Taj wars
Rewriting history is quite common in both India and Pakistan. Governments do it, the state does it, and sometimes, so do families.
This phenomenon has been a robust and recurring exercise in both the countries ever since the subcontinent was split (in 1947) into two countries: The Hindu-dominated India and the Muslim-majority state of Pakistan.
The practice has been more frequent in Pakistan, though, especially after the 1971 Indo-Pakistan War.
The state and various governments in the country began an academic process to sketch a narrative that attempted to delink Pakistan’s historical connection with a region which, though, ruled by Muslim dynasties between the 13th and 17th centuries, still had a Hindu majority and had become the Republic of India in 1947.
The experiments in this context have had a disorientating impact on the state’s national identity-building process, more so after Pakistan’s historical linkages with the region’s 5000-year-old history were deflected towards a largely concocted idea of having a linkage with Arabia.
On the other end, till the late 1980s, the Indian state had explained Pakistan to be an ‘unnatural creation’.
This narrative began to further mutate when the Hindu nationalist sentiment first began to seep into the mainstream politics of India.
By the early 1990s, Hindu nationalists were more aggressively pushing in a brand new narrative (vis-à-vis India’s historical links with the region that had become Pakistan and with India’s large Muslim minority).
Just as the state of Pakistan (ever since the early 1970s) had tried to undermine the history that the country shares with India, Hindu nationalist outfits such as the Bhartiya Janta Party (BJP) and the radical Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), began attempting to whitewash India’s Muslim past.
One physical manifestation of this was when RSS members and supporters demolished the 16th century Babri Mosque in the Indian city of Ayodhya in 1992. The mosque was built by Muslim ruler and the founder of the Mughal dynasty in India, Ẓahīr-ud-Dīn Muḥammad Babar.