Hindutva is afar-right political ideology that seeks to justifyHindu nationalism and the belief in establishing a Hindu hegemony. Hindutva ideologues and figures have engaged in numerous instances ofdisinformation since the Hindutva movement began.
According to Jaffrelot, the Hindutva ideology has roots in an era where the fiction in ancient Indian mythology andVedic antiquity was presumed to be valid. This fiction was used to "give sustenance to Hindu ethnic consciousness".[1] Hindutva organisations treat events inHindu mythology as history.[2][3][4][5] Hindutva organisations have been criticized for their belief in statements or practices that they claim to be both scientific and factual but are incompatible with thescientific method.[6][7]
According toAnthony Parel,Vinayak Damodar Savarkar and his 1929 workHindutva, Who is a Hindu? regarded as the fundamental text of Hindutva ideology, presents the "Hindu culture as a self-sufficient culture, not needing any input from other cultures", which is "an unhistorical, narcissistic and false account of India's past".[8] Writing for theNew York Times,Romila Thapar states that Modi's government and the BJP have "peddled myths and stereotypes", such as the insistence on "a single uniform culture of the Aryans, ancestral to the Hindu, as having prevailed in the subcontinent, subsuming all others", despite the scholarly evidence formigrations into India, which is "anathema to the Hindutva construction of early history".[9]
An investigative report by Reuters, based on testimonials from scholars, includingMahesh Sharma, the creator of the committee, claimed that the Modi government had established a committee of scholars to promote certain narratives, such as linking evidence of Indian history with ancient scriptures, establishing a view that Indian civilization is older than currently believed, proving the existence of the mysticalSaraswati river, mapping and excavating sites of battles mentioned in the Mahabharata. Sharma also stated that his ministry had organised workshops and seminars to “to prove the supremacy of our glorious past.”[10]
Distortion of history inNational Council of Education Research and Training (NCERT) textbooks has been frequently observed under the BJP governments.[11][12]G. N. Devy writes, "the discipline of history is so rich now in its knowledge of the past that Hindutva’s speculative historiography, though imposed upon learners through the NCERT, can hardly make a dent in it."[13]
Audrey Truschke states that Hindutva followers have fabricated evidence such as the Indus horse seal in order to equate the Indus valley civilisation with the Vedic culture and that they have also propagated theOut of India Theory (OIT) which claims that Aryans originated in India and spread out to the rest of the world. According to Tony Joseph, OIT lacks support from even "a single, peer-reviewed scientific paper" and that it is nothing "more than a kind of clever and angry retort."[5]
According to Truschke,Hindu nationalists in the U.S. have attempted to censor historical references to Hindu practices such as the caste system and untouchability from history textbooks. In India, they have also attempted to erase references to Muslim figures, such asAkbar the Great, or secular figures, such asNehru, replacing them with icons such asShivaji whom they falsely imagine "to have been seeking to establish a Hindu Rashtra in premodernity". Truschke concludes that Hindutva efforts at altering history textbooks have been successful in the US and India and with their attempts at subverting academic views to political narratives, they have succeeded in limiting dialogue on Indian history.[5][14]
Truschke further elaborates that Hindutva ideologues want to promote a view that Hindus alone are indigenous to India and therefore Hindu as a social group can be considered as the definition of Indian, in an attempt to exclude groups such as Muslims from said definition.[5] She also states that Narendra Modi, a Hindu nationalist claims that Islamic rule of India was “1,200 years of slavery". Hindu nationalist websites also propagate a narrative about a “Hindu Holocaust” perpetuated by Muslim rulers.[5] French journalist and Hindutva ally,François Gautier has in past proposed the idea of a "Hindu Holocaust Museum"'.[15]
According to Tanika Sarkar, Hindutva narratives portray Hindus as the sole victims of violence during thepartition of India, despite both sides being "equally combative". These narratives also depict Indian Muslims as "perpetual aggressors, invaders, and agents of terror", despite their significant "social, educational, and economic disadvantages" after losing electoral power following the partition.[16]
The BJP government has taken the initiative to "saffronise" history textbooks ever since taking to power through exclusion of Muslim rulers and their contributions from Indian history.[17] This is part of a larger effort to promote and reshape Hindutva, often leading to actions that sideline minorities. Examples include changing the names of places to Hindu ones andattempting to claim centuries-old mosques as Hindu religious sites.[18][19]
According toThe Print, theAll India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) has revised the engineering curriculum to introduce anIndian Knowledge Systems (IKS) course textbook which makes claims about ancient Indians pioneering aviation and credits the Vedic period for inventing batteries, electricity production, maritime engineering and discovering the phenomenon of gravity based on certain interpretations of Hindu scriptures such as the Vedas.[20][21] Critics such as Jaheer Mukthar, an assistant professor of economics at Kristu Jayanti College in Bangalore, have stated that "One can say that the government is clearly using the textbook as a tool for propagating the Hindutva agenda"[22]
Shivkar Bapuji Talpade was an Indian instructor who has been claimed to have flown aheavier-than-air aircraft in 1895, before the first successful flight by the Wright brothers. The contemporary evidence about a successful flight does not exist and no reliable sources report this account. The pseudo-historical narrative about Talpade was propagated in the early 2000s by theHindu-nationalists, who claimed that Talpade had "invented the modern aircraft".[23][24]
Popular historians likeSanjeev Sanyal are notable for writing books onrevisionist Hindutva history.[25]
In 2003, the idea of a 'Hindu Holocaust Museum' was proposed by French journalist and Hindutva - ally, François Gautier.
Sanjeev Sanyal, an economist who writes popular books on revisionist Hindutva history