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REMEMBERING GADARITE BABU MANGU RAM MUGOWALIA
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PIONEER OF DALIT MOVEMENT IN COLONIAL PUNJAB-ON HIS 102ND YEAR VISIT TO CALIFORNIA
by
Dr.Ronki Ram
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INDO-ISLAMIC ARCHITECTURE:
PROVENANCE & FORMATIVE
INFLUENCES

With thanks to
Journal of Regional History, Amritsar, Vol.  XIII, 2013.
Sardar Mahan Singh Dhesi Annual Lecture 2012
Ravindra Kumar*

(Sardar Mahan Singh Dhesi, a pioneer Punjabi settler in California, spent almost half a century in the USA. He lived in California for more than half of his life from 1902 to 1945. The Annual Lecture has been instituted by Dr. Autar Singh Dhesi, grandson of Sardar Mahan Singh Dhesi and former Professor and Head, Punjab School of Economics, Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar (Punjab) India.
Sardar Mahan Singh Dhesi was the eledest son of Dewan Dhesi, 16th direct descendent of Chaus Dhesi who had about 3,500 acres of fertile land under his control in the Manjki area of Jalandhar district. Mahan Singh Dhesi’s mother belonged to an aristocratic family of Jadali near Phagwara, associated with Maharaja Ranjit Singh, later bestowed with the title of Zaildar. Mahan Singh Dhesi was married to the eldest daughter of Bapu Waryam Singh, head man (Lambardar) of village Virk, near Phagwara. Mahan Singh Dhesi’s only son, Milkha Singh also inherited the title and property of Bapu Waryam Singh as his adopted son. Milkha Singh Dhesi’s wife belonged to direct descendants’ house of a princely state centered on Phagwara, covering vast tracts of present districts of Kapurthala, Jalandhar Nawanshehar, ‘and Hoshiarpur. One of the famous rulers of this state was Raja Hakumat Rai. Mahan Singh Dhesl ‘.s only daughter, Kartar Kaur was married to the youngest son of Sardar Bahadur Sardar Chur Singh Zaildar of Cheema Khurd near Nurmahal. Chaus Dhesi had a number of illustrious descendents in the 17th and 18th centuries. The most renowned among them has been Baba Sang (Jodha) Dhesi, a revered Sikh Saint associated with Guru Arjan Dev. He preached universal brotherhood and Oneness of mankind. He was 9th direct descendent of Chaus Dhesi.
Thus wrote Bhai Gurdas (Saint Paul of Sikhs) about Baba Ji:
Dhesi Jodh Husang Hai Gobind Gola Haas Milanda, Vaar 11, Pauri 23.
 (Jodha Dhesi with Noble Face; His Devotee Interacts With Grace)
Bhai Sangtu Dhesi was a Commander (General) of Guru Hargobind’s army. Bhai Bakat Dhesi, a writer in the Court of Guru Tegh Bahadur, was assigned the duty to record activities of young Guru Gobind Singh. Bhai Bakat Dhesi’s grandson, General Nanu Singh Dhesi (10th descendent of Chaus Dhesi) was a distinguished army commander of Baba Banda Singh Bahadur who decisively defeated the army of ruler of (Sirhind) Fatehgarh Sahib.
With his rich heritage, Sardar Mahan Singh embodied the lofty civilizational values of altruism, charity and compassion for others. All along, he generously contributed to various activities initiated in California for social and educational uplift of rural Punjab. As an illustration of his compassion and concern for the welfare of fellow beings, Sardar Mahan Singh allowed surgeons to remove muscles from one of his legs to repair the limbs of a virtually crippled man from his village. He did this despite forewarnings of the surgeons that he might suffer circuiting pain- in his leg later, which he did for his remaining years. Yet, as a token of his magnanimity, he bequeathed a part of his estate to this co-villager. Earlier, he could not bear a young nephew of the beneficiary of his generosity and large heartedness being refused entry to the U.S. as young man’s real uncle was not in the position to furnish the needed surety as per the then prevailing law. Later, he continued to assist the youngman to complete his study to become a dental surgeon who served in the U.S. Armed Forces during the World War II. One can go on enumerating such examples of his generosity and altruistic behavior. Editor)
*  Professor, Department of History, School of Social Sciences, Indira Gandhi National Open University, New Delhi 
Art and architecture are expressions of culture in a different media. The evolution of culture may be traced equally well in either of them and in manifestly visible forms. Perhaps architecture is a more concrete form of culture than even art. It is here that the ideas and techniques of a society find tangible, visual expression. The advent of the Turkish rule in India and via that the influence of Islam is significant in more than one respect.  While it gave rise to a new socio-political system, it also marked the beginning of a new expression in art and architecture. The style of architecture that evolved during this time is called Indo-Islamic. In estimating the influence of Islam in the making of Indian civilization it is essential to understand the provenance of Indo-Islamic architecture and through this genre the formative influences which moulded Indian civilization and shaped its aesthetic needs and values.
In Islamic architecture the focus is on the enclosed space, as opposed to the outside.  The most common expression of this attitude is the Muslim house.  It is organized around an inner courtyard presenting to the outside world high windowless walls interrupted only by a low single door. Rarely does a facade give any indication of the inner organization or purpose of the building in question, and it is rare that an Islamic building can be understood, or even its principal features identified, by its exterior. The other more prominent feature is the distinction between urban & non-urban Islamic architecture. It is necessary to make a distinction between urban and non-urban Islamic architecture, because slightly different rules apply to these two different architectural expressions.  Much Islamic architecture appears within the urban setting, though it must be added that a number of building-types were especially developed for the non-urban context, even if they frequently appear within the city as well.  Most obvious is the caravanserai, which, in the majority of cases, appears in the open countryside along the principal travel routes.  Next are the monumental tombs, which, almost without exception appear as isolated monuments, whether in an urban situation or within a proper cemetery. This is especially true when the monument commemorates an important personage; its very function as a commemorative structure makes ‘visibility’ and physical isolation imperative.
Other building-types that stand alone because of their specific function include fortified frontier structures (ribats & qasrs), hunting lodges and utilitarian structures, such as bridges, watch-towers, gateways and fortifications, especially those of the major cities themselves.  Even though most of the building types appear as isolated visible structures with clearly defined and undistinguished exteriors, few breaks the rule, that is, are developed into architectural forms that can be fully comprehended from the exterior.
Two conclusions are obvious: first, very few building-types in the Muslim world articulate the interior space on their exteriors; and second, that these buildings are either, totally functional - bridges, watch-towers etc. – or true exceptions to the rule.  In the case of the tomb or, for that matter, the mausoleum, we are in the presence of exceptional monuments that intrinsically demand to be clearly visible and free-standing.
Closely related to the concept of a ‘hidden architecture’ is the striking and almost total absence of a specific architectural form for a specific function. There are very few forms in Islamic architecture that cannot be adapted for a variety of purposes; conversely a Muslim building serving a specific function can assume a variety of forms. The paramount example of this phenomenon is the four – iwan structure of Central Asia and Iran, which is also found in other parts of the Muslim world. These structures function equally well as palace, mosque, madrasa, caravanserai, or private dwelling; at different times and in different places, in fact, they were built to serve all of these functions.  In other words, an Islamic building does not automatically reveal, by its form, the function it serves.  It need not be designed to serve a particular purpose, but is, in most cases, an abstract and ‘perfect’ scheme that can be used for a great variety of functions without any difficulties. Generally, Islamic architecture is given to hiding its principal features behind an unrevealing exterior; it is an architecture that does not change its forms easily, if at all, according to functional demands, but rather tends to adapt functions to preconceived forms which are basically the contained internal spaces.
With the exception of the tomb, the mausoleum and other similar domed structure, Islamic buildings rarely display an inherent directional or axial quality.  On the contrary, the actual physical direction of a building, if it has any at all, is often different from its functional direction (which represents a total contradiction of the logical sense of direction expressed in European architecture). It is an ancient pre-Islamic concept, which appears to have survived, unaltered, into the architecture of the Islamic culture.
This lack of indication of a direction or focus in Islamic architectural design appears at all times and in all parts of the Muslim world; it is also clearly expressed in the lack of balance between the various parts of a building complex.  Hindu architecture is generally designed as a complete balanced plan; Islamic architecture usually shows no such basic structure, and addition to an original plan are, consequently, never tampered by an inherent principle governing the whole and conditioning all parts in an equal manner. Enclosed space, defined by walls, arcades and vaults, is the most important element of Islamic architecture.
Decoration in Islamic architecture serves several functions, but its main effect – and very likely its main purpose – appears to be the creation of non-tectonic values, the dissolution of all those elements that in other architectural traditions emphasize the structure, the balance and counter-balance of loads and stresses – the actual mechanics of a building.  Islamic architecture at its best, and at its most ‘Islamic’, is truly a negation of architecture, that is, of structure; it aims at a visual negation of the reality of weight and the necessity of support.  The various means by which the effect of weight-less-ness is created, the effect of unlimited space, of non-substantiality of walls, pillars, and vaults are all well known.
I
The architecture in medieval India is marked by a widespread use of arch as the main structural form for spanning voids and the use of round dome as the main device to provide covering/roofing over walled spaces. It includes the introduction and large scale use of lime mortar as the foremost cementing material for joining individual structural elements – the stone blocks and the bricks – used in raising arches and domes.  It also holds that the application of lime mortar was better suited for rough and porous surfaces of bricks which also provided smaller surface areas for the cementing properties of the mortar to act more efficiently. The constructions in brick therefore began to match constructions in stone at least numerically, if not in size, and the urban landscape of medieval India began to change gradually.  It is contended that this “new” architectural device — arch made of bricks held in place by lime-mortar — was an advance over earlier methods and had even made masonry construction “affordable” proposition, yet had not completely supplanted the earlier column-and-beam structures.  Instead the two allied and gave rise to a style generally identified as the Indo-Islamic architecture.  That this style contains two different structural forms, is often cited as an attribute, though it should also be admitted that sometimes this combination is treated as bordering on the grotesque and having incongruous structural elements.
A study of the architecture would therefore chiefly concern itself with a probe into the design and structural behaviour of the forms and devices that were used in the buildings and other structures.  It would thus examine the “new” form/s and the structural actions that come into play as they are actually used in the buildings, their inherent potentialities, the ways in which they facilitated construction, the manner in which they allied with the structural form/s practiced in the earlier period and the overriding considerations, if any, of the available building material, and the considerations of the “economy” of time consumed in completing the construction. The actual subsequent exploitation of this architectural technology in built structures based on the “wide range of choice” made available to the builders shall also be an area of our interest.  In other words the essential purpose of this presentation is to highlight the provenance of and formative influences on Indo-Islamic Architecture. I am carefully avoiding the use of technical language though at times the structural analysis of forms etc. will require the use of some technical terms.  An important point for us to note is that in most built structures the elemental structural forms (e.g. arch, column-and-beam etc.) have grown as essential parts of a larger building and not developed in isolation.  The structural actions are therefore more complex sometimes than the simple understanding about them presented here.  The historical period delineated here is from the establishment and consolidation of the rule of Turkish Sultans over Delhi in twelfth-thirteenth centuries to the decline of the Mughal Empire in the eighteenth century; the discussion though has sometimes followed a non-chronological approach so as to enable us to focus on structurally significant specimens across periods.
It is an interesting fact that generally structural forms have not been conceived in isolation and have imbibed influences from the past.  The technical resources for an understanding of the structural actions were more limited in the past than they are today.  Therefore actions of the earlier forms would mostly become legible to the architects through experience than through abstract principles of design. The process of development of these forms and the constraints surrounding this development was then based on their successes and failures over a period of time. Our discussion based on present-day understanding of the structural action should therefore be viewed with care in arriving at any qualitative judgment about their technical suitability at specific periods of time in history. 
The principal structural form in use in India at the time of Turkish invasion was “column-and-beam” in which logs of timber or beams of stone were placed horizontally between two vertical columnar supports. The space so spanned formed part of a roof or an entrance in a wall.  In making a roof, in fact, number of horizontal elements was set at a short distance apart and the in-between space was covered with slates, reed or such other material. The columns were also carved out of timber or stone or made of bricks. Alongside column-and-beam we also notice the early use of “false” arches and vaults with stepped soffits as another device to span openings or cover roofs. A characteristic feature of this form is that all the structural blocks (usually of stone or bricks) remain embedded horizontally on one another.  As they rise to bridge the opening or to roof the enclosure they project slightly beyond those of the course below.  Thus the gap to be spanned is narrowed progressively and eventually at the centre either the two sides meet or they approach near enough to be finally spanned by a single block.
The beam and column have been the simplest of all elemental forms but their primary structural actions – internal tensions and compressions – are perhaps the most complex ones to be subjected to an analysis. In order to understand the structural behaviour of different forms a brief analysis of the forces working on a structure will be of help.  It will give us leads into learning the primary functions served by different structural forms in a building and the manner in which the stability of the buildings is served by architectural technologies employing these forms.
It is an axiom to say that the basic requirement in all architecture is that the structure remains standing and intact and does not collapse even under conditions of its use at some deviation from the “normal”. While local deformations may occasionally take place, the main objective in choosing the structural form is that they (the deformations) are kept within acceptable limits and they do not in general jeopardize the stability of the structure.  For this overall stability there are some basic imperatives: “active loads” should be balanced against resistances, the foundations should be able to bear the loads passed on by the structure, and sufficient margins of strength and stiffness should be available in the structural elements used for construction.
Let us understand these imperatives and associated features a little more closely. In a structure there are several types of load that become operative once the structure is completed. The gravitational self-weight of the structural elements and such other material used in the construction is foremost. In addition there are external pressures exerted by the users and by the environment on the structure.  The user pressure is accounted for the people and the articles and material kept or carried through the structure. The pressure of the wind, heat or the impact of the coldness, and natural calamities as earthquake and lightening etc. constitute the environmental action on the structure. The self-weight of the structural elements is called the dead load; it does not change under normal circumstances and is determined by the nature of building material. The external pressure is called the live load; the magnitude of this load is not fixed and is determined by the regularity and frequency of use of the structure as also by the manner of its construction. In addition we have the reactive loads which become operative at the points where the structure is supported and where it terminates. Generally the reactive loads offset the force exerted by the dead and live loads, and depend on the manner in which the structure is terminated either at plinth level or at or below the foundations. The points of junction of different structural elements too show reactive loads.
The forces or loads discussed here, namely the dead and live loads– collectively called the active loads– and the reactive loads, have a normal tendency/proclivity to generate displacement in the direction in which they work.  As a result a miniscule movement or displacement occurs; this gives rise to a resistance in the structure that attempts to defy the displacement. The structure remains intact under the forces so generated due largely to the fact that they are balanced by each other. The strength or stability of a structure is its ability to attain balance without too much displacement or deformity.  It is also important to understand that these loads generally act quite slowly. This permits the development of resistance to keep pace, and the stability of the structure does not get endangered. Yet there may be situations in which there are swift changes in the loads causing resistance to not grow at the same pace, and bring deformities in the structure. The earthquakes emanating vibrations of great amplitude are illustrative instances of such actions.
