BURMA'S ROHINGYA ORIGIN IN THE ANCIENT KINGDOM OF ARAKAN: UNDERSTANDING THE ARAB- CHANDRA SYNTHESIS (A WORKING PAPER ON ARAKAN
Dr. Abid Bahar
Abstract :(Several
issues has come to the surface from the present research on DHANNAWADI
and VASALI period of ancient Arakan; (1) That DHANNAWADI and VASALI were
Indian dynasties with Hindu and Mohayana Buddhist religious followers
(2) During the Chandra
rule there had been some Arab settlements in Arakan. The language of
the Chandras was proto-Chittagonian: Sanskrit, Pali, and Arabic mixed
similar to what Buchanon Hamilton found in 1799 with Rohingyas in Burma,
also that a similar language was
spoken by the Chakmas and Thanchangras of Arakan and Bangladesh, its
written form similar to Bengali. found in the Ananda Chandra script (3)
Beginning from 957 A.D. there had been a huge migration of Tibeto-Burman
Theraveda Buddhist population into the plains of Arakan, by defeating
the Chandras they took
possession of Arakan and the Indian look alike people retreated either
toward the Northern part of Arakan or went back to Bengal, making the
event its first Indian exodus of Arakaniese people to Bengal. (4) In our
contemporary period there has been a conscious effort among Arakan’s
Rakhine crudader like historians to deny and cleanse from history, not
only the traces of Indian Hindu or Mohayana civilization but also the
traces of Muslim population and their Arab-Chandra synthesis of the
Chandras predating the Tibeto Burman Theraveda Buddhist existence. )
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The
Rohingyas people of Arakan are mostly Muslims with a small Hindu
population among them. They are racially Indo- Semitic. They are not an
ethnic group developed from one tribal group affiliation or single
racial stock. Tides of people like the the Brahmins from India, Arabs,
Moghuls, Bengalis, Turks and people from Central Asia, came mostly as
traders, worriors and prechers overland or through the sea route to
Arakan. Many settled
in Arakan, during the Indian Chandra period, mixing with the local
people formed the first neclus of the Rohingya people in Arakan.
Historically speaking, in their common suffering in Burma, they found an
identity now known to the world as the Rohingyas of Arakan. (1) Part
one of this series of articles on Rohingya history is about the first
Arab Chandra synthesis; covering from 3rd century CE. to 1406 A.D in chronological order.
3rd Century
(CE): “By the 3rd century (CE), the coastal region of Kala Mukh
(Arakan) had been settled with the colonists dominating and coexisting
warily with the indigenous people. In the sites of major habitation
Sanskrit became the written language of the ruling class, and the
religious beliefs were those prevalent at that time in south-Asia (or
Indian sub-continent). “(2)
4th to 10th century. DHANNAWADI and VASALI (Brahminical and Mohayana Buddhist civilizations)
“
As a port city, Vaishali was in contact with Samatat (the planes of
lower Bangladesh) and other parts of India and Ceylon (Sri Lanka).
Historically, these early rulers came to be known as the Chandras and
controlled the territories as far north as Chittagong. “(3)
“The Anand Chandra Inscription, which contains 65 verses (71 and a half lines) and now sited at the Shitthaung pagoda, provides some information about these early rulers. Interestingly, neither the name of the kingdom or the two premier cities – Dhanyavati and Vaishali – is mentioned. This 11-foot high monolith, unique in entire Burma, has three of its four faces inscribed in a Nagari script, which is closely allied to those of Bengali and north-eastern India. As noted rightly by Noel Singer had it not been for Professor E.H. Johnston of Balliol College, Oxford, who translated the Sanskrit script and the Indian epigraphists before him, the contents of the Inscription which remained inaccessible for well over a thousand years would never have been known. (4)
“The script on the panel on the east face is believed by Johnston to be the oldest. According to Pamela Gutman it was similar to the type of script used in Bengal (Bangladesh) during the early 6th century CE. As to the panel on the north face, Johnston mentioned that several smaller inscriptions in Bengali characters had been added in the 10th century. Gutman however felt that the principal text in this section is of the mid-11th century CE. The panel on the west face, which is reasonably preserved, is believed by Gutman to be of the earlier part of the 8th century. This priceless document not only lists the personalities of each monarch but also some of the major events of every reign.”(5)
