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Hindu Shahis
Western Afghanistan comprising the provinces of Heart (whose name is derived
from Hari-Rud which is said to be a derivation from the older term Hari-Rudra - two Hindu dieties), Kandahar (the ancient Gandhara
of the Mahabharata) was ruled by Sabuktagin a Muslim ruler from a town named Ghazni. He was
facing Raja Jaya Pala who ruled from Kubha (modern Kabul) in Eastern Afghanistan. His kingdom
comprised the provinces of Kapisa on the western side of the Hindu Kush Ranges and Punjab on the
Eastern side. (Incidentally, his kingdom was like that of Ambhi who ruled approximately the same
provinces, when Alexander the Great had invaded the area in 330 B.C.E.)
Raja Jaya Pal Shahi, Ruler of Punjab bore the brunt of the Islamic Onslaught
The year 980C.E. marks the beginning of the Muslim invasion into India proper when Sabuktagin
attacked Raja Jaya Pal in Afghanistan. Afghanistan is today a Muslim country separated from India
by another Muslim country Pakistan. But in 980 C.E. Afghanistan was also a place where the people
were Hindus and Buddhists. The name "Afghanistan" comes from "Upa-Gana-stan" which means in
Sanskrit "The place inhabited by allied tribes". This was the place from where Gandhari of the
Mahabharat came from Gandhar whose king was Shakuni. The Pakthoons are descendants of the Paktha
tribe mentioned in Vedic literature. Till the year 980 C.E., this area was a Hindu majority area,
till Sabuktagin from Ghazni invaded it and displaced the ruling Hindu king - Jaya Pal Shahi.
The place where Kabul's main mosque stands today was the site of an ancient Hindu temple and the
story of its capture is kept alive in Islamic Afghan legend which describes the Islamic hero
Sabuktagin who fought with a sword in every hand to defeat the Hindus and destroy their temple to
put up a Mosque in its place. (This is not being mentioned here to reclaim the place as a temple.
But to record a long forgotten fact that today's Islamic battlefield of the Taliban was once
inhabited by Hindus.)
The victory of Sabuktagin pushed the frontiers of the Hindu kingdom of the Shahis from Kabul to
behind the Hindu Kush mountains (Hindu Kush is literally "killer of Hindus" - a name given by
Mahmud Ghazni to describe the number of Hindus who died on their way into Afghanistan to a life
of captivity) . After this setback, the Shahis shifted their capital from Kubha (Kabul) to
Udbhandapura (modern Und in NWFP). Sabuktagin's son Mahmud Ghazni, kept up the attacks on the
Shahis and captured Und. Subsequently, the Shahis moved their capital to Lahore and later to
Kangra in Himachal.
Tirlochan Pal Shahi - The Last Hindu Ruler of Punjab
Three generation of Shahi kings laid down their lives and their kingdom in battling the invaders.
Raja Jaya Pal Shahi was followed by his son Anand Pal Shahi who fought a battle with Mahmud near
Lahore, but lost as his elephant is said to have run amok within his own army. His son Tirlochan
Pal Shahi continued his struggle with the Muslims from Kangra but he too went down fighting when
he was treacherously killed when away from the battlefield.
The defeat of the Shahis opened up the Gangetic plains to the Muslims and Mahmud Ghazni
repeatedly attacked the main Hindu kingdoms ruled by the Gurjara-Pratiharas and sacked Hindu
temples. The main ruler in those days was Rajyapala Pratihara who resisted Mahmud Ghazni's raids,
partly successfully. In his last attack on Somnath, Mahmud Ghazni successfully sacked the temple
at Prabhasa Patan in Gujarat, but on his way back he was roundly defeated by the Gujar rulers of
North Gujarat. Mahmud never came back to India after that. (Refer to the Glory that was Gujar
Desha by K.M. Munshi) But these first Muslim raids into India proper had given an ominous
indication of what was to come a couple of centuries later in the year 1194 C.E.
But for now, the Muslim rule of the Ghaznivids was established in Kabul, Paktoonistan and in the
land of the five rivers - Punjab. Thus after Sindh in 715; Kabul, Paktoonistan, and Punjab became
the next Indian provinces which went under Muslim domination in the period 980 C.E. to 1020 C.E.
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