It is thus clear that in choosing a configuration for a structure and in selecting the manner of its construction most of the subsequent forces operative on the structure are in a way pre-decided. While it is not possible to accurately predict the subsequent behaviour of a structure under the impact of loads likely to be borne by the structure, it is still possible to take care of some general structural requirements at the time of making the choices as above. These requirements are in addition to the selection made with respect to the structural form/s and the building material/s. In the first place is the requirement to organize the assembly of structural elements and their joints in such manner that the structure becomes a stable order and not an assemblage of loosely joined and disarrayed elements. Next is the requirement of having structural elements and their joints of such characteristics as to provide requisite strength.  It is true that in complex structures i.e. having multiple components, it is not easy to discern these requirements and meet them for individual elements.  It is more practical to account for the balances of forces at work in the structure at various points or to achieve, what in the technical term is called, a static equilibrium of the forces at work in the structure.
Now, to get back to the column-and-beam constructions, it is generally understood that the beams do not exert any appreciable horizontal force and the sizeable actions are only along vertical lines.  In fact the dead load of the beam gets distributed over its length unlike a few other structural forms, such as arches and catenaries, where the dead load gets resolved into two resultants and operates at the points at which the arches and catenaries are supported. In general terms it can be said that the beams supported on vertical pillars or columns work as an “arch” and a “catenary” simultaneously.  In other words, the two structural forms where loading actions operate conversely become combined in the beam; the resultant has a propensity to neutralize these converse loading actions. However, it is not easy to even approximate the axes or lines through which these actions or forces operate. We only know that normally the two forms remain in a state of equilibrium and it is only under the impact of any changed load on the beam that a readjustment in the two forms takes place.  The beam gives way when this readjustment reaches its limit and fails. Either the “arch” or the “catenary” is disrupted and the collapse of the beam occurs. 
The column-and-beam architecture was practiced in India from a very early time and this long experience had taught architects and builders many practical lessons.  The structures were built in all the three principal materials viz. timber, stone, and brick but the strength and easy availability of stone had over time resulted in a preponderance of stone structures. Generally it was a combination of all the building material in which one predominated and the other materials used for other specific purposes. The strength of this architecture lay in its simple methods of construction and the abundance of building materials.  It is true that stone was not a very friendly medium for visually embellishing the surface.  But the Indian artisan had mastered the sculptural techniques to an immaculate perfection. The surface in these stone buildings as also in the other structural media was adorned with iconic figures of marvelous beauty. There were hardly any areas that were left undressed. However, the column-and-beam architecture suffered from at least one major structural shortcoming. The stone (or even timber) beam used for spanning purposes had only limited strength.  Moreover, there was a maximum length in which it could be naturally procured.  As a result there did operate a limitation on the span that could be covered by the stone beam and attempts to further increase the span would require additional columnar support.  Not only ingenious expedients were available to override this deficiency; the architecture based on this technology was massive but composed of covered spaces that were long and narrow and where the columns were closely spaced. 
The temple had come to typify the architectural form using column-and-beam device. Temple structures had sprung up in many variants in different parts of India since the time of the Gupta rulers.  Beginning with flat-roofed simple structures having a pillared pavilion in front of the door-frame, the temple structures of the later periods came to signify one of the most elaborate and embellished constructions in pre-Turkish India. Many experiments with their plans and designs and equally expansive extensions in front of the architrave housing the deity resulted in the emergence of large rectangular stone (and occasionally brick) buildings that were also great visual delights.  On the basis of their styles, Indian temples have been classified into three categories – Nagara, Dravida and Vesara.  It is not our purpose here to delve deep into the architecture of temples.  The intention is to stress the fact that quite diversified attributes of the temples were achieved with the use of column-and-beam device.  High pyramidal superstructures marked by the Shikhar and profusely decorated outer surface having iconic representations from all hues of social and religious life became the distinguishing features of temple architecture. Thus when Turks came to India they encountered temple as the principal architectural form and column-and-beam as the main structural form practiced by the builders here.
The advent of the medieval period in India also marks the beginning of a new expression in architecture. New structural forms are introduced and the new forms – arch and vault/dome – are employed in architectural construction in many innovative ways. Arch and vault/dome are such versatile structural forms that they present numerous exciting possibilities to the architects. It will therefore be worth our while to seek to comprehend their structural characteristics and the actual mechanics of their usage, to truly appreciate their application in medieval Indian architecture.
The arch is usually a curved form and is normally made of wedge-shaped component blocks (in stone, brick or even concrete) fixed together firmly either by neatly dressing the adjoining surfaces of component with blocks for a tight joint with the help of a cementing material. The figure given here shows the typical features of an arch and its component parts. The curved form endows the arch with very special structural characteristics. Geometrically the arch is an unstable form prone to cracking or collapsing at one or more points along its curvature.  The same curved form, nevertheless, attains stability and acquires remarkable properties of carrying loads of its component blocks (voussoirs, to be technically accurate) which are rigidly joined so as to form a continuous masonry. It is important for an arch to retain its curved shape to be able to retain all the remarkable properties. It is equally important for this curved formation to support itself at the two end points of the curve on firm bases. Once these essential conditions are met the arch achieves an equilibrium in which the dead load of the arch gets resolved into two parts each exerting a thrust at the point of support.  This thrust operates through the line of tangent drawn along the curve on both sides. Since the end points are firmly rooted on the supports, the thrust gets resolved at this point into two components, the vertical downward thrust and the horizontal outward thrust.  The vertical thrusts are generally transmitted through the supports to the foundations and only horizontal thrusts try to destabilize the arch. The net effect of all these forces is that the destabilizing action is generated by only a part of the total dead load while the remaining dead load is absorbed by the foundations.  If the arch is burdened with active loads, by the same principle, only a part of it and not the whole would try to destabilize the arch. The practical aspects of this principle were of great value to the architects. It may have resolved their difficulty in not being able to increase the dead load beyond a certain limit, as was the case in the column-and-beam structures. Moreover larger spans could now be covered by arches without the necessity of any intermediate support.
The architectural use of the arch was first attempted by the Egyptians.  Mud-brick arches dating back to a period early in the third millennium BC have been reported from Reqaqnah in Egypt.  They were perhaps of the window arch type and were made of only a few bricks. Arch was, however, not preferred by ancient Egyptians as a structural form and the reasons for this were perhaps similar to the arch not finding a favour with the architects in ancient India.  It was much later that adoption of arches began in the larger structures. In seventh century BC, we find brick archways of fairly wide span surviving in Thebes in middle Egypt.  The use of stone in making arches began in Greece and Italy and later in Rome around fourth century BC. These arches were semi-circular in form and were made of stone voussoirs of such workmanship that they fitted quite closely in the semi-circular profile. In these arches there was no use of mortar. It seems the semi-circular shape was preferred so that these finely worked voussoirs would remain intact even without mortar. Great advance in using arch was made by the Romans. They refined the technique and introduced some very useful modifications in the shape. The design and construction of Roman arches also have a bearing, if indirect, on the kind of technology used in making arches in India during the medieval period. 
The making of Roman arches involved the construction of support walls or columns up to the point from where the arch would spring up.  At this level a false-work was raised having the same semi-circular shape as was desired for the arches. This was perhaps a cumbersome process and needed the support of carpenters who would create the false work (centering) in wood. It is of interest for us to note that semi-circular people could be easily attained only in wood and not in other materialsThe next stage in construction was to accurately fix the voussoirs in place from both ends.  As has been noted above, the craft of chiseling stone voussoirs was perfected by the Romans to such an extent that the two adjacent voussoirs joined together without leaving any crevice in between. This type of tight-fit was an absolutely necessity for the principle of load transfer on the supports to come in operation. As the crown was reached the key stone was tightly fitted in the available space. The keystone was a critical element that was to keep the semi-circular profile in place and was to bring the tangential thrusts of the two halves of the semi-circle to become operational at the points of support or the springing of the arch. Once this stage of construction was over the false work or centering was removed leaving the arch standing in place. Structural characteristics of Roman arches that emerge from this detail are of interest: the semi-circular arches were not capable of accommodating even the slightest movements of its supports, otherwise they would collapse; the curvature of the soffits had to be truly semi-circular that is no horizontal profile at any point was admissible otherwise the voussoirs would slip on each other causing their fall; the Romans used joggled voussoirs as an expedient to minimize the likelihood of slipping  and also found it useful in situations where false work was not very firm and required an additional contrivance to keep the voussoirs in place at the time of construction.  A few more innovations made by Romans are also noteworthy. From about the middle of the first century AD brick-faced concrete arches came into use. An interesting feature of these concrete arches was that they were penetrated by full bricks at regular distance.  Perhaps the attempt was to create voussoir-like sections as component blocks of the arch. In technical terms though the concrete would have behaved in much the same fashion as the concrete structures of today would – as a complete monolithic curved formation. Towards the later part of the Roman empire along with semi-circular profile of the arches segmental profile was also introduced. It seems that in this process only slight departures from semi-circle were initially done. These departures were more a consequence of errors of construction than any deliberate attempts to experiment with a new profile. Subsequently arches with markedly segmental profile were used in their structures though in an irregular manner.
The departures from the simple semi-circular profile have been of seminal value in the development of arch as a structural form. The departures, as we have noted above, came about initially from the slight structural errors during the construction stage.  But once the benefits of these “errors” became evident the departures became deliberate. Lessons were perhaps drawn from the observation that profiles at deviance from semi-circle were also quite strong.  It would have been hard to anticipate the actual behaviour of the “departed” profiles but practical observations and strength and longevity would have assured the architects about their utility.  The most significant new profile was the pointed arch. It offered advantages in construction that were impossible to ignore.  These were: easy setting out of the arch; possibilities of using lighter centering than was required for a semi-circular or segmental arch; and the propensity to adjust its profile marginally to offset minor settlements due to poor foundations. The pointed arches appeared first in the Islamic world in Jordan in the eighth century AD and soon became one of the main features of the Islamic architecture of the region. Popularity of pointed arches speaks for the advantages they offered in case of construction. The regions of its early spread were wide deserts and jagged rocky uplands that were barren of wood or vegetation. The architects were therefore deprived of the advantage of creating centering made of timber unlike the Roman practice. Under these circumstances pointed arches were the most suitable proposition since they did not require an all-timber centering in their construction. In fact material other than timber which could be locally procured was used in centering. This material was brick and a combination of timber with brick or sometimes bricks alone were used in making the centering. The bottom layer of light centering was constructed first and then a thin layer of bricks was placed on it. If needed, another concentric layer of brickwork was also added over it and the arch was to be raised over these layers of bricks. Often these two layers of brickwork acted as permanent shuttering for the arch. Since pointed arch would impose less load on the centering and a smaller horizontal thrust at the support than semi-circular profile the method described thus worked quite efficiently. The horizontal thrust in the pointed profile was minimized because the rise in pointed arches was greater than the span. The line of thrust at the support would therefore resolve into horizontal and vertical thrusts such that the vertical thrust increased and the horizontal thrust got reduced in the same proportion. This arch was therefore found better equipped than the semi-circular arch in dealing with conditions were stable foundations were difficult to obtain and where timber was not easily available for raising the false work.
It would appear, at first sight, from the account given above that for the architects it was rational choice to opt for the pointed arch. The architect’s freedom to choose its form when a structure is to be constructed, however, is a complex process in which many inter-connected factors come into play. In addition to the basic structural requirements of the building and the availability of the material the architects have to contend with the application of particular techniques of construction within the available mechanical aids and human skills. It has often been found that the architects have developed ingenious methods to cope with such situations and suitable adjustments in the structural form/s have been made to overcome constraints at least partially if not completely. The introduction of arch – the pointed arch in medieval India - presents a somewhat similar situation.  The architects employed by the new rulers – early Turkish Sultans – were given the task of assembling a built form that would in shape be a pointed arch.  The assurance gained in their homeland about the strength of pointed arch was now to be translated into practice in “alien” conditions.  The architects had also to tackle with the problem of securing adequate stability and strength to the arch at intermediate stages of construction.  The availability of building material and its fabrication into desired shape, and the methods of joining them together were also issues seeking a resolution.  The first buildings were raised under such conditions.
The first structure raised by the new rulers was the mosque in the Qutb Minar area at Delhi popularly known as the Quwwatul Islam mosque which was completed in 1195 AD. It was built on the ruins of a temple by integrating its plinth within the plinth of the mosque. The material for the mosque was not fabricated afresh but the material (stone) used in twenty-seven other temples of the area and demolished by Qutbuddin was largely reorganized to serve the purpose. It is a well known fact that at such an early stage of their rule the Sultans were ill-equipped to use an architectural technology very different from the one already practiced in India. The mosque - its prayer hall and the colonnade – was built by using the column-and-beam device.  Pillars-sculpted ones- from the demolished temples were reused as columns and beams and were put in place with the help of brackets to complete the colonnade.  The craft of the mason in assembling the mosque from the spoils collected from the temples is remarkable. Obviously the principal consideration was architectural exigency as aesthetics had perforce to take a back seat.  The columns, brackets, and lintels were reused without being reworked in any significant manner and the mosque was completed. The covered colonnade all around the central courtyard was also provided with shallow domes at periodic intervals. These were “false” domes built by laying successive courses of horizontal stones where each upper layer was projected slightly inward. As the top of the dome was reached the space was gradually narrowed.  Finally a round stone at the top completed the form.
