
The Mughal Prince, Dara Shukoh is undoubtedly one of the most tragic figures in Indian history. The life and death of Dara Shukoh is one of the ‘what-ifs’ of Indian history. How would Indian history be different had Dara instead of Aurangzeb won the battle of succession? A noted intellectual in his own right, Dara was a champion of cultural interaction between faiths and would write and commission several great works on the comparative religious discourse between Hinduism and Islam. Author Avik Chanda, in his new book ‘Dara Shukoh: The Man who would be King’, looks at the story of this tragic prince.
Since the earliest days of the Mughal Empire, its sovereigns had taken a keen interest in the customs, mores and sciences of the indigenous people of Hindustan. But the project of deciphering the hidden mystical truths in the millennia-old runes and scriptures of the Hindus found a new purpose during the reign of Akbar. At his instance, a dedicated maktab-khana of translators and scholars was set up, to ponder intricate questions of doctrine and theological argument, and translate tracts in their multitude – from Sanskrit to Persian. From the Ramayana and Mahabharata, to the Bhagavad Gita and Yoga Vashisht, and treatises on every subject from mathematics to medicine and astronomy – the Emperor swiftly collated a treasure-trove of translated works as part of his library. Scholars handpicked by the Emperor himself were granted an almost daily audience. The great books of the Hindus were read out in Persian from beginning to end, as Akbar listened with complete focus, interrupting the reading from time to time, to clarify a point of discourse or ask questions.
But besides the Emperor’s unbounded intellectual curiosity, another motive was also at work. As his Prime Minister Abu’l-Fazl explained in the preface to his work, Ain-i-Akbari, the project of translating from the scriptures of the Hindus was conceived because ‘hostility towards them might abate and the temporal sword be swayed awhile from the shedding of blood, so that discussions within and without be turned into peace and the thorn of strife and enmity bloom into a garden of concord.’ This was not Abu’l-Fazl’s own manifesto, but that of his imperial patron. After subjugating the local chiefs with military might, Akbar had begun to adopt a policy of diplomacy and marriage alliances, and more broadly, an approach of conciliation with the large Hindu majority of the population he ruled over.


In terms of religious outlook, no four brothers could be more different from one another.


He concluded that the true belief of the Hindus was aligned to that of monotheism.
