India has a rich tradition of learning and education right from the antiquity. These were handed over generations to generations either through oral or written medium. The highly esteemed Vedas have come to down to us. They existed for nearly 2000 years before they were known in India.
It was the knowledge of acoustics that enabled ancient Indians to orally transmit the Vedas from generation to generation. Institutional form of imparting learning came into existence in the early centuries of the Christian era. The approach to learning was to study logic and epistemology. The study of logic was followed by Hindus, Buddhists and Jains, one of the most important topics of Indian thoughts was pramana or means of reliable knowledge. The Nyaya schools upheld four pramanas – perceptions of are liable by analogy or comparison, word (Sabda), and pronunciation of a reliable authority such as the Vedas. The Vedanta school added one more to it i.e. intuition. It is probably while studying the process of inference that the schools of true logic arose.
Ancient Indian postulated syllogism though not as accurate as that of Aristotle. Yet, they recognize some of the major fallacies of logic like reduction and absurdum, circular argument, infinite regression, dilemma, and ignorance. In the field epistemology, Jains contributed the most. There were not only two possibilities of existence and non-existence but seven more. Although the modern logicians might laugh at this pedantic system of ontological and epistemological reality they concede that the world is more complex and subtle than we think it to be. Regarding institutional form of education the first was the guru-sishya system.
The Hindu Pride _The Somnath temple
According to sacred texts, the training of the Brahmin pupil took place at the home of a Brahmin teacher. In some texts the guru is depicted as the poor ascetic and it is the duty of the student to beg for his teacher. The first lesson that was taught to the student was the performance of sandhya and also reciting of gayatri.The family functioned as a domestic school, an asrama or a hermitage where the mental faculties of the pupils were developed by the teacher’s constant attention and personal instruction. Education treated as a matter of individual concern, did not admit of the method of mass production applicable in industry. The making of man was regarded as an artistic and not a mechanical process. Indeed, the aim of education was the developing of the pupil’s personality, his innate and latent capacities.
This view of education as a process of one’s inner growth and self-fulfilment evolved its own technique, its rules, methods and practices. The Somnath temple located in Prabhas Patan near veraval on the western coast of Gujrat. The temple is believed to be the first among the twelve Jyotirlinga shrines of Shiva. It is an important pilgrimage and tourist spot of Gujarat. Destroyed and reconstructed several times in the past, the present temple was reconstructed in Chalukiya style of Hindu temple architecture and completed in May 1951. The temple we see standing today was ordered to be reconstructed by Sardar Patel in 1948. The remains of earlier temple was removed and mosque was shifted a few kilometers away, (No one dared protesting for shifting of mosque built on temple as Ballab Bhai Patel was an iron leader)
The temple was destroyed several times by the hands of different Muslim rulers and was again erected just to be glorious than the previous one. In this process of demolition and reconstruction not only Islamic fascists destroyed it to ground but also plundered all its wealth (even gates were taken along) They massacred thousands of innocent Hindus. The level of hatred and extremism was so much that, in one of his expeditions, temple was put to floor and Shivling being crushed and stones were taken back to Ghazini just to put in the floor of the mosque there, so that Muslims could walk over them and disgrace it. And yet people try to blame It was sacked 16 times. Thrice it was smashed to the ground. Six times the Shiv Ling itself was torn out & desecrated. The original one made of half a ton of solid gold-by some accounts, believed to have been consecrated by the gods themselves-was taken to Samarkand where half of it was melted down & the other half embedded under the steps of a mosque so that Muslims could walk over it. According to popular tradition documented by J. Gordon Melton, the first Siva temple at Somanath is believed to have been built at some unknown time in the past. The second temple was said to be built at the same site by the Seuna kings of Vallabhi around 649 CE. In 725 CE, Al-Junayd, the Arab governor of Sindh is said to have destroyed the second temple as part of his invasions of Gujarat and Rajasthan. The Gurjara-Pratihara king Nagabhata II is said to have constructed the third temple in 815 CE, a large structure of red sandstone.
There is no historical record of an attack on Somnath by Al-Junayd. However, Nagabhata II is known to have visited tirthas in Saurashtra, including Someshvara (the Lord of the Moon) at Somnath, which may or may not be a reference to a Siva temple.
The Solanki king Mulraj possibly built the first temple at the site sometime before 997 CE, even though some historians believe that he may have renovated a smaller earlier temple in 1024, the temple built by Mularaja was destroyed by the prominent Afghan ruler,Mahmud of Ghazni,who raided the temple from across the Thar Desert. The temple was rebuilt by the Paramara king Bhoja of Malwa and the Solanki king Bhimdev I of Anhilwara (now Patan, Gujarat) between 1026 and 1042. This appears to have been a wooden structure, which was replaced by a stone temple by Kumarpal.
