When nearby residents tire of the daily grind, and when the temperatures soar in the summer, they seek respite at the glistening Khanpur Lake, located in the Haripur District of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
But on the way to Khanpur, just beyond the precipice of Taxila, one notices there a signboard that has rusted with age. Mohra Muradu Remains,
it says, marking a thin road that snakes off into lush fields
reminiscent of all those beautiful vistas you might see in a nature
documentary on Pakistan
Walking along the road, one sees
a small village perched upon a mountain, and a stream that rumbles with
the authentic, tidal force of Mother Nature.
East of
that stream are the remains of an old settlement, fairly preserved: a
large stupa and other structures crafted out of black stone, the
remnants of a 2nd century BC monastery called Mohra Muradu.
Mohra Muradu was one of the 18 monasteries – Jolian,
Dharmarajika, Sirkap, and Pipplan being the other important ones – that
constituted Takshashila – the world’s first known university and a
powerhouse of academic knowledge.
It is to be noted that
although the word ‘university’ was not invented back then, Takshashila,
which was formed in 7th century BC, functioned very much like a
university.
The Buddhist sacred scriptures, the Jatakas, mention Takshashila as a centuries-old centre for learning. It was here that the Mahabharta was first said to be recited.
The
rise of Gandhara, a kingdom in the northwestern region of present-day
Pakistan, had a significant impact on Takshashila’s growth. The
university offered 63 courses that included Vedas, astronomy,
philosophy, surgery, politics, warfare, commerce, music, archery, and
other performing arts.
According to other Buddhist texts, such as the Pali Canon,
Brahmin princes and students migrated from far distances to enroll at
Takshashila, and its alumni include a thorough list of notables:
Jatopil, the commander in chief of Banaras; Jivaka, who cured Buddha;
Parasasenajit, the ruler of Kosala; Panini, a great grammarian; and
Charaka, a famous physician.
But perhaps the
institution’s most noteworthy alumni is the legendary political
philosopher and thinker, Chanakya, better known as Kautilya, the author
of Arthashastra, often compared to the Italian mastermind Machiavelli and his book The Prince.
There is a popular South Asian adage: "jo gur se maray, usay zehar kyun do". The saying originates from an intriguing interaction between a prince, Maurya, and Chanakya, back in 330 BC.
Maurya was on a stroll one day when he noticed an odd sight:
Chanakya, on his knees, pouring honey on to the roots of grass. Maurya
approached him and inquired of his purpose, to which Chanakya replied
that he was sweetening the roots.
Apparently, Chanakya
had tripped over the grass while walking. He decided it was much better
to uproot the grass permanently so that he never stumbles over it again,
rather than removing it temporarily.
And so he was
sweetening the roots, because the colonies of ants under the soil would
sniff out the nectar, find it, and nibble through the roots, rendering
the grass dead for good.
Impressed by Chanakya’s wisdom,
Maurya henceforth hired him as chief advisor for state affairs. This
laid the foundation for a long and enduring relationship between
Chanakya and Chandra Gupta Maurya – one which helped establish a state
so powerful and vast it stretched across the entire Indian subcontinent
and lasted for nearly 150 years.
It became the largest
(in terms of geographical expanse) and the most glorious empire Indian
history has ever witnessed, even larger than the Mughal empire.
Not many are privy to Chanakya’s indissoluble relationship
with what's today Pakistan. Born in the suburbs of present-day Taxila,
young Chanakya’s burgeoning intellect had him quickly noticed, and for
his studies he was admitted to Takshashila, where he rose above the
ranks and was hired as a teacher during his 20’s.
His magnum opus Arthashastra
talks about various subjects of power and facets of governance. It
enlists the duties of the ruler, the associates, and the advisor;
discusses intricate matters, such as the art of diplomacy, the rules of
unleashing and defending wars, the duties of the state during peacetime;
domestic governance affairs like taxation, commerce, law, municipal
affairs; social norms and customs; and artisan work, agriculture,
medicine, and census.
On one hand, it provides an
account of the Chandragupta army – the facts, numbers, weapons – and on
the other, it says, “mere numbers do not count for much; without
discipline and proper leadership they may become a burden.”
Unlike Lahore – where the city sounds off frequently in
recognition of the poet and philosopher Allama Iqbal – Taxila, a much
older city, is devoid of any reference to its son, Chanakya. Some time
ago, there was an attempt to create a university in his name; however, the political rifts and bureaucratic hurdles relegated it to an unending limbo.
Today,
the only references to his existence are the shattered monasteries and
the shambled remains of the once-great Takshashila.
Of
these monasteries, Mohra Muradu is still a thriving village: an abode to
200 families, encircled by mountains and fields, home also to orchards
and olive grafting. The settlement history of the village is unknown,
but to locals it is as old as the monastery’s remains.
A young university graduate, Anis ur Rehman, runs the only
private school in the village. He is proud of his village as being part
of the world’s first learning centre, and of it he says: “Mohra Muradu
is a historical village. It was always a centre of education and is
still an educated village with many graduates and PhDs, some pursuing
higher degrees outside the country.”
Sir Syed Ideal
School, the school he runs, has a block named after his grandfather,
Master Abdul Rehman, one of the first graduates of Aligarh University in
Uttar Pradesh, India.
While showing his small school
library, named after Chanakya, Anis continues: “I have read about
Chanakya and it is a matter of pride for us that we gave the world a
philosopher who is revered everywhere.”
Henry Kissinger in his book World Order described Chanakya’s Arthashastra
as avant-garde that established hard power as a dominant reality in
politics and validated realism much earlier than Machiavelli’s The Prince.
Whilst
the world recognises Chanakya's stature as a philosopher, he’s nothing
more than another example of how our nation has made someone a pariah
without realising what they stood for.
Chanakya is damned
for obvious reasons. He is presumed to be a representative of the
Brahmin mindset and Hindu culture which we have parted from a long time
ago. Merely this was enough to disqualify him from the stature of a
learned philosopher of the soil.
Hence, not a single
reference of him is found in the country, whereas we already have
buildings and campuses named after scientists and philosophers from
different eras and places.
Nothing can describe this irony better than The Indus Saga
, in which Aitzaz Ahsan writes in the preface: “… a nation in denial of
its national identity is unfortunate. But when it chooses to adopt an
extra-territorial identity, it becomes a prisoner of propaganda and
myths... This is the Pakistan of today, not the Pakistan of its
founders. Identity is at the heart of its problem”.
If
Pakistan is to come out of its tortuous identity crisis, it needs to
accept its non-Muslim history as its own. Recognising someone as
important as Chanakya will have to be part of the long process.
Have you ever visited any ancient but forgotten
sites that deserve a place in our cultural/historical consciousness?
Write to us at blog@dawn.com
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