In 2001, making my PTV documentary “Sindhia mein Sikander”, I and the rest of the crew were in Taxila, where an elderly local ‘historian’ came around to check us out. Satisfied with our credentials, he lauded us. To me, he very solicitously said that Allah was sure to be pleased with my endeavour to glorify Islam and grant me a place in heaven. Taken aback, I said this was a purely secular documentary with no religious colour. “Sikander-e-Azam was one of the great heroes of Islamic history”, said the so-called historian. “By making a documentary on his life and achievements, you glorify Islam.”
Until this time, I had heard of Alexander being the scriptural Zulqarnain. After Stoneman, I know much more. Except the tribes of the Americas and the Australian aborigines, everyone else claims a connection with Alexander. The Mongols claim descent from Olympias, Alexander’s mother; the Malays and Chinese from the man himself; the Slavs; Pathans; several Central Asiatic tribes et al. Since we are counting, never forget the greatest scam ever: the great Kalash Falsehood now completely shot to pieces by DNA testing. Nevertheless, there are Greeks and Pakistanis who still head for the three Kalash valleys in Chitral. The former seeking kinship; the latter easy virtue in a ‘European community’.
That, incidentally is not all; the Arabs, too, claim some tenuous blood connection with the man. Therefore, since all of us Muslims in the subcontinent are Arabs, we are actually Macedonians! That’s about as convoluted as a family tree can ever get.
Stoneman tells us that Christian lore records Alexander’s presence in Jerusalem, where he performed all sorts of Christian rituals and even visited the tomb of the Prophet Jeremiah. (On his advance through Lebanon to Egypt, in real history he by-passed Jerusalem). But what I found ever more intriguing was the story of his dying injunctions. It is of particular interest because it comes to us from Arabic sources.
As he lay dying in Babylon, Alexander is supposed to have told his generals to kill his physicians to show that man has no control over life and that not even the best doctor can heal a dying person. He also instructed them to prepare his body for the funerary procession so that both his hands should stick out of the coffin, palms up. The idea was to show that they were empty, that no matter how much one acquired in this short life, there is not a jot one can take to the next world.
This and other stories from Arabic sources clearly show that the authors had not read a single authentic history of the conqueror and did not have the vaguest measure of the man’s character and personality. They had heard yarns passed down through scores of generations, embellished as they tumbled along from tongue to tongue and added their own spice to them. The fiction of the hands being left out of the coffin carries the tone of moralising as we Oriental folks like best.
However, the Arabs were not the only moralisers. A 12th century Spanish writer, Walter of Chatillon, writing a millennium and a half after the death of the man, addresses Alexander directly: “To what lengths does your hunger go, Alexander?” He then proceeds to admonish the conqueror for the futility of his worldly ambitions. It is as if Walter, a good and practising Christian, was pained at the perdition that Alexander, a co-religionist, purchased for his soul by pursuing fame and glory in this ephemeral life.
Published in The Express Tribune, November 3rd, 2012.
COMMENTS (29)
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@Rajeev Nidumolu i read the article just now, I am indeed surprised at the ignorance of ancient Indian history among many. Is it the fault of schooling or just unwillingness to learn, one wonders. Thanks for clarifying matters. For those who want to know about these things there are indeed many excellent books!
@Rajeev Nidumolu
A good argument, which debunks the fallacy that ancient Indians did not pursue large scale expansion of Indian civilization, culture and religion into Asia. Some Pakistani posters are just being disingenuous by denying the truth, their hatred for India puts them in perpetual denial mode.
Thank God for scholarship and academia, which documents everything under the sun and only philistines can afford to be dismissive of recorded history to perpetuate their sense of superiority.
Identifying with alien conquerors and claiming kinship with the likes of Alexander, Ghaznavi, Babar, Abdali and Sultan Bin Qasim is not going to change the DNA of the people of South Asia. Pakistanis are just Muslim Indians and no amount of invented identities can alter this truth.
