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Muslim Studies of Hinduism? A Reconsideration of Arabic and Persian Translations from Indian Languages

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2022

Carl W. Ernst*
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina—Chapel Hill

Extract

What have been the Historical Relationships Between the Islamic and Hindu religious traditions? Variations on this question inevitably come to mind in any attempt to assess the significance of the past dozen centuries of South Asian civilization, during which time significant Muslim populations have played important roles, interacting with Indian religions and cultures from a variety of perspectives. Although frequently this kind of question is posed in terms of assumptions about the immutable essences of Islam and Hinduism, I would like to argue that this kind of approach is fundamentally misleading, for several reasons. First, this approach is ahistorical in regarding religions as unchanging, and it fails to account for the varied and complex encounters, relationships, and interpretations that took place between many individual Muslims and Hindus. Second, it assumes that there is a single clear concept of what a Hindu is, although this notion is increasingly coming into question; considerable evidence has accumulated to indicate that external concepts of religion, first from post-Mongol Islamicate culture, and eventually from European Christianity in the colonial period, were brought to bear on a multitude of Indian religious traditions to create a single concept of Hinduism.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2003 Association For Iranian Studies, Inc

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References

1. This study, entitled The Pool of Nectar: Muslim Interpreters of Yoga, is in preparation and should go to press soon. My critical edition of the Arabic text, together with the principal Persian translation, will be published separately.

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15. Sachau, trans., Alberuni's India, Preface, 1.

16. See, for instance, works on erotics and farriery translated from Sanskrit to Persian and dedicated to ˓Abd Allah Qutbshah of Golconda (d. 1672) and Muzaffar Shah II of Gujarat (d. 1526), listed by Marshall, 227, no. 792; 548, no. 621A. On Indian music see the numerous translations listed by Ethé, nos. 2008–33, and in particular Husaini, Indo-Persian Literature, 227-47, for a detailed description of the Lahjat-i Sikandar Shāhī. For further examples of translations on practical subjects see also C. A. Storey, Persian Literature 2: 4-5, 17, 26 (mathematics); 38, 93 (astronomy); 231, 253-54, 266 (medicine); 394-96 (farriery); 412-22 (music); 439 no. 13 (alchemy).

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26. Ibid., 1: xl-xli.

27. Abu al-Fazl, Mahābhārat, 1: xviii-xx. In translating the third sentence of this passage, I have emended the printed text to read juḥūd-i hunūd (“the quarreling of the Hindus“) instead of juḥūd u hunūd. Also, in the first sentence of the second paragraph under point (3), I read ra˓ instead of ragh (meaning ra˓ wa amīn, i.e., jewels).

28. Ethé, Catalogue of Persian Manuscripts, no. 1955.

29. Marshall, Mughals in India, no. 1768.

30. al-Fazl, Abu The Ā˒īn-i Akbarī, 3: 110–12.Google Scholar This translation, entitled Atharban in Persian, was entrusted to Bada˒uni, but he abandoned it after failing to find a competent pandit.

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45. Pertsch, Die Handschriften-Verzeichnisse, no. 1077/3. Another copy is described by Ahmad, NazirNotes on Important Arabic and Persian MSS, found in Various Libraries in India—II,Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 14 (1918)Google Scholar: cxcvix-ccclvi, esp. ccxxix, no. 24, dated 1676.

46. Mir Findariski (d. 1640), who produced a translation of the Yogavāsiṣṭha, showed a similar attitude in these verses: “These words are just like water to the world, pure and enlightening like the Qur'an. / When you have passed through the Qur'an and Prophetic sayings, no one [else] has this way of speaking” (Jūg bashisht, p. xxxi).

