Karnataka is witnessing an Opposition backlash against a review committee set up by the state government that recommended doing away with the glorification of the alleged ‘Rocket Man’ and freedom fighter, Tipu Sultan. The Opposition led by the Congress, which was in power in the state between 2013 and 2018, has been parroting following three points to glorify Tipu Sultan:
- Tipu was the first freedom fighter of India
- Tipu was the pioneer of war rockets
- Tipu supported the temples and mutts while Marathas looted them
This essay intends to show how slippery and ill-founded these claims supporting Tipu Sultan are. Let’s begin. “Who are my people? All of them — yes those that ring the temple bells and those that pray in the mosque — they are my people, and this land is theirs and mine. Above is a quote appearing from the work of fiction, The Sword of Tipu Sultan , written by novelist Bhagwan S Gidwani in 1976. Unfortunately, this very work of fiction sets the narrative around how Indians should look at the “Tyrant of Mysore”. Do you recall the following quote often attributed to Tipu Sultan, the Aurangzeb from south India? “Every blow that is struck in the cause of American liberty throughout the world, in France, India and elsewhere and so long as a single insolent and savage tyrant remains, the struggle shall continue.” My maiden encounter with this quote came through a paper titled, “ Haidar ‘Ali and Tipu Sultan: Mysore’s Eighteenth-Century Rulers in Transition ”, written by Kavesh Yazdani. Being an explorer of the past, it appeared to be an important duty to investigate the source mentioned by Yazdani for making such a grandiose claim. He had referred to “ Secret Correspondence of Tipu Sultan ” edited by Kabir Kausar with a complete section called “Tipu’s Views on the American Declaration of Independence.” Interestingly, Kabir’s source is The Sword of Tipu Sultan , a historical fiction by Gidwani. Isn’t it highly cynical that one of the most “seriously considered” academic non-fiction works relies on a historical fiction to build a narrative on how Tipu Sultan “drew inspiration out of the American War of Independence”? More interestingly, the ‘ Foreword ’ to Secret Correspondence of Tipu Sultan was written by eminent historian BR Grover of Jamia Millia. Read the interesting point he observes as below: “Compiled by an archivist in his methodical and scientific approach, this work is a welcome addition to the source material of the late 18th century history of India. It affords fresh ground for an assessment of the character and activities of Tipu Sultan and his place in history.” The then Director of the Indian Council of Historical Research ( ICHR ), Grover goes on to laud this work for its “methodical and scientific approach”, even though it relies on a work of fiction ( The Sword of Tipu Sultan ) to make a hyperbolic claim about Tipu Sultan. Grover further recommends everyone to read this book! Now let’s analyse the three points on which Tipu Sultan is glorified. Tipu Sultan: A freedom-fighter? Wouldn’t it be best to again pick the most popular work used by most to idolise Tipu Sultan as a freedom fighter? Hence, I pick an anthology of essays, titled Confronting Colonialism: Resistance and Modernisation under Haidar Ali and Tipu Sultan , edited by eminent historian Irfan Habib . As the title itself suggests, the author attempts to project the two as the flag-bearers of modernisation and crusaders against colonialism. Ironically, there are innumerable primary sources that speak aloud of how Tipu Sultan had colonised the southern belt through the sword of Islam. This essay is not intended to deal with colonisation and atrocity under Tipu Sultan, I will just leave the readers with the verse mentioned on his sword which reads as below: “My victorious sabre is lightning for the destruction of the unbelievers. Haidar, the Lord of the Faith, is victorious for my advantage. And, moreover, he destroyed the wicked race who were unbelievers. Praise be to him, who is the Lord of the Worlds! Thou art our Lord, support us against the people who are unbelievers. He to whom the Lord giveth victory prevails over all (mankind). Oh Lord, make him victorious, who promoteth the faith of Muhammad. Confound him, who refuseth the faith of Muhammad; and withhold us from those who are so inclined. The Lord is predominant over his own works. Victory and conquest are from the Almighty. Bring happy tidings, Oh Muhammad, to the faithful; for God is the kind protector and is the most merciful of the merciful. If God assists thee, thou wilt prosper. May the Lord God assist thee, Oh Muhammad, with mighty victory.
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Let us now inspect how well Haidar Ali and Tipu Sultan stood against colonialism. On the issue of Tipu Sultan taking on the British, we need to understand that all he was trying to do was to safeguard his, aka Islamic Influence over the land he was ruling. A serious student of History would go back to the contemporary source of that period to get to the truth. I came across The Asiatic Annual Register for the year 1799, and the details on Page No. 194-95 under title “Supplement to the Chronicle” contained the thing of interest pertaining to the subject. It tells us that in February 1797, the captain of a French Ship, François Ripaud, dismasted in Mangalore. He was a conman who exemplified himself as the second-in-command in Mauritius and reflected as authorised personality to discuss Mysore’s succour with a French force that had already amassed to expel the British from India. Tipu fell for this. There began his tourney of French correspondences. It was on the second day of April 1797, when he gave his complete proposal to the French authorities through a letter . It contained among other things the proposal to replace the British with the French, and the equal division of property and territory between the French and him. We also get to know that Tipu was set to hand over Goa and Bombay to new allies, thereby replacing English with French. Irfan Habib should let us know if the proposal to replace one coloniser by another makes Tipu anti-colonial? One can also look at Tipu’s letter to Zaman Shah, the ruler of Afghanistan on the fifth day of February 1797. In the letter, he proposed jihad against the Kafirs with intent to “free the region of Hindustan from the corruption by the enemies of Islam”. The action plan was as below:
- Zaman Shah was to banish the Marathas from Delhi.
- Next the collaborated Afghan and Tipu’s army would crush the Maratha power in Deccan.
This same strategy was being applied during the Khilafat movement too. It has been documented clearly and unapologetically by Dr BR Ambedkar in his book
Pakistan or Partition of India
. Dr Ambedkar writes as below: “(…) when it is recalled that in 1919 the Indian Musalmans who were carrying on the Khilafat movement actually went to the length of inviting the Amir of Afghanistan to invade India (…)” The communal Moplah outrage of 1921 in Malabar could be easily traced to the forcible mass conversion and related Islamic atrocities of Tipu Sultan during his cruel military regime from 1783 to 1792. So, calling Tipu Sultan a freedom fighter is an outright insult to all the freedom fighters. Tipu: The Pioneer of War-Rockets? The other claim which is used to project Tipu Sultan as a man of science and technology was his “invention” of war rockets. But like the previous one, even this claim doesn’t hold much water; the primary sources say otherwise. As a first source I go back to the recorded experience of
James Forbes
(1749–1819). He writes in his book,
Oriental Memoirs: A Narrative of Seventeen Years’ Residence in India, Vol-1
(Page No. 359): “The war rocket used by the Mahrattas which very often annoyed us, is composed of an iron tube eight or ten inches long and nearly two inches in diameter. This destructive weapon is sometimes fixed to a rod iron, sometimes to a straight two-edged sword, but most commonly to a strong bamboo cane four or five feet long with an iron spike projecting beyond the tube to this rod or staff, the tube filled with combustible materials (…)” The below images (
posted by Dr Uday S Kulkarni
) show the replica of Indian war rockets (1790) kept in London Museum of Science. The text clearly mentions Marathas using it against the Europeans.