The Buddhist stupas, monasteries and
the massive statues carved out of a sand rock at Bamiyan in the heart
of Afghanistan were the wonder of tourists, scholars and connoisseurs
of art and culture and scholars are no more, devastated by the Islamic
Fundamentalists' Taliban terrorist regime of Afghanistan, notwithstanding
the international plea against this iconoclasm, unleashed on the cultural
heritage of the ancestors of the present day people of Afghanistan.
Afghanistan, situated
in the midpoint of Asia and the cross-roads between the north and south,
cast and west and in the famous "Chinese Silk Route" due to its geographical
position became in bygone times the rendezvous of
different
peoples and various civilisations, namely Aryan, (Bactrian or Rivedic),
Achaemenian, Greek, Kushan and Buddhist. The cumulative effect of this
cross-cultural fertilisation found its expression in different schools
of art, embodying techniques borrowed from different lands and climes,
but modified and remoulded according to the ethos of the Afghan people.
The Greek culture found its paths into Bactrian art in the fourth century
BC, when the country became a part of the vast Macedonian Empire and
came to be totally influenced by the Greek culture and philosophy.
In mid-third century BC
during the reign of Emperor Asoka of India, Buddhism found its way into
Afghanistan. It was in Afghanistan that Greek realism and Surrealism
intermingled with Indian mysticism, giving birth to a new school of
art now accepted by the world as the Gandhara School of art, which had
its epicentre at Hadda, six miles south of modern
Jalaalabada (Nangahara of Buddhist era) in Afghanistan. In the second
century AD with the ascension of Kanishka to the throne, Afghanistan
became a great seat of Buddhist learning and the arts. It was from this
pivotal centre that Buddhism reached Sinkiang, China and Mongolia. Kanishka,
being intellectually convinced of the realism is and pragmatism of Buddhism
became a Buddhist and later became a very liberal, generous and steadfast
promoter of Buddhism and Buddhist art and culture.
During his long and epoch-making
rulership (120 to 160 AD), Buddhism and Buddhist art and culture became
the life-blood of his far-flung empire. Consequently, the famous Gandhara
or Graeco- Buddhist school of sculpture progressed by leaps and bounds.
This new school on Afghan spill defied the Buddha, the founder of Buddhism,
and his images became the cynosures of worship and veneration to the
exclusion of primitive modes of worship.
In Afghanistan, Buddhism
compromised with many elements of foreign culture and gave them a Buddhist
outlook. The old schools of art never "idolized" Buddha but was represented
by an empty seat, a footprint, an umbrella, riderless horse or even
a vacant throne. According to the new techniques of art that bred on
Afghan soil, Buddha came to be portrayed in human form, with aesthetically
rich serenity and compassion on the face and the entire body, inspiring
the worshipper to take the path of the Four Sublime States of Buddhism:
Loving-kindness (Metta), Compassion (Karuna), Blissful Joy (Mudita)
and Equanimity (Upekkha).
Kanishka had two capitals:
Capsie (modern Bagrain, 35 miles north of Kabul), has summer residence,
and Purushapura (modern Peshawar), his winter palace. He being the indefatigable
promoter of Buddhism built stupas and monasteries very specially in
these two locations, and elsewhere in his vast empire. In Peshawar,
Kanishka built a beautiful Sanghararna (monastery like the Mahavihara
of Anuradhapura) with a lofty stupa of about 150 feet in height, a most
breath-taking construction of the time. Capisa was dotted with viharas
and statues. One of these, Shalokia, was built by his Chinese princess
who was taken as a hostage and kept in Kanishka's court. This monastery
was in a state of preservation.
The famous Chinese pilgrim
monk, Xuan Zang, visited Afghanistan in the seventh century AD, as attested
by the pilgrim's travel notes. He describes that great many monasteries
were ubiquitous in Bamiyan, and the smaller statue at Bamiyan (35 metres
in height) and the stupa at its feet (no longer in existence) which
were to become the cynosure of the Buddhist past of Afghanistan. Bamiyan
valley in those far-off days was a great seat of culture, comparable
to Nalanda, Ajantha, Ellora, Odanpura, Wikremashila of India and Mahavihara,
Abhayagiri Vihara Jetawana Vihara of Anruadhapura of Sri Lanka and also
to Cittalapabbata of Mahagarna of Rohana, in the southern province of
Sri Lanka.
