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Distorted by historians, defiant in legacy: Shambhaji Maharaj lives on
The Sunday Guardian
|March 23, 2025
The recent cinematic success of 'Chhaava' marks a crucial turning point. It has ignited a spark in young Indians, compelling them to question the blindfolded historiography of our textbooks.
Shivaputra Chhatrapati Sambhaji Maharaj stands as the embodiment of Swaraj with Balidan. He was not just a formidable warrior, but a ruler, a leader, and an indomitable inspiration whose legacy has transcended centuries. His life remains a testament to resilience, fortitude, and sacrifice—not merely in the realms of politics, leadership, or military strategy, but also in social and personal spheres. Yet, despite his unparalleled contributions, he remains an unsung hero in the pages of Indian history.
History, as propaganda as conceived by the Left Islamist historians, needed to whitewash the bloodiest period of Islamic invasions for its so-called consequences. They used their techniques of interpreting history not from facts but rather their interpretations of an imagined community.
For children growing up in this country, his legacy barely registers beyond a fleeting mention in textbooks. His entire life, his battles, his visionary leadership—reduced to a one-mark question in exams, buried within a handful of pages that discuss the Maratha Empire in passing. Such a travesty is not accidental, but it results from a deliberate whitewashing of history, a wilful erasure of the towering legacy of Shivaji and his successors.
In this context, we must evaluate the systematic disregard for his contributions and the narratives that continue to overshadow his sacrifices. Such distortion of history is not just a misunderstanding but a painful irony. The ruthless Aurangzeb, a man whose reign was defined by tyranny and oppression, has been repackaged as a figure of inclusivity and tolerance by leftist-Islamist historiography, and the so-called intellectuals have perpetuated it. How appalling it is that the Mughal emperor, who never once claimed to be secular, is now portrayed as a symbol of pluralism.
This story is from the March 23, 2025 edition of The Sunday Guardian.
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