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49. The Arabic version of Majma˓ al-baḥrayn by Muhammad Salih ibn Ahmad al-Misri, completed before 1771, is found in the Buhar collection (National Library, Calcutta), MS 133 Arabic. The Urdu translation by Gokul Prasad, entitled Nūr-i ˓ayn or Light of the Eye, was lithographed at Lucknow in 1872. For the Sanskrit version, see Chaudhuri, Roma A Critical Study of Dārā Shikūh's Samudra-sangama, 2 vols. (Calcutta, 1954).Google Scholar

50. Majma˓-ul-baḥrain or The Mingling of the Two Oceans, ed. Mahfuz-ul-Haq, M. (Calcutta, 1929)Google Scholar; Muntakhabāt-i āār-i Muḥammad ibn Shāhjahān Qādirī Dārā Shukūh, ed. Muhammad Riza Jalali Na˒ini (Tehran, 1335/1956); Majma˓ al-baḥrayn, ed. Muhammad Riza Jalali Na˒ini (Tehran, 1366/1987-8).Google Scholar

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54. In the opening lines of Majma˓ al-baḥrayn, (1), Dara Shukuh quotes a version of a famous verse by the poet Sana˒i (d. 1131), “Infidelity and religion (kufr wa dīn) are both following in your path, crying, ‘He alone, he has no partner!’” This verse is a quotation from the beginning of the Sana˓i's classic Sufi epic Ḥadīqat al-ḥaqīqat. In its original context, it is an illustration of the Sufi concept of mystical infidelity as non-duality (see my Words of Ecstasy in Sufism [Albany, 1985), 63-96). In Dara Shukuh's version, however, the verse reads, “Infidelity and islām,” giving it a political character implying Hindu and Islamic communities or doctrines. In this he followed the same wording (and implications) as Abu al-Fazl, who is said to have engraved this verse on a temple used by Indian “monotheists” (muwaḥḥidūn) in Kashmir (Abu'l-Fazl Ā˒īn, 1: liv-lvi). Ironically, this verse as quoted here by Dara Shukuh was seized upon by Awrangzib as evidence of his brother's apostasy from Islam, despite its classical origins in the Sufi tradition (see Syed, Anees Jahan Aurangzeb in Muntakhab-al lubab [Bombay, 1977], 77Google Scholar).

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58. Rieu, 1: 63 (Add. 5654).

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61. Ethé, Catalogue of Persian Manuscripts, nos. 1725, 2905.

62. Pertsch, Die Handschriften-Verzeichnisse, 1089 (Jātaka), 1090–91 (law), 1093 (cosmology), 1094–95 (medicine).

63. Pertsch, Die Handschriften-Verzeichnisse, no. 1078/3-4.

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79. There is considerable information on this topic in ˓Abd Allah, Adabiyyāt-i fārsī. See also Munzavi, Ahmad Fihrist-i mushtarak-i nuskha-hā-yi khaṭṭī-yi fārsī-yi Pākistān (Islamabad:, 1363/1405/1985), 4: 2135-2200Google Scholar, for a comprehensive list of titles and manuscripts of Persian works on Hinduism, both translations and original works.

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81. Rieu, Catalogue of Persian Manuscripts, 1: 64 (Or. 476), copied 1850.Google Scholar

82. Ghazi, Abid UllahRaja Rammohun Roy (1772-1833): encounter with Islam and Christianity, the articulation of Hindu self-consciousness,” Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard University, 1975, 95-98.Google Scholar

83. ˓Abd Allah, Adabīyāt-i fārsī, 216, no. 10, both found in the Lahore Public Library.

84. ˓Abd Allah, Adabīyāt-i fārsī, 216, no. 11, where the offensive treatise is identified as Tuḥfat al-Hind. This seems unlikely, since that work is primarily an account of Indian arts and culture that is not in any way critical; see Mirza Khan ibn Fakhr al-Din Muhammad, Tuḥfat al-Hind, ed. Ansari, Nur al-Hasan (Tehran, 1354/1975).Google Scholar Perhaps what is meant is the similarly entitled Ḥujjat al-Hind of ˓Ali Mihrabi, which consists of a polemical dialogue between two birds on the merits of Hindu mythology and Islam. The dating of the text by the Indian Vikrama or Samvat era, rather than the Islamic calendar, is a telling index of the polemical character of this work.