The mosque was begun in 1191-92 A.D. and completed by 1195.  It was a completely column-and-beam structure with no use of arch whether “false” or true. The first notable change in the structural form was effected four years later in 1199 when a screen was added in front of the prayer hall.  It was in this screen that arches were introduced though they were of the “false” order - not having stones arranged in the form of true voussoirs.  A detailed analysis of this early arch form is of great utility in gaining an insight into the processes and methods at work in the erstwhile architectural technology.  We have noted earlier that the process of construction during the early phase of Sultanate architecture operated within certain constrains – having to work with skills and aids not of the desired competence and the availability of only a particular type of building material, the spoils of the temples chiefly.  It is evident that these “false” arches were chosen so that the requirement of raising any temporary support during the different pre-completion stages of construction would not arise and as described earlier the two halves of the arch would be raised as stable halves independent of each other. It is logical to assume that in this kind of over- sailing elements architects would have learnt that it was always necessary to keep length of the projections in the upper course small, but under no circumstances to exceed half of its length. Similarly the total weight of the stone elements, or for that matter the other masonry used in making each half of the arch, was also to be distributed such that the weight behind the project would be more – much more – than the weight of the projection itself. If shorter blocks of stones were used in the arch, and not monolithic blocks, the force acting on each individual unit was frictional force at the two horizontal joints, below and above. There would practically be no vertical resistance. The possibilities of any deformity in this arch would arise as a result of “weak” or insufficient horizontal friction at joints leading to slipping, tipping etc. Such an arch was therefore stable generally for moderate spans.  When the span was to be increased it was necessary to use sufficiently long stone blocks and it was equally necessary to anchor them properly to the mass of the support wall on either side. 
The shape of the “false” arches built in the screen was pointed ogee having a slight curve at the crown. It is evident that in raising these arches centering was not needed. But it is equally true that due to the technical limitations the scope of widening the span would also be very limited. The screen built by Qutbuddin was subject to two extensions subsequently, one by Iltutmish and the other by Alauddin Khalji. Both the extensions today retain only the jambs or walls on which the (“false”) arches were raised but the arches do not survive.  Since the two extensions were also bigger in proportion, it is most likely that aches failed either the test of horizontal friction or of the anchor. Noteworthy is the fact that the arches of smaller span in these extensions have survived and only the central wider arches have perished. Sufficient confidence to build structures having true arches was not gathered soon and the practice of using corbel and column-and-beam device was continued for a little over a century since the construction of Quwwatul Islam mosque. During this period no major changes were introduced in the methods of construction except perhaps a few experiments made with the shape of the arches. We note that the ogee form employed in the screen by Qutbuddin was altered when the first extension was carried out by Iltutmish.  The ogee cusp was replaced with a simple pointed arch formation which, as noted by Percy Brown, was “not very dissimilar from the pointed arch of Decorated Gothic style appearing about the same time in England”. In fact this form was closer to the four-centered arch of the Lodi and Mughal period; we can see this form in the central arch of the screen added by Iltutmish to Arhai-Din-Ka- Jhompra mosque originally built by Qutbuddin at Ajmer (begun in 1200 AD). A new form that makes an appearance in the Ajmer structure is the trefoil pointed arch, used in the two side arches on each flank. The two end arches of the seven-arched screen are again of the four-centered type. 
After more than a hundred years of experimentation with corbel and column-and-beam methods, and the use of “false” arches, the next logical stage in the development of architectural technology was the construction of the true arch which appeared for the first time in Alai Darwaza, an entrance gateway built by Alauddin Khalji at the Qutb Complex in 1311 AD. Like Iltutmish, another extension of the Quwwatul Islam mosque was planned by Alauddin.  The scheme was to double the size of the complex.  Thus the structure originally built by Qutbuddin, and subsequently extended by Iltutmish, was meant to be expanded to more than four times its size. In the new lay-out four gateways were planned such that each was an elaborate complex on its own. Today only the southern gateway survives and is popularly known as Alai Darwaza.  Perhaps this was the only one to have been completed as indicated from the sites and ruins of the proposed extension of the mosque under Alauddin. The gateway has four arched openings, one in each wall. The three, in east, west and south walls, are pointed ogee arches while the fourth one, in northern wall, is a semi-circular arch. As stated above the true arch (having structural elements arranged as voussoirs) appears in a medieval building in India for the first time in Alai Darwaza.  Significantly, the semi-circular arch too makes a brief appearance here as it is not found used in other contemporary buildings and also vanishes almost completely from the buildings of the succeeding period.    
All the arches in Alai Darwaza have been built of freshly fabricated stone unlike the usual earlier practice of reuse of the temple stones. (Fresh stones were, in any case, cut and dressed for the screen built by Qutbuddin and later extended by Iltutmish.)  The three pointed arches have been built of stone slabs measuring approximately 2.75 meters in length.  Interestingly these arches have been constructed of full length stone slabs; the practice of making several concentric rings of arches of smaller width has not been employed here.  As a matter of fact the pointed arches in Alai Darwaza are built with such long voussoirs that they in effect constitute a vaulted passageway.  It seems plausible that at such an early stage of constructing the arch the architects were not confident about their methods; hence the use of long voussoirs instead of smaller elements and the method of making several layers of concentric rings of arches.  The span of these pointed arches is only a little more than 3.00 meters each.  This is not a very wide span and understandably so at this (probably the) first use of true arch having voussoirs.  There is no direct evidence available to give us information about the different stages of construction of these arches.  We may, however, safely assume that they were built with the aid of centering – the fine finish of their joints and the thin, uniform thickness of the cementing material providing the testimony.
The northern entrance arch, as noted above, is a semi-circular arch.  But its manner of construction indicates certain indecisiveness on the part of the architect. It seems, an attempt has been made to use the semi-circular form in the same material as was fabricated for the pointed arches. The keystone is therefore not as pronounced as it should normally have been in a semi-circular arch. The voussoirs have been arranged such that they appear as a combination of “horizontal” and “curved” soffits.  The arch stands intact because the depth of its voussoirs is sufficient to resist the “slip” resulting from such construction. It is evident that some experimentation with the form of arches was definitely on at the time of building Alai Darwaza.  The favour shown to the pointed arch in the other contemporary buildings and in the subsequent period too did not mean that attempts, even though sundry, were not made to use the other forms, particularly the semi-circular form. It may be interesting for us to know that the confidence gained with the use of pointed arch was soon translated into its application in more utilitarian structures such as in building bridges across rivulets and streams of not very long spans.  A three-arched bridge stands extant across a seasonal stream in front of Siri, Alauddin’s new capital at Delhi.  Another larger bridge of eleven arches was built to provide passage across river Gambhir below Chittaurgarh fort. One of the arches of this bridge is a semi-circular arch while all the remaining ones are pointed arches of the same type as built in Alai DarwazaIt is of some interest for us to note that the column-and-beam method was not forsaken altogether in favour of the arcuate constructions; the extension proposed by Alauddin in the Quwwatul Islam mosque complex was undertaken by employing the column-and-beam device as is evident from a small surviving portion located in its south-east corner.
The wider application of arch, made possible from the successful experiment of the Khalji period, also brought into focus the question of achieving an overall stability of the building in addition to the durability and load-bearing properties of individual structural elements. It was important to ensure that individual structural elements in a completed building were not so arranged that the collapse of one would jeopardize the entire structure. The column-and-beam buildings were more stable in this respect because structural elements acted almost completely in tension. Destabilizing forces of moderate intensity generated small displacements in these elements. As against this, the arches were the type of structural forms that acted in compression. Even small displacements in such cases had the tendency to inflict larger instabilities. Therefore, if the arches in a complete structure were so arranged as to be interlinked with each other structurally (such as in a long arcade), it was an added risk that the collapse of one arch was likely to result in the collapse of the entire building. It was then important to either structurally “de-link” arches or to introduce an additional element in the arch having a different pattern of loading action from that of the arch. Sometimes the addition of a beam to the arch was found an adequate device to address this issue. Tughlaq period buildings, where large scale use of arch was practiced and a new material – the rubble – was employed in major building projects, show the adoption of some new and interesting features.  Foremost is the use of a pointed arch having a profile much closer to the profile of a four-centered arch? This was a significant change as it allowed two major advantages to the architects: the first was to give a leeway in extending the span of the arches without, in the same proportion, raising the height of the arches; and the second was to give an additional strength to the arch since it now worked as composed of four instead of two parts. We can even call this form a more “squat” arch than the pointed arch used hitherto.   The other notable feature, also accepted as the brand-Tughlaq attribute, is the use of an “extra” beam or lintel invariably in association with the arch.  The beam/lintel always appears at the base of the arch that is spread across the span of the arch at the springing point or at a point little lower than that. The addition of a beam in this manner has been mostly described as “technically irrational,” not having any structural merit and as a mere ornamentation or a continuance of an old habit not easily forgotten. We have noted above that structures using several arches needed a composition in which the failure of one arch was not likely to endanger other arches and thereby the entire structure. The introduction of beam/lintel as different structural form was perhaps an expedient to guard against an interlinked structural dependence of multiple arches in a single structure. The large scale use of rubble would have reinforced the arch-beam arrangement. In fairness to the medieval architects, though, it must be said that it took them quite some time to realize that in practice no standing structure behaved as closely interlinked as to suffer a collapse due to the failure of one or more of its structural elements.
Before we move ahead it is necessary to comprehend the meaning and significance of the change in building material from the ashlars to stone rubble on a large scale under the Tughlaqs.  The readily quarried sand stone, mostly with rough and random surfaces required a slightly different treatment.  The architects were sure about the durability of this material - strength of stone as a structural element was time tested.  Perhaps what they doubted was the strength of the structure built in rubble and the load bearing capacity of the forms created in rubble.  We have noted above the “contrivance” employed in arch making – combining arch with an additional beam to seemingly provide added strength to rubble arches. The other structural device used conspicuously in Tughlaq buildings was the sloping effect in walls, columns etc. by unusually widening the base and reducing this width gradually upwards. A detailed comment made by Percy Brown, specifically for the structures of Firuz Tughlaq’s period, holds equally good for the entire Tughlaq period: “The materials and method of construction employed by the Firuzian builders naturally reacted on the character of the architectural style. With masonry of this loosely knit order, additional strength and stability was assured by building certain portions thicker at the base than at the top, an expedient which gives the illusion of greater power, although no such angle of batter is really structurally necessary. This effect of slope is emphasized in many of the examples by the attachment of tapering turreted buttresses at the quoins, and by projecting conical bastion-like towers crowned with low domes from the four corners of the building.” Evidently the strength of the structure made of rubble was uppermost in the minds of architects while resorting to the extra wide bases of walls and tapering them upwards.
A subject, we have not addressed so far but which can no longer be deferred relates to the medium in which the rubble was set, in other words the cementing material used in joining the rubble for raising the structure.  It is quite clear that the requirement of cementing material or mortar in construction work based on rubble was much more than in the ashlars. Simultaneously the construction method used in raising the arch was also dependent on a good quality cementing material that would hold the voussoirs in place and would allow the loading actions in curved shape to operate tangentially as illustrated earlier.  Therefore the development of arch as a structural form and its application in different situations in structures demanded the ready availability of a strong cementing mortar. This cementing material was lime mortar; the recognition of its adhesive properties and its early use in masonry construction is generally attributed to the Romans. It is said that the cementing action of lime was discovered “accidentally” when it was employed in the form of rubble fillings between the two faces of walls made of dressed stone and inside a square or rectangular dressed stone pier. The device was used to economize on construction in making walls and piers of extra thickness. With the passage of time, it was discovered, the casing walls had given way but the rubble fillings remained intact and exhibited appreciable strength. It seems the Romans soon found out the good cementing properties of pozzolana (volcanic ash found near Rome) and also the more satisfactory manner of its application than a mortar using lime as the basic ingredient. The different cementing action of lime mortar and pozzolanic mortar has been clearly described by Mainstone (Developments in Structural Form): “As lime mortar gains strength only by Carbonation of the lime as a result of contact with the atmosphere.  It therefore does so very slowly in the centre of any large mass, and large proportions of the lime may remain unchanged even for thousands of years.  A pozzolanic mortar contains a further active ingredient – a compound of silica or alumina – which reacts directly with the lime independently of the atmosphere.  It hardens much more rapidly, attains higher strengths, and is much more durable in the presence of water.”  It is very significant that references to the use of lime mortar, independently of Roman discovery, have also come from India, and they date back to second century BC.
The use of lime mortar as a cementing material in the Islamic world had gained added importance in view of the fact that pointed arch had been adopted as a preferred form and this needed the stone or brick voussoirs to be cemented firmly to hold the pointed form in shape.  As we have noted earlier, in the case of semi-circular arches (especially of the Romans) there was no such cementing requirement if the keystone was accurately fitted. There is some ambiguity about the precise nature of the main ingredient used in the mortar in the Islamic world.  It is not clear whether ‘gypsum’ or ‘lime’ is meant in the records. Since gypsum was more easily prepared, it was a common bonding agent for mortar used in much of the Islamic World throughout the medieval period. There is some evidence, however, that mortar manufactured from lime wherever available, was preferred for the foundations and the corners of buildings.  Gypsum mortar was then used for pointing the joints of face stonework or brickwork, in which case the mortar of the inner faces and cores of walls was seldom more than a local clay grout, occasionally mixed with chaff or straw. The use of lime mortar and/or gypsum mortar in medieval India has not been properly documented. One study that discusses the making of mortar relates to Mughal India. It is, however, not very unreasonable to assume that most of the inferences drawn there, if not all, would also hold for the Sultanate period.
The use of both lime – and gypsum – mortar in medieval India was widespread.  Several kinds of lime were in use and the use of special types of mortar for specific parts of the building was also a common practice. Lime was obtained from three principal sources – Lime stone, gravel, and marine shells.  The preparation of mortar had gradually developed into a specialized crafts. In the Mughal period the mortar was improved for its adhesive properties by mixing “a number of gelatinous, glutinous, resinous and non-resinous cementing agents”.  Much in the Roman manner of adding ingredients such as crushed under-fired brick, tile, or potsherds, in medieval India too lime mortar was mixed with “pounded bricks”.  There is also mention of the preparation and application of mortar for special purposes – for constructions that required water-leakage, e.g. indigo-vats, and for plastering on the walls of the structures.
It is important to note that the effective use of lime mortar was possible only on “small” and porous surfaces. If the joints were wide, the adhesive property of the mortar was not likely to generate adequate compressive strength that was so vital a factor for holding structural forms such as an arch or a dome intact. Therefore, use of bricks as building-material was found to be of greater utility in making arches and domes which used lime mortar as the main cementing agent. 
