This article first appeared on IndiaFacts website
If stones could speak, the story of Indian temples and
deities would have been one of resilience and rebirth in the face of
persecution and annihilation. But as things stand, discomfiting truth has been
surrendered for a more ‘suitable’ narrative. With academics driving this shift
of truth-gears, the task of unravelling facts has become even more riddled.
Meenakshi Jain, Senior Fellow at the Indian Council of Social Science Research,
takes this challenge head-on in her latest book ‘Flight of Deities and Rebirth
of Temples’.
The book traces the journey of deities and pulls out
historical references to outline how temples were built again and again despite
being razed by Muslim invaders. With this approach, she establishes that
temples were not just plundered for wealth but, more importantly, desecrated
with the intention of wiping out the faith associated with them. She also
traces the journey of deities to counter the argument that the practice of
desecrating temples was started by Hindu rulers.