@Sultan: We are not talking about solitary "Buddhist monks riding Bactrian camels". We are talking about large scale expansion of Indian civilization ,culture and religion into Asia. The prohibition against foreign travel was restricted to probably the priestly class in certain scriptures and was not uniform . The expansion was mainly spearheaded by Indian Mercantile community Hindu scriptures are diverse and contradictory in contrast to Abrahamic religions. I would recommend you to read either Cambridge history of India or History of India by Romila Thapar /Penguin books Chapter 6 titled "The rise if merchantile community " to know the real extent of this expansion. Another source is well researched book"Indianized states of South East Asia "by Coedes published by University of Hawaii press. Please also reference this link http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chola_Navy to the extent of Chola empire which encompassed south east Asia which contradicts your thesis of lack of "fortune seekers in high seas" You are correct that Indians did not produce people like Ghazni, Ghori, Babar, Pizarro, Cortez etc, There was no need for Indian states to go outside the indian subcontinent because of its fertile Indo Gangetic plains and geographic barriers.Most of the conquerers in history came from agriculturally arid areas with predominantly pastoral communities . There is no need to emigrate and conquer other people when the local conditions are sufficient for sustenance.
Alexander was not great, maybe to his people, but to us he was nothing but a conquering barbarian... we should refer to him as Alexander the barbarian... not great!
It was our Rajas who turned him away... take pride in the Rajas not the conqueror!
@Rajeev Nidumolu:
Ten Buddhist monks riding Bactrian camels through contiguous lands in Asia does not make a conquering army. I was referring to the fortune seekers taking the high seas--india never had any of these because or scriptures that prohibited foreign travel and a visceral aversion to anything foreign. While in the 21st century, attitudes have changed but you still find strong pockets of orthodoxy that follow this introvert tradition to the extreme.
Sorry Rajeev, I am right and you are wrong, historically. Please see @A reader's comment above as well.
@Pir Bulleh Shah
@Jawad '........thoughh you don’t know that Islam is the natural religion which has always existed – even before anything else was born.'
When are you going to entertain us with staff like natural literature, natural economics or may be natural nature?
@Sultan:
You are wrong historically. Indians participated in trade with Rome as revealed by the artifacts in west coast. Indians were one of several ethnic groups who actively participated in trade in Asian silk route.Rajendra Chola 1 the emperor(1012–1044 CE) his empire spread into South Asia which included Sumatra and parts of Indo China. This was a precursor to great empire of Sri Vijaya(7th to 13th centuryA.D.) which encompassed Indonesia, parts of Burma and Phillipines . Indian Mercantile colonies were established Before 1000 A.D. in Cambodia, Thailand and Burma.Indian Emperor Ashoka (304–232 BCE)sent Indian Buddhist missionaries to Tibet, China, Korea, Japan , Srilanka, Thailand . Great Indian sage Padma Sambasiva was responsible for conversion of Tibetans from indigenous Bon religion to Buddhism . Indian Monks Dharmarakṣa and Kaśyapa Mātaṅga were responsible for introduction of Buddhism in China during Chinese Emperor Ming (58–75 CE) . Except for Chola emperors the influence exerted by ancient India was in soft power in spread of religion, architecture, and culture. Monuments of Ankor Wat in Cambodia and Borobodur in Indonesia are epitomes of Indic cultural influence. It is also true that for unknown reasons that Indians became introverted after 1000 CE and developed aversion to travel outside. May be they became satisfied with what they had at home. Buddhism would not have been a world religion if the Indian Buddhist missionaries did not travel outside the country
Shahensha and Sultan -
Some edification - Brahmins generally were bound by the rules that they should not travel overseas otherwise they would lose their caste. The Orthodox leaders of Brahmins - the Shankaracharyas - are bound by this rule and do not travel outside of India to this day. Other Hindus did engage in travel - the extent of the Chola Kingdom with SouthEast Asia, Indian Philosophers in ancient day Greece, all account for this. So to some extent, both of you are correct, but only partially.
@Waseem Januja
'What the obsession about?
It's about 'glory by association'. Alexander was a winner. By establishing some kind of connection with him; religious, ethnic or whatever, I view myself as one of his kinsmen, hence a rightful claimant to his glory and fame. It's sort of an ego trip. But I take it anyway, because I have a low self-esteem.
Islam is 1400 years old and Alexnder lived 328 BC I really dont know what makes him a Muslim a christian a jew or whatever. whats the obsession about?