In 1296, the temple was once again destroyed by Alauddin Khilji’s army. Raja Karan of Gujarat was defeated and forced to flee. According to Taj-ul-Ma’sir of Hasan Nizami, the Sultan boasted that “fifty thousand infidels were dispatched to hell by the sword” and “more than twenty thousand slaves, and cattle beyond all calculation fell into the hands of the victors.”
The temple was rebuilt by Mahipala Deva, the Chudasama king of Saurashtra in 1308 and the Linga was installed by his son Khengar sometime between 1326 and 1351.
In 1375, the temple was once again destroyed by Muzaffar Shah I of the Gujarat Sultanate.
In 1451, the temple was once again destroyed by Mahmud Begada, the Sultan of Gujarat.
By 1665, the temple, one of many, was once again ordered destroyed by Mughal emperor Aurangzeb.
Later the temple was rebuilt to its same glory adjacent to the ruined one. Later on a joint effort of Peshwa of Pune, Raja Bhonsle of Nagpur, Chhatrapati Bhonsle of Kolhapur, Queen Ahilyabai Holkar of Indore & Shrimant Patilbuwa Shinde of Gwalior rebuilt the temple in 1783 at a site adjacent to the ruined temple.
Before independence, Prabhas Patan was part of the princely state of Junagadh, whose ruler had acceded to Pakistan in 1947. After India refused to accept his decision, the state was made a part of India and Deputy Prime Minister Patel came to Junagadh on 12 November 1947 to direct the stabilization of the state by the Indian Army and at the same time ordered the reconstruction of the Somanath temple.
When Patel, K. M. Munshi and other leaders of the Congress went to Mahatma Gandhi with their proposal to reconstruct the Somnath temple, Gandhi suggested that the funds for the construction should be collected from the public and the temple should not be funded by the state for the reasons better known to Gandhi. Consequent to death of Sardar Patel the task of reconstruction of the temple continued under Munshi, who was the Minister for Food and Civil Supplies in the Nehru Government.
The ruins were pulled down in October 1950 and the mosque present at that site was shifted few kilometres away.
In May 1951, Dr.Rajendra Prasad, the first President of the Republic of India, invited by K M Munshi, performed the installation ceremony for the temple.
The President said in his address, “It is my view that the reconstruction of the Somnath Temple will be complete on that day when not only a magnificent edifice will arise on this foundation, but the mansion of India’s prosperity will be really that prosperity of which the ancient temple of Somnath was a symbol.”.
He added “The Somnath temple signifies that the power of reconstruction is always greater than the power of destruction”.
And this process of destruction started consequent to arrival of Islam in the inland of Indian subcontinent in the 7th century when the Arabs conquered Sindh and later arrived in Punjab and North India in the 12th century via the Ghaznavids and Ghurids conquest.
Antiquity of Datta Clan.
About 3500 years ago the entire middle east from Turkey to saudi Arabia in the south and Egypt in the west, was under the rule of princes of indian origin in the later half of the 16th century BC and the first half of the 15th century BC. They belonged to Hittite, Mittani, Kassities and other tribes. They were ruling either independently or as subordinate rulers. N D Mironov, Roger, Calaghan, Albbright and other scholars have published more then a hundred names of such princes found on tablets discovered from sites in turkey. (e.g Bogozkoi) Egypt, Iraq, Iran, Syria, Israel, and other middle eastern estates. Dutta was the surname of these princes.
Manepa Dutta and Ura Dutta ruled over the country around setha river in Anatolia in the Turkey (see Steffani Ruggars 1964 KUBXXIC 33 (B0487) Mursilis journal of American Oriental Society Vol 84.PP 22 to 30. Another Indo Aryan Prince Bir Diya defended the egyptian territorries against the onslaught of Indian dialects. Also yasha datta Biridhi Birshena and many other Indo Aryan Princes are mentioned in Tal-El-Amarna tablets as fighting against the enemies of Egypt. The letters are in ancient Egyptian script, have already been translated in several languages. Shuvar datta controlled entire territorry of Helron.Another Indo Aryan prince Inder Datta supplied 50 chariots to Shuvar datta in his battle against Apirus
James B Prichard an American scholar translated the cunieform letters of these princes. These Indo , Soma in Daryans worshipped Vedic Gods
Such a Indra, Mitra, Varubna, Nasatya. These four Gods invoked as witnesses to the Bogaz treaty that two tribes Hittitis and Mittanis with two other tribes signed at the conclusion of a war. They also worshipped Vayu, Swar, Soma, The Dewas, Rita, Yama, Vasus, Surya and Marut ie All Vedic Gods. See Dument PE – (u.d) Nelson, The Indo Aryan Names from Mitani, nazi and Syruian Documents)
In one of the letters to Egyptian king the Aryan ruler Named Dusharatta states “With the grace of God “Raama” I captured and killed my rebel brother “Artashuma”
This reference to Rama God and popularity of of epic names such as Dusharatta Shatrushan Washishtha etc among this generation of West Asian princes of 16th century BC, shows that Ramayan episode was already an event of this remote antiquity. Rama was therefore worshiped even in this far flung desert lands of the middle east.