Now, returning to the developments in arch we discover that the experimental four-centered arch of the Tughlaqs finally blossomed into a proper four-centered arch under Akbar. The curvature changed such that arch could now be divided into four segments each having a different centre of gravity. In architectural terms the great advantage derived from such a shape was that the architect could henceforth increase the span and yet will have only marginal increase in the height that is, the rise of the arch.  It not only provided technical advantages but also introduced certain elegance in compositions employing this arch. In red sand stone, Akbar’s favourite building material, this arch assumed a distinctly recognizable character.
One of the most distinguishing features of the architecture of the sixteenth century (especially the second half) was the combination of two different structural forms judiciously used for particular structural purposes.  Arch was used principally in gateways and buildings needed for congregations of people for various purposes (e.g. barahdari, diwan-i aam etc.).  Column-and-beam method was used for roofing, in colonnades and in entrances to chambers and also in other buildings. The objective clearly was to economize on construction that is to achieve greater output from the efforts put in composing the complete structures. The stability and the load-bearing capacity of the two forms had also been grasped. The parts of building where greater stresses were likely to occur were provided with arches; in those parts where load arranged for near vertical transference to the foundations, columns and beams were used in association with brackets and capitals of varying sizes. In fact brackets and capitals constitute significant element of architecture of this period.
The only other change in arch making came when marble was introduced as a building material on a wide scale in the seventeenth century. The curves of the arch were modified from the continuous line profile to a multi-foliated profile.  Generally there were nine cusps in each arch, four in each half and one at the crown. Cusps were however, increased in places where the span of the arches were fairly big. The introduction of foliates is decorative in essence without altering the structural characteristics of the arch.        
II
We shall now consider dome and its application in architecture. We should remember that dome is an important space-enclosing structural element, and the development of its structural form was associated with, prompted and stimulated by, even at times overshadowed by, many non-structural objectives and overtones. The development of dome was facilitated by the discovery and perfection of the arch – the dome is in fact an arch rotated around its principal axis. The development of dome, although facilitated by the arch was not a simultaneous process; early domes did not use arches as they were raised by using over sailing courses of circular or segmental stone beams.  The true domes were late-comers and became popular only when dressing of stones in the required wedge-shape and the technique of placing the centering achieved a certain level of advancement.  The early true domes survive from 2nd-1st century BC period and, interestingly, are structures made of Roman pozzolana concrete, not of stone or brick. Since the use of concrete required a good centering to be in place for domical construction, early domes did not directly take off from arch and had to wait until centering techniques were developed. The use of stone and brick in place of concrete was a still later development and it also involved a certain change in the construction method.  The concrete domes required a good centering to be set up and several circumferential frames to be placed at different heights along the vertical rise of dome to hold the concrete in place until it dried and firmed up. Against this method, the brick or stone domes needed to be raised layer by layer of arches or several rings of arches. Here the free-flowing composition of concrete domes was not possible. The other technicality that needed a resolution related to the conversion of usually square base of walls in the enclosed space, from where the dome was to rise, to a circular base so that the hemispherical shape of the dome could be conveniently attained. In the making of a concrete dome this issue would not be so acute. The centering of the concrete dome would take care of transition by either placing cross beams at corners or beginning the centering itself from lower points at corners to gradually convert the square base into a circular base with the help of merging pendentives. The transition of square base into a circular or near-circular base was achieved in various ways. The simplest method was to place cross-beams at the corners to convert square into a octagon (which provided a near – circular base).  The other methods were of placing corbels at the junction of the two walls at a lower point than the base from where the dome would rise and increase their length gradually upwards; by the time the base point of the dome was reached the right angle junction of the walls was converted into a smooth curve. The corbels so arranged were called pendentives.  In domes, however, of larger radius and a “squat” profile the thrust on the pendentives increased and often resulted into the displacement of pendentives.  The general method followed in the Islamic world was to span the corner of the square buildings by raising small arches springing from the two points located in adjoining walls. The square base was thus converted into a polygonal base. These arches were known as squinches and if required, as in larger domes, two or more tiers of squinch arches of varying sizes were built to achieve a polygonal base. It should, however, be noted that in each case, whether using pendentives or squinch arches, a centering was needed to support the dome during the process of its construction; this centering was removed only after the bricks or stones fixed in the dome had properly set in and had become strong and self-sustaining.
The construction of domes in India has been known from pre-Turkish days. But those were all instances of “false” domes constructed by using over- sailing courses of stones as in the case of “false” arches discussed earlier. In the buildings of the early Turkish sultans domes of the same type were constructed mostly by reorganizing the building material obtained from temples. Shallow domes of this type were built in the colonnade of the Quwwatul Islam mosque and in the tomb of Iltutmish.  The latter, though, does not survive today. The fragments of the corbel stones were found lying near the structure by J.A. Page. The tomb is a square structure and the method of raising its dome, as described by Percy Brown, is worth quoting: “Not a little of the interest in this building lies in the principles employed in the construction of its roof, which, although most of it has fallen was probably some form of shallow dome.  Curved fragments lying in the vicinity imply that it was of the indigenous type, composed of concentric rings of masonry, but owing to the excessive span it was unable to carry its own weight, so that it collapsed.” It is of interest for us to note that the transition method employed, for converting the square base into an octagonal/polygonal base, used for domes in Quwwatul Islam mosque colonnade, is by placing cross-beams at the corners.  In the tomb of Iltutmish this transition has been achieved with the help of squinch-arches constructed in the corners.
The earliest surviving true dome is in the Alai Darwaza providing a covering to the central hall of this structure. The dome covers a square each side of which approximately 11 meters. It is only logical that a domical roof of such dimensions would sustain if built by using voussoirs in the manner of true arches.  The transition in this dome has been achieved by arranging squinches of successively narrowing spans in the manner of an alcove (semi-dome or semi-vault) in the corners. It should be recognized here that the appearance of a true dome did not by any means signal the termination of corbel and column-and-beam methods and their total take over by the architectural technology used in arches. In fact another building from almost the same period (only slightly later than the Alai Darwaza) yields evidence of the use of arch in conjunction with corbel and column-and-beam methods.  This structure is Alauddin’s madrassa located behind Quwwatul Islam mosque towards south-west and built in a quadrangle keeping an open court in the middle.  The architectural feature that interests us much is to be found in the roofing of the west side cellular apartments. The “distinctive feature” as described by Page “is the method employed of supporting the flat-ceiled roof – a curious combination of Hindu and Saracenic (Islamic) devices.  Thus the centre part of the roof is carried on a wide, deep-soffited pointed arch running axially north to south which, in turn, is made to carry the ends of flat roofing slabs laid to form a simple diagonal coffer characteristic of the ceiling construction of the aisles of a temple mandapa.”. This madrassa building is also noteworthy for providing the earliest evidence of the use of pendentives for transition purposes. We are tempted again to quote Page for describing this method: “Another noteworthy feature of these madrassa cells is the use of what for want of a better term may be called a corbelled pendentive in the corners of the two higher domed chambers that break the skyline towards the ends of the façade. It is the earliest instance of this corbelled treatment of a pendentive in India (circa. 1290 A.D.), and is by no means an unhappy solution of this constructional problem [transition].”
The technique applied in the Alai Darwaza dome became a custom and in the subsequent period only cosmetic changes were introduced in the method of raising the dome without any major deviations from the practice of raising a centering, organizing structural elements – stones, bricks or even concrete – and cementing them and converting generally square bases into circular shapes by means of squinches, pendentives or in many cases cross-beams. The domes were embellished in different ways in accordance with the taste of the builders and same times the prevalent practice of decoration. In this context, a visible change in the shape of the dome appears when Tughlaqs assume the control of Sultanate and calls for attention. From a somewhat compressed spherical shape of the dome in Alai Darwaza, we now get to see a more “squarish” and also raised contours of the dome. This shift can be likened to a similar shift in the form of the arch from its use in Alai Darwaza in a “roundish” contour to a wider curve closer to the four-centered profile. A few structural changes also mark the Tughlaq period domes apart.  We notice an attempt to provide the domes with a “neck” or more appropriately a drum to facilitate the construction and to give to the viewers a fuller appearance of the dome. The drum is an arrangement used for providing a completely circular base dome to rise. It is usually constructed in the form of a slightly raised vertical wall at the point where the transition from square to polygon terminates. Prior to the introduction of drum, the dome itself would have risen from this point. In many cases the transition was completed in the drum itself. The raised wall of the drum was of varying height depending upon the size of the dome and the requirement of its visibility. The early drums, as in the case of Ghiyasuddin Tughlaq’s tomb (built during 1320-25 A.D.), were wide and short polygonal walls the inner side of which were rounded so that a circular base for the dome would be readily available. It is apparent that the drum was in an experimental stage in this building. Other constructional change in this dome related to the arrangement of stones and bricks. Percy Brown notes: “The process of construction was by means of headers and stretchers of marble attached to a brick and cement core, dowelled in with metal cramps, the headers being inserted into the core for nearly a foot, the whole having been erected over some kind of temporary centering.” It seems the arrangement, as above, was made to provide additional strength to the dome.  The use of metal cramps, even if it did not serve the desired purpose – holding the joints together – was not uncommon as it was practiced for a long time – the Romans used it in their bridges and so did the architects of the later period. Inserting stones deep into the cementing material was a practice used for providing additional strength to the dome, in the same manner as was done in making the thick bases of the tapering walls.
The drums gave a fresh, new look to the domes and the “stumpy” appearance of the earlier period gave way to rising and boldly contoured domes sitting on the high drums. By transferring the four-centered arch profile to the dome a different form was achieved. The process had begun under the Tughlaqs but attained completion under Akbar. Rising on a moderately high octagonal drum and surmounted by an inverted lotus motif having a finial standing vertically in the centre this dome became a distinguishing feature of Akbar’s period. In the changes that followed the major one related to the shape of the dome that was modified without in any serious manner meddling with the technique of raising domes.
The structure of the dome, built on the principle of rotating an arch axially or by raising arches from all points of the circular base to finally converge at a single point at the top, did have inherent structural weaknesses. One weakness, as analyzed by George Michell, was “the change in shape from a smooth contour that occurred under the springing of the dome in the corners of the square plan, where squinch arches or spherical pendentives were used; this caused the thrusts from the dome to spread outwards, a tendency that could be partially corrected by adding dead weight above the corners”. The other weakness emanated from the outward thrust generated by such a volume of hemispherical shell. If matching reactive force balancing the net effects of this thrust was not available the lower part of the dome would crack radically. The usual method to save domes from this fault was to provide reinforcement rings at the points from where the dome would rise. The device of providing “neck” or drum, discussed above, was in fact the reinforcement ring built to balance the outward thrust of the dome. But it is also true that with the increase in the size of the dome, it became increasingly difficult to contain this destabilizing thrust. An innovative method was then employed to tackle this problem. The dome began to be formed of two distinct shells instead of a single shell practiced hitherto. The two shells, outer and inner could either be joined at different points or could retain a void in between. This formation, commonly known as double dome, had the advantage of reducing the weight of the dome and of “creating great depth to aid in spanning the room below, as well as raising the external dome so that it might be more imposing”. The other advantage, perhaps for harsher climatic conditions, was of “divorcing the weathering surface from the inner shell and thereby giving improved weather protection”.  For masonry double domes perhaps the prototype was available in the timber double domes of the earlier period built in regions like Syria where there was a persistent tradition of such structures. The early masonry double domes, from eleventh century, have been reported from Iran  Later the practice spread in other parts of the world.
The double-dome in India appears at the beginning of the sixteenth century, after almost three centuries of the introduction of the “new” structural forms, arch and dome. It seems the early attempts to raise a double dome had started towards the close of the fifteenth century and in a tomb completed in 1501 AD, that of Shihabuddin Taj Khan, a Lodi noble, a half-attempt to raise a double dome was made. The feat was finely achieved in Sikander Lodi’s tomb (completed c.1518 AD) where the first double dome in India survives even today. Afterwards, it became a common practice as larger domes were mostly built as double domes.
I would like to conclude this presentation by describing the basic features of Gol Gumbad of Bijapur (completed 1660 AD) which is an epitome of a structure based on the “new” technique/s- arch and dome. Gol Gumbad is the popular name of the mausoleum of Muhammad Adil Shah, the ruler of Bijapur and is dated 1656 AD.  It is a square building surmounted by a massive dome, hence the name Gol Gumbad.  From the outside the building gives the appearance of a “great cube” having towers in each angle and topped by a “hemispherical dome”. Simple architectural technique of raising four-centered arches has been used in creating the walls of the chamber and the base of the dome.  Eight tall arches have been so raised as to intersect each other at mid-point at the level of their springing. This has helped achieve circular base at the crown of these arches. “The crowns of all the arches”, as noted by Merklinger, “fall upon a circle inscribed within these squares and carry the dome, which may be no smaller in diameter than the internal diameter of the circle, and which rests directly upon the crowns of the intersected arches.” The circular base built thus becomes the base for the dome to rise.  “The huge hemispherical dome, which is nearly 42.97m in diameter, makes it the largest space covered by a single dome in the world. It is built of bricks of varying size laid unsystematically flat in chunam, a lime mortar. The dome is, thus, a rigid concrete shell having no voussoirs or lateral thrusts, resting, as it were a dead weight on the mass of masonry formed by the pendentives, each, acting as a tie to the other, keeping the whole structure in equilibrium”. The riddle though remains unresolved as to why Gol Gumbad is not a double dome.
Notes and References
     1.  Rowland J. Mainstone, Developments in Structural Form, Architectural   Press, Oxford,  Edn., 1998.
     2.  J.C. Harle, The Art and Architecture of the Indian Subcontinent, Penguin Books, Middlesex, 1986.
     3.  Stella Kramrisch, The Hindu Temple, 2 vols. (pages in continuity), Motilal Banarasidas Publishers Pvt. Ltd., Delhi, 2002 (First published by the University of Calcutta, 1946 and reprinted at Delhi by the above publisher).
     4.  George Michell (ed), Architecture of the Islamic World, its History and Social Meaning, Thames and Hudson, London, 1978.
     5.  J.A. Page, An Historical Memoir on the Qutb: Delhi, Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India, No.22, Published originally in 1926 by the Archaeological Survey of India and reprinted in 1998, New Delhi.
     6.  Percy Brown, Indian Architecture (Islamic Period), D.B. Taraporevala Sons & Co. Pvt. Ltd., Bombay, 5th edn., 1968, p.13. (Originally published in 1956).
     7.  Ahsan Jan Qaisar, Building Construction in Mughal India, the Evidence from Painting, Oxford University Press, Delhi, 1988.
     8.  E. Baldwin Smith, The Dome, A Study in the History of Ideas, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1978.
     9.  Elizabeth Schotten Merklinger, Indian Islamic Architecture, the Deccan 1347-1686,  Oxford & IBH Publishing Co., New Delhi, 1981.