Bamiyan, lying on the
trade route linking India with Balkh, through which trade in spices,
pearls, ivory and cotton raw material were traded and it was also on
the famous Chinese Silk Route, that linked Mid-west Asia with the Chinese
Empire and other East Asian empires. History has it that the pearls,
gems, cotton ivory and spices were from Sri Lanka being transited through
South Indian ports from the great port of Sri Lanka, Mahatittha (Mannar)
on the west coast of Sri Lanka. now a buried port city. This trade rendezvous
of Bamiyan continued until the invasion of Genghis Khan in the early
part of the thirteenth century and as very correctly
said by Jawaharlal Nehru in his book, Discovery of India "The dagger
of Islamic invasion went through the heart of India" and this was fate
of Afghanistan too.
Bamiyan is only 145 miles
north of Kabul and a motor-road, now occupied by the Taliban demons,
leads to it through the picturesque valleys of Kohdanan and Ghoraband.
At a distance of about 110 miles from Kabul there is a deep ascent,
named Shibar Pass, which is snow-capped in winter. About 19 miles ahead
of this Pass, the road branches off, one to the right leads to Mazar-Sharif
and Katghan, while the other to the left leads to Bamiyan. The road
to Bamiyan runs parallel to the river of Barmiyan and girdles the range
of hills. After six miles and old mud fort
on a steep rock is called
the city of Zahak-I*Msran.
From thenceforth, the
valley widens and the city of caves, where once reclusive Buddhist monks
would have lived in meditation, appears. This is the historic city of
Bamiyan, lying at the foot of a reddish hills, some 9,000 feet above
mean sea level, which also forms the dividing line between the gigantic
mountain ranges - the Hindu Kush and the Koh-i-Baba. The valley of Bamiyan,
sunk deep in the pleateau. is between 8,000
and 9,000 ft above sea mean sea level To the
south is the snowcapped range of Kh-i-Baba range
running to 16,000 to 17,000 feet. The passes the
hilly ranges, valleys and the girdling river give Bamiyan the ideal
backdrop to a Buddhist centre of learning and orectic and it was undoubtedly
a glorious centre of Buddhism, that enveloped the entire Afghanistan,
until Islamic invasions took over Afghanistan.
Little is left of the
ancient city, being victimised by barbaric fundamentalists and still
the capital exists, known now as Shahr-iGhulghols (City of Uproars).
Gigantic statues of Buddha (53 and 35 metres in height) with smaller
ones in different directions are carved out of the sedimentary rock
on the sides of the Bamiyan gorge. These statues once coated with reinforcements
to withstands the rigours of climatic changes in this hilly terrain,
were a source of inspiration and religious fervour for the sore-footed
weary pilgrim who, trotted over the land with just a sack tied to a
walking stick and held on the shoulder, for there were no vehicles to
travel but just a donkey to be their pack animal and cornpanion through
the desolate human unfriendly terrain and weather gods.
Xuan Zang, who saw these
stupendous monasteries and statues and other Buddhist artifacts in 630
AD said very laconically and implicitly, "The Golden Line Sparks on
Every Side". The two masdove statues (175 ft and 125 ft in height) were
begun in the second century AD under the patronage of Emperor Kanishka
and the several others. probably in the fourth or fifth centuries AD.
The niches of the Buddha statues carry, now marred, beautiful frescoes,
giving the archaeologist a pointer as to the path arts of India found
its way to Afghanistan and percolated it with Greek,
Roman and Sassanian elements prior to it being it conveyed to
China and Japan through Sinkiang.
The early Moslem writers
(prior to the thirteenth century AD) speak in glorious terms. One writer,
Yaquibi, describes it in detail and mention the frescoes that adorned
the niches of the caves where statues of the Buddha were depoited. He
says, the inhabitants called the big statue the "Red Buddha" and the
smaller one the "Grey Buddha".
Early in the thirteenth
century, the city of Barmiyan and ill its inhabitants were swept off
the face of the valley by Genghis Khan. the Mongol. The legend has it
that his grandson, Mutugen, son of Jaghati, was killed in action during
the siege of Bamiyan. When the town surrendered after a long and arduous
battle. Genghis, the revengeful fiend of fundamentalism in its early
dressing ordered that no living being, man or animal, was to be spared.
The ruined town was named Mao - Baligh (The Bad Town). How true are
the words of the savant Jawaharlal Nehru, today it is not the dagger
but gun powder and mortars that destroy the Buddhist cultural heritage
of their own ancestors by the barbaric Taliban. It is time
that the all governments of the world take cognisance of this
"Cultural Cleansing" and action similar to those in Kosovo "Serbia Ethnic
Cleansing" be taken against the Taliban, as the freedom of religion
and cultural heritage of the human race are in jeopardy and other similar
organisations would take a leaf off the book of Taliban demons.