A strong tradition of non-violence is one of the most striking features of ancient Indian religious history. Jainism and Buddhism, both of which were non-god-oriented and emphasised renunciation as the path to liberation, stress the importance of ahimsa. Non-violence also appears in the Brahmanical tradition, in association with the idea of the sannyasi and as one of the elements of samanya-dharma or sadharana-dharma, the dharma that applies to all, regardless of social class or gender. Within Hinduism, non-violence also came to be associated with Vaishnavism.
To what extent did religions centred on non-violence remÂain true to their original principles in the long run? Are followers of ahimsa-oriented religions more non-violent or compassionate than others? To what extent did the ethics of non-violence have an impact in the political sphere, especially in the attitudes towards war?
Attitudes towards war
Jainism is the most non-violent of all ahimsa-oriented religions; members of the monastic community and laity are supposed to practice ahimsa, altÂhough in different degrees. In Jaina texts, attitudes towards war range from disapproval to ambivalence, tacit acceptance and justification. Killing in war should be avoided. So, for instÂance, in the eighth-century Adipurana, Bahubali fights his half-brother Bharata for his kingdom to prevent a war. Although he overpowers Bharata, he does not kill him, and instead heads to the forest in search of liberation. In the Jaina Ramayana, Rama does not want to kill Ravana. Lakshmana commits this act and goes to the same hell as Ravana. On the other hand, in the Samayasara, the Jaina monk Kundakunda states (this seems to be an echo of the Bhagavad Gita) that a person who thinks he kills or is killed is ignorant, and that death and killing are results of actions in previous lives. A verse of SomaÂdeÂvasuri has been interpreted as implying that altÂhough killing in a defensive war should be avoided, it is acceptable for the laity.


A Buddha mural in Mulagandhakuti Vihara in Sarnath
There is no such thing as a non-violent war. History tells us that Jaina kings fought wars, and Jaina monks prophesied their outcome. Kharavela, the ruler of Kalinga, boasted about his military victories in his HathiÂÂgumpha inscription. Later, Ganga, Rashtrakuta, and HoysÂala kings with Jaina leanings fought as hard as those of other religious persuasions to expand their dominion. The Ganga general Chamundaraya was as famÂous for his ferocity in batÂÂtle as for patronising the building of the colossal BahuÂbali statue at ShravanaÂbelgola. Clearly, Jaina kings were not pacifists.
Buddhism too displays a range of attitudes towards polÂitical vioÂlence and war. AlthÂough most Jataka stories empÂÂhasise non-violence and compassion, many a BodhÂisattva (Buddha-to-be) fights wars. Non-violence was an impÂortant part of Buddhist ethics for monks and the laity. But it could be argÂued that an enlightened arhat (one who is worthy or a member of the elite class) was beyond the purview of ordinary morality. Mahayana schools advÂocate friendship (metta) towÂards all beings. The idea of the Bodhisattva who leads others towards liberation embodies compassion, but the doctrine of emptiness (shunyata) could be used to dilute the moral force of non-violence. Certain Mahayana and VajÂrayana texts seem to condone the idea of killing out of compassion. The Buddhist king Ashoka famously renounced war, but his warning to the forest tribes shows that he was not a complete pacifist.
In the history of Asian Buddhism, Buddha relics came to be closely connected with warfare. In Sri Lanka and Burma, wars were often justified as part of the quest to acquire relics. The episode of Mara바카라™s attack on the meditating Siddhartha, an important incident in the Buddha바카라™s sacred biography, acquired great symbolic political significance. For instance, in sixth-century Tang China, rebel monks invoked it to justify their violent revolt. Interestingly, no such episode of Buddhist violence is recorded in ancient Indian history. The key to the violent potential of religion lies in its connection with politics.


