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Padmavati was not a real human she was a fictional character created by a Muslim Poet

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So much rukkus created by hinduvtas about film Padmavati when sh ewas not even a real a perosn, was only work of fiction from a Muslim poets, in Hundu rajas darbar, imagination :P

The original tale

The popular narrative of Padmavati and her Jauhar (sacrifice) is said to be based on the fictional work of Malik Mohammad Jayasi, a sufi saint of the sixteenth century, written two centuries after the reign of Khilji.

This immortal classic was written as a metaphor for the futility of power.
The tale of ‘Padmavati’, a classic of sorts, revolves around the love story of Ratan Singh, the king of Chittor and Padmavati, the princess of the fictional Simhala Island. Guided by his beloved pet-parrot Hiraman, Ratan Singh pursues the princess and the lovers unite. According to the legend, Ratan Singh dies in an attack carried out by the king of Kumbhalner. Meanwhile, Khilji, smitten by Padmavati’s legendary beauty, attacks her kingdom to find that the princess and her ladies have committed ‘Jauhar’ or mass immolation. This immortal classic was written as a metaphor for the futility of power.

I have made up the story and related it,” are the words with which Malik Muhammad Jayasi ends his Awadhi masnavi, Padmavat. One would think that such a clear admission of “making up a story” would leave no doubt that the epic poem is a work of fiction. But such is not the case. Following the announcement of a Bollywood film on the subject, Jayasi’s fictional story is now being pandered as Hindu history, the rumoured distortion of which was punished by violence on January 27, when vandals attacked the film’s director Sanjay Leela Bhansali and its sets near Jaipur.

Calling Jayasi’s masnavi a work of history is doing great injustice to the many efforts he took to weave together such brilliant poetry. A practising Muslim, Jayasi belonged to Jayas, a small hamlet in Amethi, and was schooled in the philosophy of Vedanta and Kabir’s couplets. His patron, Raja Jagat Deva, a Rajput ally of emperor Sher Shah Suri, could have been the driving force behind Padmavat. The legend of Alaudin Khilji’s pursuit of Rani Padmini has not been related by any author before Abul Fazl, who bases it on Jayasi’s work. Then where does Jayasi get this epic tale from?

Sufi philosophy
However, Padmavat is more than just an epic poem that merges many legends and contemporary figures together. The epic verse is allegorical and subservient to the didactic, the main thrust of the poem being the depiction of Sufi concepts of nafs (soul) and ishq (love). Jayasi quite explicitly mentions that Ratan Sen is an allegory for the human soul, Padmini represents intelligence (firāsat, the supreme virtue of a monarch in Muslim philosophy), Alauddin Khilji is illusion (maya) and Chittor stands for the human body. Thus, the tale is that of the travails that the human soul has to suffer in order to be one with the human mind where both illusion and the human body act as deterrents. This is Jayasi’s own interpretation of the Sufi concept of the nafs that suffers many a torment to purify itself and unite with the supreme being. Such a connection is heightened by Jayasi devoting the first part of his Padmavat to Ratan Sen, who is inspired by a parrot, Hiraman (allegorically a Sufi pir/preceptor) to search for the Ceylonese beauty Padmini. The search causes Ratan Sen many a suffering but eventually leads him to the object of his desire.

Such a curious mix of legend and Sufi philosophy was not the first of its kind. Before Jayasi, Mulla Daud, in the 14th century, composed his Chandayana, the love story of Chanda, a Hindu woman, and Laur, a Muslim man, who face many a trial to be united, just as the human soul suffers to be with god. The genre of such poetry came to be called premakhyan (poetry of love) and was solely composed in the Awadhi dialect of medieval Hindi.

Jayasi’s literary genius was so well received in medieval India that at least a dozen Persian versions of the text were produced, chief of which is Mulla Abdush Bazmi’s Rat Padam, penned in the 17th century in Jahangir’s reign. None of the versions, however, hailed the story as a fact of history. Jayasi’s work is such a marvel of creativity that to claim it as history would be the real “tampering of history”.

The inspiration
Aziz Ahmed, in his paper Epic and Counter-Epic in Medieval India, said Jayasi’s masnavi, completed in 1540, drew heavily on an earlier source, Nayachandra Suri’s Hammira Mahakavya. The epic penned by Suri in the 15th century is largely a legendary biography of the 14th-century Chauhana king Hammira Mahadeva. Before Suri committed it to writing, the legend of Hammira’s gallant fight against Khilji’s attack on Chittor was orally transmitted. In the epic, Khilji has to mount a series of three expeditions against Chittor, following Hammira’s refusal to pay tribute to the Delhi sultan, before finally capturing it. The first expedition is inconclusive while the second results in the defeat of the sultanate army by the Rajputs and in the capture of several Muslim women, who are humiliated and forced “to sell buttermilk in every town they pass through”.

Before the third expedition, Khilji offers a truce on the condition that Hammira resumes paying tribute and gives him his daughter’s hand in marriage. Even though the daughter agrees to such a liaison, Hammira refuses to give her away to an “unclean mlechcha” (literally, barbarian, usually used to refer to outcasts). Learning that defeat is near for the Chauhanas, the womenfolk in the fort commit mass self-immolation (jauhar) and Hammira dies fighting bravely.