85. ˓Abd Allah, Adabīyāt-i fārsī, 216, no. 12, found in Punjab University Library, Lahore.

86. Shayagan, Daryush Adyān wa maktab-hā-yi falsafī-yi Hind, 2 vols. (Tehran, 1967).Google Scholar

87. Besides the previously mentioned editions of Dara Shukuh's Majma˓ al-baḥrayn and the Mahābhārata, see Shukuh, Dara trans., Ūpānīshād (Sirr-i akbar), ed. Tara Chand and Muammad Riza Jalali Na˒ini, 2 vols. (Tehran, 1963Google Scholar; reprint Tehran, 1368/1989).

88. Muhammad Riza’ Jalali Na'ini, Guzīdah-i sarūd-hā-yi rīg vedā (Tehran, 1348/1969)Google Scholar; idem, Ṭarīqa-i Gurū Nānak va paydāyī-yi āyīn-i Sik (Tehran, 1349/1970)Google Scholar; idem, Ādāb-i ṭarīqat va khudāyābī dar ˓irfān-i hindū (Tehran, 1347/1968)Google Scholar; idem, Khwīshāvandī-yi zabān va maẕhab-i qadīm-i dū qawm-i āryā-yi Īrān wa Hind (Benares, 1971); Shahrastāni, Ārā-yi Hind (bakhshī az kitāb al-milal wal-niḥal, new ed. Mustafa Khaliqdad ˓Abbasi, ed. Muhammad Riza’ Jalali Na'ini, (Tehran, 1349/1970); Dara Shukuh, trans., Bhagavad Gītā, ed. Muhammad Riza’ Jalali Na'ini (n.p., 1957).

89. Muhammad Riza’ Jalali Na'ini and Shukla, N. S. Lughāt-i sānskrīt maẕkūr dar kitāb mālil-Hind-i ˓Allāma Bīrūnī (Tehran, 1353/1975)Google Scholar; idem, Farhang-i fārsī prakāsh (farhang-i sānskrīt bi-fārsī) (n.p., 1354/1976); idem, Farhang-i Sanskrīt-Fārsī (Tehran, 1996).Google Scholar Cf. also Raja, Chittenjoor Kunhan Persian-Sanskrit grammar, (New Delhi, 1953)Google Scholar, and Muhammad ˓Ali Hasani Da˓i al-Islami, Khwudāmūz-i zabān-i Sanskrīt [Teach Yourself Sanskrit] 2nd edition, (Tehran, 1982).Google Scholar

90. Mujtabai, FathullahMuntakhab-i Jug-basasht or, Selections from the Yoga-vasistha,” Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard University, 1976.Google Scholar

91. al-Din Ashtiyani, Muhandis Jalal Īdiāl-i bashar; tajziya wa taḥlīl-i afkār-i ˓irfān-i būdīsm wa jaynīsm, maẕāhib-i hindū, (The Ideals of Humanity: Analysis of the Mystical Thought of the Indian Religions of Buddhism and Jainism,) (Tehran, 1377/1999).Google Scholar

92. Carandas Sukhadevji, Svarodaya, Persian trans. from Hindi by Satidasa son of Ram Bha'i ˓Arif,” Muḥīṭ-i ma˓rifat (Lucknow, 1860)Google Scholar; reprint ed. Chahardihi, Nur al-Din Asrār-i panhānī-yi maktab-i yūg (Hidden Secrets of Yoga Teaching) (Tehran, 1369/1991).Google Scholar

93. Kalidasa, Śakuntala, Persian trans. by Hasan, Hadi Shakuntala yā khatīm-i mafqūd (Tehran, 1956)Google Scholar, also trans. ˓Ali Asghar Hikmat (Delhi, 1957); Rabrindranath Tagore, Gitanjali, Persian trans. by Farhadi, Ravan Surūd-i nayāyish (Kabul, 1975).Google Scholar