Pali shown
the door in Buddha’s Land



http://www.lankaweb.com/news/items/2013/11/24/pali-shown-the-door-in-buddhas-land/
The Un­ion Pub­lic Serv­ice Com­mis­sion (UPSC) of In­dia re­cent­ly re­moved the an­cient Pali lan­guage from the list of pre­scri­bed op­tion­al lan­guag­es of the main en­trance ex­ami­na­tion of the In­di­an Ad­min­is­tra­tive Serv­ice (IAS), al­so com­mon­ly known as the In­di­an Civ­il Serv­ice. This came as a shock­ing move to many, as Pali is con­sid­ered as the sec­ond pop­u­lar lan­guage amongst IAS can­di­dates.  How­ev­er dur­ing the tur­bu­lence which oc­cur­red fol­low­ing this in­ci­dent, pro­fes­sors and teach­ers spe­cial­is­ing in the Pali lan­guage in In­dia learnt that Pali which is in­dig­e­nous to the In­di­an sub­con­ti­nent and the lan­guage in which Bud­dha dis­closed the Dham­ma (which is al­so the lan­guage of the Bud­dhist Can­on) Pali has not been rec­og­nised as an In­di­an clas­si­cal and na­tion­al lan­guage. This promp­ted many Bud­dhists liv­ing around the world to sad­ly ac­cuse the In­di­an Gov­ern­ment of giv­ing step-moth­er­ly treat­ment to the Bud­dha’s lan­guage in his own coun­try.
Pro­fes­sor and Head of the De­part­ment of Pali and Bud­dhist Stud­ies in Ba­nares Sid­dharth Singh ad­dress­ing a me­dia brief­ing on this mat­ter in Co­lom­bo last week said this ac­tion dis­cri­mi­na­ted Bud­dhists in In­dia on both re­li­gious and eth­nic grounds.
” Re­mov­al of Pali is a great dam­age to Bud­dhist stud­ies and the un­der­stand­ing of Bud­dhism in Bud­dha’s moth­er­land. Pali is the foun­da­tion to un­der­stand­ing Bud­dhism. So this move of the In­di­an gov­ern­ment should be op­posed “

“The sen­ti­ments of the Bud­dhists in In­dia have been hurt through this act. We wrote to the In­di­an Prime Min­is­ter Man­mo­han Singh, to the lead­er of the op­po­si­tion and to the mem­bers of the Ra­jya and Lok Sab­ha about this great in­jus­tice. But so far they have not giv­en any rea­son or a jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for the re­mov­al of Pali from the In­di­an civ­il serv­ice ex­ami­na­tion. Re­mov­al of Pali is a great dam­age to Bud­dhist stud­ies and the un­der­stand­ing of Bud­dhism in Bud­dha’s moth­er­land. Pali is the foun­da­tion to un­der­stand­ing Bud­dhism. So this move of the In­di­an gov­ern­ment should be op­posed,” Singh said.