Cut to the 16th century, Suri’s dauntless Hammira becomes Jayasi’s Ratan Sen. Much like Hammira, who refused to stake his honour by giving away his daughter, Ratan Sen refuses to give up his wife Padmini to the lecherous Khilji and fights valiantly. Given his Rajput patronage, Jayasi would have been well-versed with Suri’s work.

Signs of his time
Padmavat, however, is not merely a copy of Suri’s work. Jayasi also drew a lot from the current political milieu of his time. For example, Ratan Sen, (1527-’32 AD) who was the rana of Chittor more than 300 years after Khilji’s death, is a contemporary of Jayasi and, hence, his name is borrowed for Padmavat’s hero, a move made perhaps to impress the rana (given the poet’s close association with the Rajputs). Furthermore, captivating tropes employed in the story, such as smuggling Khilji’s army into the Chittor fort through women’s palanquins, was an actual move employed by emperor Sher Shah Suri (Jayasi’s contemporary) in his conquest of Rohtas.

Aziz Ahmed argued that the much maligned Khilji of Padmavat was confounded with Ghiyas al-din Khilji of Malwa (1469-1500), who is said to have had a roving eye and purportedly undertook the quest for Padmini, not a particular Rajput princess but the female ideal type in Hindu erotology. It is further gathered by an inscription in Udaipur that Ghiyas al-din Khilji, in 1488, faced a crushing defeat at the hands of a Rajput chieftain, Badal-Gora, incidentally also the name of the twins (Badal and Gora) who help Ratan Sen escape the besieged fort of Chittor in Jayasi’s Padmavat.


The Rajput belief — fact or fiction?
Over the years, this narration has been reduced to a simplistic tale where Padmavati remains a symbol of Rajput honour and Khilji represents the infinite lust of an Islamic invader.

The construction of the past by the Rajput community has been greatly influenced by the present political scenario. The community’s version of this narrative moves along the communal view of history where kings were seen as vehicles of their religion—that power could be the central motive of most kings is bypassed by this perspective.

In contemporary times, it is this orientation that forms the core of community memory—an orientation constructed over a period of time.

The aim of the community’s construct is to display the Rajput valour where rulers defended their kingdoms from Muslim invaders and the Rajput women committed immolation, lest they would be defiled by the lusty Mughal kings.

Unfortunately, this view doesn’t fall in line with historical accuracy, where most Mughal-Rajput interaction was the fulcrum around which political alliances were forged and Rajput daughters married the Mughal princes in particular to strengthen these bonds.

Distorting history — The cost of comfort
There are broadly two representations of the Rajput princess. First, the quintessential woman who commits Jauhar to save the community honour—the brave woman who captures the mass imagination and second, the girl who marries into a princely family with the purpose of maintaining political power.

Today, any historical memories relating to such inter-caste matters are wiped away.
The film, ‘Jodha Akbar’, chose to present the latter—to present the marriage of a Rajput princess to a Mughal king as a political pact between two ruling families. Today, any historical memories relating to such inter-caste matters are wiped away, as they do not fit within the constructions of community honour, making these communities rather uncomfortable.

Intolerance and Democracy
With ‘Padmavati’, the matter has been taken one step further. The vigilantes of ‘community honour’ have attacked an entire unit on the basis of a rumour, a dream sequence involving a Hindu woman and a Muslim man, a thought that causes deep discomfort in the minds of the likes of Karni Sena.

There is no doubt, that such intolerance has grown unchecked over the last three decades. In India, artistic freedom is controlled by the ruling right-wing where Hindutva politics are fast gaining ground. Filmmakers have felt the wrath of these groups with increasing intensity — our political system meant to uphold the right to freedom of expression has been reduced to a mere bystander.

The fact is — the Hindutva ideology does not cater to diverse presentations of the past, or to the creative freedom of artists. The state is failing the test of ‘democracy’ time and time again.

https://qrius.com/vigilantes-artistic-freedom/
 
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Its nothing but just Politics and Promotional campaign for film , unnecessary controversy created.
 
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Its nothing but just Politics and Promotional campaign for film , unnecessary controversy created.
The karni sena and rss groups that went as far as slapping the director on his film sets and later threatened to vandalize the cinemas believe she was a real rajput queen and refuse to accept open tht fact she was a work of fiction plus they pin some rajput honor on her
 
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The karni sena and rss groups that went as far as slapping the director on his film sets and later threatened to vandalize the cinemas believe she was a real rajput queen and refuse to accept open tht fact she was a work of fiction plus they pin some rajput honor on her


Don't believe in everything you read, all the part of same mill, they take people for ride for few votes and money
 
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Don't believe in everything you read, all the part of same mill, they take people for ride for few votes and money
I Dont think so the initial opposition by karni senas etc during films shooting were fake and pre planned by director, they barged into the set and slapped him leading director into packing up shooting from the location and leaving
 
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It's not that we don't know this.
But the majority of the world believe in fictional things and go to full denial mode when in doubt.
What can you do. :cuckoo:
 
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