharata as their own and have interwoven Islamic practices into
"Hindu" cosmologies. Java has no Hindus, and yet a massive
statue of Arjuna's chariot being driven by Krishna adorns one of the
central thoroughfares in Jakarta. Such a dialectic of presence and absence
is perhaps itself the source of anxiety: commentators point to the absence
of Buddhists in Afghanistan to express their bewilderment that the Bamiyan
Buddhas should have been construed as a threat, but it possible to imagine
that even a faint Buddhist presence might have been more reassuring
to the Taliban and helped to save the Buddhas.
Ironically, much as the Taliban would be loathe to admit it, their most
eloquent spokesman is the hyper-rational Naipaul, who has stated with
supreme confidence that all non-Arab Muslims are mere converts and consequently
imperfect specimens of their faith. This suggests that the pathology
of rationality is at least as interesting a discursive field as the
pathology of irrationality; self-hatred is by no means a prerogative
of those whom we wish to condemn as irrational. Previously Naipaul,
writing in the pages of the New York Review of Books, the vehicle of
the secular, liberal intelligentsia of the United States and some wider
worlds, spoke of the destiny of humankind to embrace what he calls "our
universal civilization", a civilization predictably rooted in the
values of the modern, secular, liberal West. Taken together, Naipaul's
pronouncements point to no conclusion but this: either the peoples of
the non-West can choose to enter into the "universal civilization"
or, by their defiance, they can place themselves outside the pale of
the community of the civilized. Even Samuel Huntington's hysterical
framework of the "clash of civilizations" seems charitable
by contrast, since many are inclined to see in the destruction of the
Bamiyan Buddhas a clash between the civilized and the uncivilized. Such
an impoverished view of the Taliban must be unequivocally rejected not
only because it is deeply injurious to an entire people, but because
discursive views, strengthened by the vast paraphernalia of modernity,
from media in its various manifestations to the force of sanctions,
have the power to create the very object of their inquiry.
When the other becomes so radically other in our sensibility, it is
an ineradicable sign of our unwillingness to adhere to a vision of a
communicative universe; it points to the moral defeat of all humankind.
When the Bamiyan Buddhas were reduced to rubble, it was not Islam that
was degraded; it was not even Buddhism which was demeaned. To admit
as much is not only to take solace in the observation that the Buddha
is much larger than his statues, and that the actions of the Taliban
cannot dint the armor of the Buddha's supreme intelligence, benevolence,
and compassion. The Buddha's teachings have always stressed the impermanance
of the material world, and it is not for nothing that the monks blow
away the sand mandalas over which they have labored with such care.
Other sensibilities, however, demand a more political reading. Had the
Indian media, for instance, been less parochial in its intellectual
disposition, it might have been more careful in lavishing sole attention
upon acts of cultural desecration in South Asia, while ignoring the
numerous tragic events with which the destruction of the Babri Masjid
and the Bamiyan Buddhas share a family resemblance, stretching from
the destruction of Sarajevo, the callous (and much worse) representation
of war victims as "collateral damage", the exceedingly modern
massacres in Rwanda carried out through primitive weapons, and the genocidal
elimination of Iraqis through the purported non-violence of a sanctions
regime. Politics has for long been a zero-sum game, but the categories
of contemporary political knowledge and practice -- "rogue states",
sanctions, "the international community", among others --
have tightened the noose around the powerless. That is one aspect of
the politics of knowledge surrounding the destruction of the Bamiyan
Buddhas. Bamiyan compels us to ask: what are the conditions of the soul's
survival and well-being in modernity? That, however, is the subject
for another meditation.
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