“  I be­lieve this act is an ef­fort to take venge­ance from the Sched­uled Caste peo­ple and stop the spread­ing of Bud­dhism in In­dia. To­day In­dia is talk­ing about the hu­man rights vi­o­la­tions of Sri Lan­ka. But how can they criti­cise Sri Lan­ka, when they them­selves are vi­o­lat­ing the hu­man rights of the Bud­dhist com­mun­i­ty liv­ing in In­dia?  “
He fur­ther ex­plained that this move of the In­di­an gov­ern­ment could re­sult in In­dia los­ing in­ter­na­tion­al re­la­tions with the Bud­dhist na­tions around the world and that dur­ing his stay in Sri Lan­ka he plan­ned to hand a mem­o­ran­dum to the In­di­an High Com­mis­sion­er in Sri Lan­ka about this mat­ter who he ex­pects would com­mu­ni­cate the mes­sage to the In­di­an gov­ern­ment.
“We wrote to the In­di­an Prime Min­is­ter Man Mohan Singh, to the lead­er of the op­po­si­tion and to the mem­bers of the Ra­jya and Lok Sab­ha about this great in­jus­tice. But so far they have not giv­en any rea­son or a jus­ti­fi­ca­tion for the re­mov­al of Pali from the In­di­an civ­il serv­ice ex­ami­na­tion “

Com­ment­ing on the con­se­quen­ces of re­mov­ing Pali from the In­di­an civ­il serv­ice ex­ami­na­tion Singh said the de-list­ing of Pali may pre­vent can­di­dates con­ver­sant in Pali (who are Bud­dhists in In­dia) from sit­ting for the ex­am and join­ing the In­di­an civ­il serv­ice. He said this would al­so cause the In­di­an ad­min­is­tra­tion in­clud­ing its for­eign serv­ice to be man­ned by of­fi­cers ig­no­rant of Pali, while Bud­dhists liv­ing in In­dia would lose the state pa­tron­age they have had and the pres­er­va­tion of its few shrines and monu­ments would come to an end.
“By the re­mov­al of Pali from the list of ‘ap­proved sub­jects’, the UPSC has open­ly vio­la­ted the pro­vi­sions of the Con­sti­tu­tion of In­dia (which they had sworn to up­hold); re­mov­al of Pali con­sti­tutes vi­o­la­tion of fun­da­men­tal rights of mi­nor­i­ties (Bud­dhists less than 0.79% in In­dia) and the less priv­i­leged ‘sched­uled castes and sched­uled tribes’ pro­tec­ted by the con­sti­tu­tion of In­dia. The UPSC has vio­la­ted In­di­an citi­zens’ fun­da­men­tal rights on the ‘right to equal­i­ty’ that con­sti­tute ‘dis­crim­i­na­tion on grounds of re­li­gion’ vi­o­lat­ing Ar­ti­cle-16, ‘equal­i­ty of op­por­tu­ni­ty in mat­ters of pub­lic em­ploy­ment’ un­der the In­di­an Con­sti­tu­tion. De-list­ing of Pali has in­fringed the In­di­an Con­sti­tu­tion un­der ‘di­rec­tive prin­ci­ples of state pol­i­cy (ar­ti­cle 46) which states that ‘pro­mo­tion of ed­u­ca­tion­al and eco­nom­ic in­ter­ests of sched­uled castes, sched­uled tribes and oth­er weak­er sec­tions in the so­ci­ety would be pro­tec­ted from so­cial in­jus­tice and all forms of ex­ploi­ta­tion. Ar­ti­cle-335 claims of Sched­uled Castes and Sched­uled Tribes to serv­ices posts. There is al­so pro­vi­sion for mak­ing claims against the UPSC to the “Na­tion­al Com­mis­sion for the Sched­uled Castes and Sched­uled Tribes” un­der the spe­cial pro­vi­sions re­lat­ing to cer­tain classes,” Singh said.
Ja­thi­ka He­la Ur­u­maya (JHU) Par­lia­men­tar­i­an Ven. Athur­a­liye Ra­tha­na Thera who was al­so pres­ent at this press con­fer­ence said that this move of the In­di­an gov­ern­ment was a vi­o­la­tion of hu­man rights against the Sched­uled Caste peo­ple liv­ing in In­dia.
“I be­lieve this act is an ef­fort to take venge­ance from the Sched­uled Caste peo­ple and stop the spread­ing of Bud­dhism in In­dia. To­day In­dia is talk­ing about the hu­man rights vi­o­la­tions of Sri Lan­ka. But how can they criti­cise Sri Lan­ka, when they them­selves are vi­o­lat­ing the hu­man rights of the Bud­dhist com­mun­i­ty liv­ing in In­dia? This is a Brah­mic Caste act based on the re­gres­sive Brah­mic ideol­o­gy of In­dia,” Ra­tha­na Thera said.
Mean­while when the Dai­ly Mir­ror con­tac­ted the Sri Lan­kan For­eign Min­is­try about this is­sue, sour­ces said they were yet to re­ceive com­pre­hen­sive in­for­ma­tion on this mat­ter.   It is sad that many peo­ple to­day con­sid­er Pali a ‘dead lan­guage’ when the ear­li­est ex­tant Bud­dhist scrip­tures are writ­ten in Pali. It was the lan­guage the Bud­dha used to dis­sem­i­nate the Dham­ma on which the whole of the Bud­dhist civ­i­li­za­tion is foun­ded. Our coun­try to­day re­mains a na­tion where sev­er­al mil­lions of Bud­dhists re­side.
To­day Bud­dhism is not on­ly a re­li­gion, but it has turned in­to a way of life. To­day the Bud­dha’s Dham­ma (which is in Pali) is not on­ly chan­ted in a rit­ual con­text by Bud­dhists all over the world, but it is al­so prac­ticed and lived in their day-to-day lives. So if Pali is a ‘dead lan­guage’ and ‘out­da­ted’ in to­day’s so­ci­ety as many con­sid­er it to be, then how come so many peo­ple around the world to­day live by this lan­guage?
Pix by War­u­na Wan­niar­ach­chi
http://www.dailymirror.lk/opinion/172-opinion/36388-pali-shown-the-door-in-buddhas-land-.html
FREE ONLINE E-Nālanda Research and Practice UNIVERSITY
ART OF GIVING
68 With aroused effort to attain the highest, with a mind not sticky and lazy,
Thoroughly given up and with firm endeavour, fare alone like the single horned rhinoceros.

CLASSICAL PALI
68. âraddhaviriyo paramatthapattiyà
Alãnacitto akusãtavutti,
Daëhanikkamo thàma khalåpapanno
Eko care khaggavisàõakappo.

Pali is a classical language now the TIPITAKA is being translated to 74 languages. And all these automatically become classical.
The Brahmins right from time immemorial oppose anything they feel will affect their interest. Now it is true that majority of the educated and others started moving back to Buddhism the original religion of Jambudvipa and one fine day again it will become a majority religion and PRABUDDHA BHARATH will become reality because of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, Kanshi Ram and Ms Mayawati. This is not tolerated by the brahmins hence the path followed by the Buddhist is correct.
Now is all that you have.
Throw out Congress from power and do not allow BJP to come back. Support BSP to acquire the Master Key to distribute the wealth of the Country equally among all sections of the society for their welfare, happiness and peace and also to enable them to attain eternal Bliss as their final goal. That is the only hope of the nation.
Lankaweb

Posted on www.ambedkartimes.com , November 24, 2013

HAVE DELHI POLICE WEAKENED
THE CASE AGAINST THE RAPISTS OF NIRBHAYA?
Ashok T. Jaisinghani

All the 6 criminals who committed the heinous crimes of gang-rape and brutal assault on Nirbhaya, Delhi's paramedical student, are likely ton escape the Death Penalty. The Delhi Police have weakened the case against the rapists by contradicting the statements given by Nirbhaya's male friend who was also assaulted in the moving bus on December 16, and was later thrown out of the bus along with the naked Nirbhaya, after his clothes were also removed by the criminals.

The Delhi Police have challenged Nirbhaya's friend over his allegations about the extreme callousness shown by them by not providing clothes to cover the naked bodies of the two severely injured victims, who were also shivering in the cold night of December. They have also refuted the charge that they took an unduly long time in moving him and Nirbhaya to the hospital due to bickering among the different policemen to decide who had jurisdiction over the location of the crime. The Police are well known for their ability to find all types of excuses to avoid performing their duties.

By challenging the credibility of Nirbhaya's friend, the Delhi Polic have indicated that they do not believe he was telling the truth. So how can the Delhi Police rely for evidence on their main witness who is being treated by them as a LIAR? Why have the Delhi Police deliberately weakened the case against the criminals involved in the gang-rape and murder of Nirbhaya? Are any of the 6 criminals related to some important political leaders and big businessmen, or associated with political parties, whose reputation the Delhi Police are trying to save?

Why has the UPA Government of Manmohan Singh tried to suppress the truth by filing the case against Zee News for telecasting the interview of the rape victim Nirbhaya's male friend? Has the UPA Government not learnt any lesson from the massive demonstrations of protest on December 23 by millions of people all over Delhi?

Through their lawyers, the 6 criminals have declared that they were all drunk when they gang-raped Nirbhaya and mercilessly assaulted her and her friend. Such a claim may help them to escape the Death Penalty for the brutal murder of the lady. In such cases of murder, other criminals have managed to escape the Death Penalty by claiming that they were not in their senses due to drunkenness and could not understand what they were doing. So, the 5 adult rapists and murderers are likely to get a maximum sentence of Life Imprisonment instead of the Death Penalty. According to legal experts, the minor rapist will get a much shorter sentence, in spite of being the most brutal of the 6 criminals who assaulted Nirbhaya, as he will be tried separately in a Juvenile Court.