The issue of politically-inspired religious conflict is a volatile one these days. What was the situation like in ancient times? Between the 6th century BC and 7th century AD, we hear of three major episodes of religiÂous persecution, and interestingly, all of them are recounted in Buddhist texts. The first of these is connected with PushÂyamitra Shunga (2nd century BC). We are told that PushyaÂmitra decided to destroy the 84,000 stupas that Ashoka had built and marched with his army to the Kukkutarama monastery. When the king offered the monks a choice of keeping either the 84,000 stupas or the 84,000 monasteries, they chose the former. He then destroyed the monasteries, killed the monks, and offered a reward of 100 gold coins to anyone who brought the head of a Buddhist monk to him. According to the archaeologist John Marshall, the brick core of the great stupa at Sanchi revealed evidence of considerable, deliberately infliÂcted damage. Marshall conneÂcted this with the activities of the Shunga king. Pushyamitra has also been held responsible for destroying the GhoÂshiÂtaÂrama monastery at KauÂshambi and the DeorÂkoÂthar stupa in central India. Yet we know that Sanchi and other BuddÂhist monasteries in central India continued to exist and flourish during the Shunga perÂiod. Was this in spite of Pushyamitra바카라™s persecution of the Buddhists? Was it because later Shunga kings discontinued his anti-Buddhist policy? Or was it because the growth of Buddhist monasteries was not really dependent on royal patronage or the lack thereof?
The Hunas too are singled out in Buddhist texts for violent rel igious persecution. The Huna ruler Toramana has been held responsible for destruction of the famous Buddhist monastery at Kaushambi. Toramana바카라™s successor Mihirakula (who seems to have been inclined towards Shaivism) acquired an even stroÂnger reputation as a persecutor of the Buddhists. The seventh century Chinese monk-ÂÂtraveller Xuanzang descÂribes him as cruel and oppressive toward Buddhists, and this is endorsed much later by the 16th/17th century Tibetan traveller Taranatha. Excavations at the Dharmarajika stupa at Taxila revealed evidence of a fire, severed heads, dismembered bodies, and skulls bearing injury marks. John Marshall intÂerpreted this as evidence of a Huna massacre. Even if the scale destruction is not as great as what would be expected in a massacre, the archaeological evidence does point towards a violent event. The fact that many types of arrÂowheads were found within the Dharmarajika monastery indicates a threat perception. The Chinese pilgrim Songyun, who visited Gandhara in the early sixth century, attributed the destruction of the Gandhara monasteries to the Hunas. According to XuanÂzang, Mihirakula destrÂoyed 1,600 monasteries in Gandhara and had 9,000 men killed or sold into slavery on the banks of the Indus. On the other hand, an inscription found at Kura in the Salt Range records the building of a Buddhist monastery by a person named Rotta Siddhavriddhi during the reign of Toramana. The donor expÂresses the wish that the religious merit gained by his gift be shared by him with the king and his family members. So, Buddhist monasteries were being built during Huna rule. Did Mihirakula indulge in actÂive persecution of Buddhists? Or was he cast into the role of a cruel anti-Buddhist ruler becÂause Baladitya of Magadha, one of his arch political opponents, was an ardent patron of the Buddhist sangha? The intÂeresting thing is that ninth- and tenth-century Jaina texts desÂcribe Mihirakula as a wicked, oppressive tyrant who was anti-Jaina.
Another king who acquired a reputation for persecuting Buddhists was Shashanka, who ruled in eastern India in the early seventh century. According to Xuanzang, he desÂtroyed monasteries, cut down the Bodhi tree, and tried unsuccessfully to replace the image of the BudÂdha at Bodh Gaya with one of Shiva. Shashanka was a rival of Harshavardhana, king of Kanauj, who was inclined towÂard both Shaivism and BudÂdhism. So was the BudÂdhist picture of a villainous ShaÂÂshÂanka cast against the background of a bitter political conflict?
Even if we do not take such accounts of religious persecution literally and make allowance for exaggeration, do they point towards active political violence? Or are they expressions of resentment at a lack of royal patronage and support? Or do they recast political conflicts into religious moulds? As the perpetrators of the acts cited above were kings, they have to be viewed as political acts, but their perception and presentation as religious persecution cannot be ignored. Nevertheless, these episodes are exceptions rather than the rule. The absence of large-scale religious violence in the early period was in large measure the result of the relationship betÂÂwÂeen kings and the religious domÂain. While inscriptions incÂreÂasingly announced kings바카라™ relÂigious or sectarian affÂÂilÂiation, rulers usually exteÂnded their patronage to a variety of beneficiaries. No religion becÂame a 바카라˜state religion바카라™.
However, over time, as religious and sectarian identities hardened, and the stakes for polÂitical patronage rose higher, expressions of religious hostility became more frequent, intÂense and violent. For instance, we hear of sharp conflicts betÂween the Vaishnavas, Shaivas, Jainas and Buddhists in South India. We know of Hindu kings carrying off religious images from the temples of their adversaries as war trophies. The Pallava ruler Mahendravarman (who is said to have oscillated between Shaivism and Jainism) is accÂused of having persecuted the Shaivas and the Jainas. The hagiographic accounts of Shankaracharya바카라™s digvijaya suggest a milieu of strong religious contest. The material evidence presents a mixed picture. On the one hand, there are reflections of symbolic violence in early medieval images, of deities trampling on their rivals; On the other, images of Hindu deities found at Buddhist sites such as Nalanda suggest their incorporation into Buddhist worship. So it becomes necessary, but not easy, to distinguish between actual violence, symbolic violence, religious rhetoric, and violence as part of political ideology.
Long history of violence
Evidently, the discourse of non-violence, which was so prominent in a section of the religious sphere, had little impÂact on political practice. Ashoka famously renounced war after the Kalinga battle, but no other ancient Indian king, Buddhist or otherwise, followed his exaÂmple. Although ancient Indian thinkers were acutely aware of the tension between violence and non-violence, there is no reason to believe that social and political life in ancient India was marked by significantly lower levels of violence than elsewhere in the world. The reason why the principle of non-violence did not have any significant impact in the political sphere seems to lie in the pragmatic ambivalence of the dominant religious traditions. Even the ahimsa-oriented religions tacitly accepted that a certain amount of violence was necessary in politics.


An artist바카라™s representation of the battle of Kalinga, which is reputed to have changed emperor Ashoka
In the long history of politico-Âreligious conflicts (more so in the context of medieval India), there are two sorts of appÂroaÂches. One is to deny the exiÂstÂence of such conflicts; the other is to exaggerate their impact. These approaches are geared towards an interest in promoting either communal harmony or communal polarisation in the present, in either denying or providing a legitimacy to the settling of old historical scores. But beyond such approaches that view history in terms of herÂoes and villains is another possibility바카라”of seeing various kinds of violence as a part of Indian history from ancient times onwÂards and trying to undÂerstand its forms and contÂexts, justifications and critiques.
History is part of the past. It is over. While we need to understand history, and cannot escÂape it, we must not become its slaves, reacting to one or other version of events that may or may not have happened centuries ago, in very different times, in very different contexts. There is a difference betÂween history, cultural memory and creative interpretations based on either; one cannot be redÂuced to the other. Finally, our desire to have harmony among religious communities and a politics free of violence should not be based on selective constructions of the ancient or medÂieval past. It should be based on the modern principles of demÂocracy, freedom, equality and the rule of law.
Upinder Singh is professor of history, University of Delhi