Sultan
You know neither history nor religion. Indians traveled extensively by sea long before there was an Arab in the neighborhood. Your kind of blindness and bigotry is what keeps us Muslims backward.
Jawad
You are making fun of your driver even though you don't know that Islam is the natural religion which has always existed - even before anything else was born.
@Jawad:
My driver from Baluchistan claims to be an Arab and has been Muslim for 6000 years.
He is probably from Omani descent--Pakistan bought the Gwadar coast from the Sultan of Oman in the 50s. In Oman and even in Bahrain, there are a lot of Arabs whose last name is Baluchi (pronounced Balushi).
I am afraid I cannot help you with his rather elastic understanding of time elapsed since the advent of Islam!
@Jacob Avrunin:
P.S: As a western historian, I have always had a fascination for Indian society which is the only one in humankind that does not revere plunderers (whether it be Alexander or Tamerlane or Ghazni) but revere the peacemaker (Ashoka)
Very simple--the indians never stepped out of india. It was considered against the teachings of hinduism to go abroad or even set foot on the sea. Why do you think there is no mention in history of any indian sailors riding the high seas despite having a vast coastline? It was always the Arabs, Vikings, Normans, Greeks, Romans, Spaniards, etc. who took to the sea. indian culture is one of the most inward looking cultures in the history of mankind. Whether that is good or bad, is debatable.
@upkamath
Smart move. Will never shy away from giving credit where it's due. Yes, you got me. It's a pleasure to be in the company of intelligent people.
Cheers.
@Pir Bulleh Shah: "What could have brought so much glory to a man but his submission to the true Lord – Allah?"
Going by your convoluted thought process, the next great submitters are the CHINESE who are set to dominate the earth.
My driver from Baluchistan claims to be an Arab and has been Muslim for 6000 years.
@Cynical: -While at it he could have paid his tributes at the tomb of both Jesus and Mohammed!
Got you, you missed the exclamation mark at the end.Alexander's India quest gave the Indians RAKHI, a brother-sister relationship celebrated all over India. I do not know why we in Pakistan do not follow it. After all at that time it was one nation. I wish the RAKHI tradition is celebrated all over the world.
you are misguiding people about muslims in subcontinent
The only country that claims no kinship with Alexander and regard him a plunderer: the Indians. In fact, they are proud that they turned back Alexander and dealt him the death blow in Moolasthan (today's Multan).
He was (a plunderer)! And, they did (turn him on his back)!
P.S: As a western historian, I have always had a fascination for Indian society which is the only one in humankind that does not revere plunderers (whether it be Alexander or Tamerlane or Ghazni) but revere the peacemaker (Ashoka). They have had conquerors too. Many in fact. Like Raja Raja Chola who ruled all the lands around the bay of bengal - an empire larger than the Mughals. While he is revered locally, he is not on the Indian flag and never will be.
@BlackJack
Thanks for the excellent quote.
@upkamath
-While at it he could have paid his tributes at the tomb of both Jesus and Mohammed!
No he couldn't. For that to happen, Alexander had to wait for close to 900 years.
Stoneman tells us that Christian lore records Alexander’s presence in Jerusalem, where he performed all sorts of Christian rituals and even visited the tomb of the Prophet Jeremiah.
-While at it he could have paid his tributes at the tomb of both Jesus and Mohammed!
@ Bullesh Shah : What could have brought so much glory to a man but his submission to the true Lord – Allah? Alexander roamed this planet almost a thousand years before the advent of Islam - so how do you expect him to submit to Allah?
My favorite quote from Alexander was recorded by his biographer Eumenes and is one that continues to inspire me; it is a true prescription for greatness and showcases his extraordinary ambition. 'The Gods put dreams in the hearts of men - dreams, desires, aspirations that are often much bigger than they are. The greatness of a man corresponds to that painful discrepancy between the goal he sets for himself and the strength nature granted him when he came into the world'. The first two words in the quote may be a bit painful for those seeking to establish a tenuous religious link where none exists.
A sad tale of falsification. What could have brought so much glory to a man but his submission to the true Lord - Allah? Does not Islam bring the same strength of spirit and character to every man who truly sees its light? Muslims of the subcontinent have not made Alexander of their own, you are making an effort to the deny the obvious truth.