At the behest of the extremely corrupt UPA Government of Manmohan Singh, even the Delhi Police may choose to save the criminals from the Death Penalty. Helping the criminals is a highly lucrative business all over India..
Posted on www.ambedkartimes.com (January 12, 2013)

 

DHAMMA CHAKRA PARVARTAN DAY CELEBRATION DAY AT DALLAS TX
ON SATURDAY, OCT 22ND 2011. 11AM – 6PM GMT-04:00, AT: RUCHI PALACE, DALLAS, TX
INDIVIDUALS, INSTITUTIONS AND
PARLIAMENTARY DEMOCRACY IN INDIA

By:
C. Lakshmanan
AARAKSHAN’-A SOLUTION FOR EQUALITY
By: Arun Kumar, Bedford, UK
JAN LOKPAL: AN ALTERNATE VIEW by K. N. PANIKKAR

THE COMMUNAL CHARACTER
OF ANNA HAZARE’S MOVEMENT

By Bhanwar Meghwansh

Translated from Hindi by Yoginder Sikand
WHY I CANNOT SUPPORT THE JAN LOKPAL
- A DETAILED ANALYSIS


Dr. Harmesh Kumar
Aarakshan movie
NEED FOR SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION –
BOLD MOVE BY PARKASH JHA AND AMITABH BACHCHAN
SOCIAL JUSTICE FORUM ON LOKPAL
ROOM NO. 119, INDIAN SOCIAL INSTITUTE,
10 INSTITUTIONAL AREA, LODI ROAD, NEW DELHI-110003

RK Kashyap

A PROGENITOR OF RECIPE OF HARA-KIRI OF BAHUJANS:
HAZARE’S SELF STYLED CIVIL SOCIETY

Rajinder Kashyap, New Delhi

UPA GOVT SET TO MAKE 4% OF ITS YEARLY BUY FROM DALIT-RUN FIRMS
A very good news for the empowerment of Dalits. We have been campaigning this for a long time. A resolution was passed in the International Dalit conference held in 2003 in Vancouver, Canada to impress upon the government of India to take necessary action to make purchases from the businesses run by Dalits and Tribals. I had an opportunity to attend that conference. Mr. Chandrabhan Prasad, a Dalit columnist in the English daily, ‘The Pioneer’ is spearheading this campaign and helped to set up Dalit Chamber of Commerce in Mumbai. Their campaign seems to be working. Hopefully we would have a few Dalit millionaires like Blacks in America. Our battle must continue in both fronts: one against caste discrimination and another for the empowerment of Dalits.Regards, Arun Kumar
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/UPA-govt-set-to-make-4-of-its-yearly-buy-from-dalit-run-firms/articleshow/9949640.cms
Sidhartha & Subodh Ghildiyal, TNN | Sep 12, 2011, 02.02AM IST
NEW DELHI: The Centre is set to make it compulsory that 4% of its annual purchases be made from units run by dalits and tribals, in what will be its strongest bait for classes which hold the key to political battles at the Centre and states.

The 4% purchase quota proposal from ministry of micro, small and medium enterprises (MSME) is part of the policy that 20% of government procurement be done from MSMEs.

Preferential procurement has been an early poll promise of UPA and its delivery after seven years in power is set to be seen through the prism of Uttar Pradesh elections where Congress is vying with dalit czarina Mayawati to recapture some political space after decades in the wilderness.

Activists believe that mandatory purchases from dalit units would boost entrepreneurship among poor classes with assured state clientele and without the fear of competition from entrenched businessmen. The demand gained ground in the new economy where job quota was shown to have limitations of reach.

The quantum of business available for dalit entrepreneurs may be big. An OECD estimate had suggested that government purchases amounted to 30% of GDP, thereby making business of Rs 94,000 crore available for dalit units. But even by the lower estimate based on Centre's spending pattern, Rs 25,000 crore may be available to units set up and run by SCs and STs.

This year, the Centre budgeted to spend around Rs 12.5 lakh crore, of which defence spending and interest payments add up to Rs 5 lakh crore while subsidies are estimated at Rs 1.4 lakh crore. So, procurement by MSMEs would be around Rs 1.2 lakh crore.

It is not a small figure going by Centre's first tentative steps after years of reluctance in the face of strong lobbying. A sub-committee of the cabinet committee on dalit affairs in UPA-1 had recommended that 30% of government purchases be made from SCs/STs. The inspiration for purchase quota comes from Digvijay Singh regime in MP where it formed part of state policy after Bhopal declaration.

The move, at once part of affirmative action plan, is bound to attract attention of social justice observers. For Congress, it would be a way to blunt the criticism among SCs/STs after failing to extend the frontiers of job reservation to private sector as promised in UPA-1. Its proposal for 5% quota in private enterprises which availed government funding met with lukewarm response and has been put in deep freeze.

If enacted now, Congress could use it as a weapon to contrast its achievement with the work done by Mayawati regime for dalits, a segment Rahul Gandhi has been trying hard to woo from its first choice BSP. Congress needs big ticket decisions to back its chances in April polls in UP and is working hard on a clutch of measures including a new land acquisition bill. Posted on September 13, 2011

Dr.Rajesh Paswan, Ph.D. (JNU)
Associate Professor and Head, Dept. of Post Graduate Studies and Research in Hindi, N.R.E.C.College Khurja U.P.203131
WE NEED AMBEDKAR NOT ANNA HAZARE
Dr Jasjit Singh

I personally salute Anna Hazare and his team for mobilizing the country against the cancer of corruption and introduction of Jan Lokpal Bill and all party discussion on it but is Jan Lokpal Bill the ultimate solution for the problem that has much deeper roots in the soil of India? Can Jan Lokpal Bill dig the corrupted soil deeply to find the seed of honesty even in ancient times?
Let us peep into the cultural back ground of the country. Do we find a parallel word to English word “Honesty" in the dictionaries of our Indian Languages? Honesty has its roots in Bible. It is the very soul of Christian life. Honesty is a little fragment of Holiness where as Bible stresses upon Holy Living. Jesus said “be holy for I am holy". There is no compromise for holiness in Christian life because a believer of Jesus Christ is protected by the Holy Spirit. So in nutshell, Christianity is synonymous of Holiness. Fall from Holiness is departure from Christianity.
Similarly "Imandari" has its roots in "Quran" because it is the soul of Islam. I have no intention to criticize any particular religion but the roots of any cultures are embedded in the religions followed by its people. It is misfortune that India has to use foreign words to speak for a foreign concept called Honesty or Imandari. The concept of Honesty is alien to Indian soil. For corruption we have a wonderful word "Bhristachar".
If we are unable to dig out the roots of corruption in Indian Culture, the new agency "LOKPAL" will be another Super Cop. He will have a tag of higher price on his shoulder. He will be another detective above the existing detective agencies and common man will have to bear the additional burden of new hypocrite.
Do we not have provisions in the law to arrest corruption? When anti-corruption law is there, why it is not implemented in proper order? We have the anti-dowry law and it has become a potent tool for exploitation of innocent husbands by the women. It has added breakage of more and more families causing the children to suffer. The judiciary and the Police agencies join hands with mischievous elements and grab their share out of the loot.
In 1984, Sikhs were mercilessly killed in Delhi. Muslims were baked in the bakery in Gujarat. Christian is being mercilessly killed throughout the country and Orisa is a big example for it. Untouchables are yet the subject of atrocities. Do we not have the law to book the criminals engaged in such acts?
The most un-implemented law is the "Atrocities on the scheduled castes and scheduled tribes Act 1989". Rather it is most opposed by the Government Agencies. There is a provision of issuance of non-bail able warrants against the accused and investigation by a senior officer of the Police department. Has it arrested the atrocities upon the untouchables? No it has given no protection to the poor downtrodden people like me. I was publically abused and insulted by my senior officer in the name of my low caste. I filed a complaint against the accused in the Civil Court for criminal proceedings. My eye witnesses appeared in the trial court. Court was convinced on hearing the testimony of witnesses and issued summoning orders against the accused persons but the accused never appeared in the court.
Government of India protected the criminals paying excessively high fee to the former Advocate General to appear in the court and defend the accused officials. Fee was paid from the public funds. Former Advocate General of India defended the accused that were booked in personal capacity for committing the crime. High Court quashed the summoning orders after 5 years’ harassment to me denying justice and to me and my community. High court protected the criminals from facing the trial in the trial court.
The total system of governance of the country joined hands together to victimize me. CVC issued half a dozen of charge sheets to me but none was established. My Government house was put on fire by the hired criminals and even on the orders of Delhi High Court the Police did not react. I was denied my promotions by false charge sheets. In nutshell to protect myself from the harassment by these white collared criminals holding high position in the Government of India I had to leave the country. I retired on completing 60 years of age in December 2007 while in US. My service dues are still pending with the Government of India and I know these Babus will deny paying my dues even.
I joined the service on my selection in Indian Administrative Services in 1977. If a person of my stature could be treated so mercilessly, whom do you expect will get justice? Why I was abused? I was abused for exposing the corruption charges against top official (Chairman) of my department. Can Lokpal stop corruption at that level? No, Lokpal cannot stop it because he will also come up from same set of people.
Who can stop it? On issue of untouchability, Baba Saheb Ambedkar asked Mahatma Gandhi that to eradicate untouchability from the country, we must scrap the scriptures that glorify Caste System(Annihilation of Castes) but Gandhi refused to accept and said that the system of Varnas (that gave birth to caste system) is the soul of Hinduism.
Bible says "No bad tree will bring good fruit".
Modern Gandhi "Anna Hazare will also uphold the opinion of Gandhi on this issue. Mahatma Gandhi preferred to commit suicide (fast unto death) on "Communal Award" to protect the untouchable communities.
Anna Hazare's breaking the fast with juice from the hands of untouchable and Muslim girls will not bring harmony in the society. Muslims, Christian, Sikhs and untouchables shall be still burnt in the bakeries or using the burning tires.
We need Ambedkar not Anna Hazare to protect the country from corruption of mind. We need the Social Surgeons not Political Reformers. Country must scrap the Religious Scriptures that glorify the corruption of mind.
Dr Jasjit Singh
Punjabi Christian Fellowship
8456 Bradshaw, Elk Grove, CA 95624

pcfministry@rediffmail.com, pcfministry@hotmail.com Poated on September 1, 2011

INDIVIDUALS, INSTITUTIONS AND
PARLIAMENTARY DEMOCRACY IN INDIA
By:
C. Lakshmanan

India with its population of over one billion, the second biggest of the emerging markets is the finance capital of neo liberal economy. The new born Nation-State embedded with umpteen number of complex predicament such as caste and gender inequalities, communalism, illiteracy, poverty, malnutrition and regional disparities are the core component of Indian political economy. Hence, it is a challenge to transform the undemocratic system into a liberal democratic one. In the process, we find there are problems and challenges. Corruption is being one of the serious obstacles of the Indian polity.

India ranks 87th amongst 176 countries, as per the Corruption Index of Transparency International in 2010. Can corruption by the Indian polity be looked at in isolation? There are some structural reasons for corruption, and until those are removed, just by having a law is not going to change the system, which requires change of mind-set. How democratic values would be brought in or infused into the people?

Media fairness is a pillar of vibrant democracy. How the media plays its constructive role in infusing democratic values? For instance, after every strikes/ agitations of workers, traders, political parties or against land acquisition etc, media highlights the loss incurred to the economy due to the strikes. Or else it would consciously ignore/ negate the struggle of the poor and marginalized. Lakhs of workers marched to Parliament in Delhi on 23 February 2011 to protest against the government’s neo-liberal policies and their outcomes. Yearly more than 10 lakhs people gather at Chaitya Bhoomi (Mumbai) and Diksha Bhoomi ( Nagpur ) to celebrate the historic occasions of Dalit movement. Irom Sharmila of Manipur has been on fast for more than 10 years demanding the repeal of the Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA). But these are barely known to wider public because of conscious negation of media. In contrast, the media live telecasts minute by minute coverage of Amarnath Yatra, Anna Hazare, Baba Ram Dev and the likes. Is the media impartial and without prejudice? Partiality, prejudice and class/caste biases are base for breeding corruption and heroism. Does Jan Lokpal address media corruption?

In fact some supporters of Anna Hazare used the occasion to show case their retribution against the Reservation. It is striking to note that in April, Anna went on a fast at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi, the banners that his supporters put up were slogans like 'Scrap Reservations, End Corruption!' rent the air.

The recent indefinite fasting undertaken by Anna Hazare Team is pressing the government to pass the Jan Lokpal Bill instead of the Lokpal Bill. Besides, demanding Citizen Charter in every department, Lokayuta in every states; lower bureaucracy under the orbit of Lokpal. This ‘democratic’ struggle has been characterized as second “independence movement”, “anti-corruption movement”, “upper caste/middle class picnic”, ‘anti-constitution’ and so on. There are complex and multiple facets to the movement which need to be examined and debated. In a democracy, politics decides the future, thus people should decide their politics.

Hence, we are organising a public meeting on INDIVIDUALS, INSTITUTIONS AND PARLIAMENTARY DEMOCRACY IN INDIA in MIDS on 2nd September 2011 at 3 PM in the Malcolm Adiseshiah Auditorium. The purpose of the meeting is to have a dialogue on the issue of corruption and response of certain individuals, Institutions towards looking for appropriate remedy within the framework of parliamentary democracy. There will be a panel of speakers who would share their thoughts followed by a discussion.

Posted on August 30, 2011
Jan Lokpal Bill: A Dalit’s Viewpoint
http://drambedkarbooks.wordpress.com/2011/08/22/jan-lokpal-bill-a-dalit%E2%80%99s-viewpoint/
HISTORY OF RESERVATION!
WHAT IS RESERVATION?
WHY RESERVATION?
Dear Brothers & Sisters of SC/ST Community, “Jai Bhim”
Sub:- Save Reservation.

As you aware that anti reservation movement is ongoing in state of rajasthan undertaken by samtha Andoolan Samiti & Mission 72 to remove reservation in promotion in first phase and remove reservation completely in public employement/lok sabha/rajya sabha/state legislatives / other legislatives/ local bodies in second stage as mission 2015.

Recently samtha andoolan samiti submitted his representation to Her Excellency president of india to remove reservation in promotions , on receipt of their representation Her excellency president of Indian referred the case to National commission for scheduled caste for further necessary action. You can visit website http://www.samtaandolan.co.in for further details.

This anti reservation mission was started from one district of rajasthan and now spreaded all over the rajasthan. Now they have a plan to spread this movement all over the country. There is urgent need to stop these type of anti constitutional activities

To fight with these types of movements we have to understand the concept & necessity of reservation. I have tried to explain with my little & limited knowledge.

History of Reservation

Caste Based Reservation in India Started in 2nd Century BC. In Manusmriti -the law book of Brahmins all the laws were based on Caste and no Merit was ever considered. It divided people into High and Low Castes on the basis of their birth and not on the basis of Merit. Wealth, Political power, Spiritual leadership, Education, Ownership of Land, Trade and all lucrative aspects were reserved purely to the higher castes.

What is Reservation ?

· The correct term used for reservation in the Indian Constitution is Representation., · Reservation is neither a policy matter, a political gimmick nor a matter of Charity. It is a Constitutional Obligation. In a country like India where power, wealth and opportunities are the monopoly of microscopically small and scandalously over privileged community, · Dr. Ambedkar said on the upper castes: “It is your (SC/ST) claim (through reservation) to equality which hurts them(Uppercastes). It is a claim of equality for SC/STs [ equality for results i.e power sharing in state as end result].

Why Reservation ?

Reservation is a democratic principle to provide representation to the castes hitherto remained unrepresented in the governance of the country.
Article 16(4) - There shall be equality of opportunity for all citizens in matters relating to employment or appointment to any office under the state.Aricle 16(4A/4B) is complementary provision of Article 16(4) Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar has rightly said Democracy does not function by merit but by participation. A Representative Government is better than an Efficient Government”. Democratic Society therefore does not aim at merit but social efficiency. We aim not for equality of opportunity but equality of results.
Dr Amedkar Statement -- "Those arguing against reservation must understand that 50 years of affirmative action is nothing as compared to 3000 years of subjugation. Those crying foul over Merit know very well that there is not enough fruit in the garden hence those who are already in want to keep out those who are already out."
Caste is by birth and remains to the end of life, Today there are thousands and lakhs of Doctors, Engineers and Lawyers among the SC's and ST's in our society. But question arises as to have the exploitation and harassment stopped? The answer is a big No
Question of Efficiency?

· A representative government is better than an efficient government. They (uppercastes) want to maintain the status quo. If you continue to accept your lowly status ungrudgingly, continue to remain dirty, filthy, backward, ignorant, poor and disunited, they will allow you to live in peace. The moment you start to raise your level, the conflict starts.”

· competitive skill is relevant in higher posts, we do not think it is necessary to be apologetic about reservation in posts, higher or lower, so long as the minimum requirements are satisfied.

· Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar has rightly said Democracy does not function by merit but by participation. A Representative Government is better than an Efficient Government”. Democratic Society therefore does not aim at merit but social efficiency

Hence the matter is very much clear. All brothers and sister are requested to circulate this email content to all relevant persons to create a movement to save our reservation as provided in constitution to. share in the State power to those who have remained out of it mainly on account of their social, educational and economic backwardness and have a feeling of equality as a end result with other citizens of India to serve the nation.

Requested to give feedback/response on this issue.

Thanks & Regards,
C.S.Devra, 09460990566, Dalit Activist, Jaipur (Rajasthan) (Posted on August 12, 2011)

WHAT IS WRONG WITH INDIA?
India is the largest democracy in the world. It is to the great achievement of the country of such size and such diversity to become a democratic country. Election of Obama as the president of USA showed that Democracy offers a posibility of change in the leadership. Same can be said about Mayawati. She is a woman. She is a Dalit. Both these classes impede people's rise to power. But democracy made it possible for Obama in USA and Mayawati in India to come to power. This is the power of democracy. There is no other way out for depressed and outcaste people of the world.

Democracy offers such a way out to more freedom and more power to people. It shifts the power in favour of people who would otherwise remain at the mercy of the elites and rich. Democracy cannot stand of its own, and it has pillars and most importantly solid foundation. The foundation of democracy is society which is nearly equal and minimum gap between the rich and poor, and haves and have nots, knows and know nots. The democracy can work in true sense if there is social democracy; which is an attitude of respect for a fellow human being. In fact democracy starts from the grassroots and rise above to give rise governments and states. American democracy could rise as it was based on the strong foundation of local democracies.

However, every state and government is different as they have different problems and different societies to respond to. India is a different society. The ageold enemy of democracy (and its most deeper form social democracy) is alive and kicking. This is caste system. Not only caste system is alive, but its ugly manifestation "untouchability" is alive and affecting people to a greater extent. Caste system is a major stumbling block in the democratic India in the true sense. Besides caste system the communalism is posing a major threat to democratic foundation of India. The people who feel left out are resorting to violent ideaologies. India is at the present point of time has become a very interesting place where there are thousands of social movements are proliferating leading to unprecedented changes and not to say complex problems.

Communalism is often attributed to Muslims in India. But there is also a saffron side to it. This side is much more dangerous than Muslims. This is evident by the information collected by Hemant Karkare, who effectively brought out the linkages between Hindu terror and public offices and their political connections. The Hindu nationalism is very dangerous as it makes the oppressed majority in India forget their suffering and target straw man,
that is, Muslims. India is a nation of slaves, according to Hindu scriptures itself. The majority of Indians belong to the middle classes, who are traditionally Shudras. They constitute over 54 percent of India's population. They are laggards in public institutions. Their percentage share in the public sphere is far less than their population. Only dominant castes among them have benefitted due to political power, even then, those dominant castes are far lagging in public services and businesses. Over 16 percent of India's population is Scheduled Caste. They are being targetted as people without merit by educated elites in India. Then there is 9 percent of Scheduled Tribes, and hundreds of millions of people are denationalised as they are never brought within the process of census. They are termed as nomads.

In a sense, reality of India differs from people to people, and there is no unified vision of what India as a country should be. This is a big problem. As Dewey said, every state is an experiment, and every nation is a nation in making. The idea or concept of India that people have in their minds affects the society at large. If we look at the ideas of India, there are some remarkable ideas which come into open. There is an idea that India is Hindustan. This idea further leads to concepts like India for Hindus. Hindu India is a myth which like all other myths affect public life. However there is a big problem with Hindu India. The word "Hindu" itself is of persian origin and have bad connotations. None of the so called sacred scriptures of Hindus do not include this word. The concept of "Holy land" and "father land" advocated by Hindu nationalists doesnt sound so appealing to 54 percent OBCs, 16 percent SCs and 9 percent STs and millions of denationalised Indians called nomad and denotified tribals. What can be holy about the land which makes them Shudras, untouchables and criminals. The bigger question of nationalism and casteism have been resolved by superficial arguments by Hindu ideaologues. Limited nationalism of Tilak, with Bramhans at the top; and obnoxious nationalism of Savarkar with "Hindu" as a national caste and "Bramhan" as the individual's family caste cannot resolve the larger question.

There is also extreme Hindutva advocated by RSS. The essence of nation as Hindutva. Actually it is very important to carry on debates and discussion on what constitute Hindutva. This links to language based nationalism; Marathi Nationalism, Hindi Nationalism and Tamil Nationalism. Then there are regional varients of nationalisms.

Pakistan is creation of Muslims from India, now called Mohajirs in present day Pakistan. Pakistan as a nation, like India, is facing the similar hydra-headed problems, but is it mostly based on ethnicity. Since its inception, the Muslims migrated to Pakistan, mostly from UP and major Provinces wanted to keep power for themselves, and didnt resort to democratic elections as it would have offered a challenge to their power from Baluchis, Pakhtuns, Sindhi, Punjabis and most importantly from Bengali speaking Muslims. Urdu like Hindi is language of nationalism. Less than 10 percent people spoke what is called Urdu today when Pakistan was created. Indians should look at Pakistan as a nation of ethnic groups. One can clearly see what happened to Pakistan and how Bagla Desh was created. The extreme Islam is not the doctrine of the majority of people in Pakistan, but that identity depends on extreme Hinduism. Both the extreme groups benefit from keeping alive religion based hatred. In the end, the losers are poor
and disadvantaged people in both the countries. There is a more scope in resolving issues if both the countries focus on problems of common citizens, and not make efforts to feed them with pills of religion based nationalism. Both the sides should understand that Cricket is just a game, and not a war.

For India to become a solid democracy, it is important for more and more Indians to know the reality of Pakistan and deprivation of people in that country. India houses second largest population of Muslims in the world. Sacchar Committee report brought very ugly facts about social and political deprivation of Muslims in India. Needless to say that majority of the Indian Muslims are converted from lower castes in India. Census of India is bringing this social reality on the surface as most of the Muslims are also registering as the lower castes. India will have to solve the problems of Indian Muslims.

There is no scope for Muslim India, but growing fundamentalism in the Islamic world (however the recent revolutions in the Arab world gives a positive hope for democracy, human rights and freedom, which the Islamic Scholars are claiming the essence of Sharia) can sweep away Muslims in India to the violent ideologies.

There is a growing Urban Middle Class India. The suddenly rich class is very impatient without any sense for responsibility and sense of charity. Indian sense of charity is limited to giving donations to temples, which in the end benefit the custodians of the temples, who are invariably Bramhans. The famous case can be the case of Tirupati Balaji where billions of money were pocketed by a few individuals. Urban Middle class India get swayed by campaigns like anti-corruption, but never get swayed by more crucial issues of human rights and atrocities. It is entangled in the caste muck and god industry. One can safely call it Middle Caste Nationalism. One can call it economic nationalism too.

All the credit to keep India intact goes to democracy and constitution. Constitution as an instrument of democracy has succeded in India till date. The periodic elections, the multiparty system and adult franchise keeps the hope of the people alive. If it had not been for the constitution of India, India would have fallen into a big mess. The proper checks and balances that constitution provides, if made more effective then most of the issues of Governance can be solved. Even when there are so many nationalisms proliferating in India, the real hope is offered by the Constitution, which defines ultimate goal for India as a nation, and that is Justice (social, political and economic), Liberty, equality and fraternity. The standard therefore for any nationalism to be valid in India are these constitutional values. The question is whether Hindu, Muslim, Linguistic, Middle Class nationalisms are in accordance with these values, if not these nationalisms are anti-national. The problem of India is problem of not understanding what constitute real India; India based on Justice, liberty, equality and fraternity. Is anyone opposed to these values?

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The five unsatiated Senses will remain, the sixth insatiable Sense (of Vanity); the whole daemonic nature of man will remain,-hurled forth to rage blindly without rule or rein; savage itself, yet with all the tools and weapons of civilization: a spectacle new in History. -Thomas Carlyle in The French Revolution. Posted on April 11, 2011

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