“So who is this Ananda Chandra? In verse 64, it clearly says that he was a descendant of the Saiva-Andhra monarchs [presumably of Banga or Bangladesh] whose kingdom was located between the Godavari and Krishna Rivers of Bengal, and close to the Bay of Bengal. The founder of this new dynasty was Vajra Sakti who reigned circa 649-665 CE. His successor was Sri Dharma Vijaya, who reigned from circa 665-701. As noted by Singer, and much in contrast to Rakhine claims, Dharma Vijaya was not a Theravada Buddhist, but probably a Mahayanist. The next in line was Narendra Vijaya who reigned from circa 701 to 704 CE. The next to rule was Sri Dharma Chandra, who reigned from 704 to 720 CE. He was the father of Ananda Chandra who was a magnificent patron of Mahayana Buddhism and Hindu institutions.(6)
“The Anand Chandra Inscription, which contains 65 verses (71 and a half lines) and now sited at the Shitthaung pagoda, provides some information about these early rulers. Interestingly, neither the name of the kingdom or the two premier cities – Dhanyavati and Vaishali – is mentioned. This 11-foot high monolith, unique in entire Burma, has three of its four faces inscribed in a Nagari script, which is closely allied to those of Bengali and north-eastern India. As noted rightly by Noel Singer had it not been for Professor E.H. Johnston of Balliol College, Oxford, who translated the Sanskrit script and the Indian epigraphists before him, the contents of the Inscription which remained inaccessible for well over a thousand years would never have been known. (4)
“The script on the panel on the east face is believed by Johnston to be the oldest. According to Pamela Gutman it was similar to the type of script used in Bengal (Bangladesh) during the early 6th century CE. As to the panel on the north face, Johnston mentioned that several smaller inscriptions in Bengali characters had been added in the 10th century. Gutman however felt that the principal text in this section is of the mid-11th century CE. The panel on the west face, which is reasonably preserved, is believed by Gutman to be of the earlier part of the 8th century. This priceless document not only lists the personalities of each monarch but also some of the major events of every reign.”(5)
“So who is this Ananda Chandra? In verse 64, it clearly says that he was a descendant of the Saiva-Andhra monarchs [presumably of Banga or Bangladesh] whose kingdom was located between the Godavari and Krishna Rivers of Bengal, and close to the Bay of Bengal. The founder of this new dynasty was Vajra Sakti who reigned circa 649-665 CE. His successor was Sri Dharma Vijaya, who reigned from circa 665-701. As noted by Singer, and much in contrast to Rakhine claims, Dharma Vijaya was not a Theravada Buddhist, but probably a Mahayanist. The next in line was Narendra Vijaya who reigned from circa 701 to 704 CE. The next to rule was Sri Dharma Chandra, who reigned from 704 to 720 CE. He was the father of Ananda Chandra who was a magnificent patron of Mahayana Buddhism and Hindu institutions.(6)
Arakani
researcher San Shwe Bu thinks the Chandras were from Hindu dynasty but
later on like in Bengal converted to Mohayana Buddhism. According to him
the king and the people both were of Indian origin. The coins of Wasali
had the image of Siva engraved on it. M.S. Collins says, “The coins of
Wasali were in pure Brahminical tradition.”(7) The
Indian Chandra aristocracy called the ancient dark skinned people of
Arakan with the derogatory name the Rakkhasas (Kula). These were the
indigenous people of Arakan.
What
was the language of these people? The language of the Chandras was
proto-Chittagonian: Sanskrit, Pali, and Arabic mixed. See the “The Anand
Chandra Inscription. There is no trace of Burmese or Rakhine Mogh
script on it. According to Dr. Emil Forchhammer, a Swiss Professor of
Pali at Rangoon College, and Superintendent of the newly founded
Archaeological Survey (1881): “The earliest dawn of the history of
Arakan reveals the base of the hills, which divide the lowest courses of
the Kaladan and Lemro rivers, inhabited by sojourners from India… Their
subjects are divided into the four castes of the older Hindu
communities…”(8)
788
A.D. During the reign of Arakani Indian Chandra King Mahat Sing Daya’s
time recorded in the royal chronicle that several Arab ships wracked on
Ramree Island. "Survivors were sent to Arakan proper and settled in
villages." (9) Similar Arab settlements were recorded in the other parts
of southern part of Chittagong of what is now Bangladesh.
785-957 Arab
traders began to settle both in Arakan and Chittagong. Inter mixture
with the local population no doubt led to the growth of the first
Chandra-Rohingyas of Arakan. During this time, in both Arakan and
Chittagong, the influence of Sanskrit, Pali, Arabic, Persi, combined
together eventually formed the Chandra-Rohingya dialect which is similar
to the Chittagonian dialect with their slight variations. The same
dialect is also spoken by the Chakmas, and the Tanchaingyas of
Chittagong Hill Tracts. Despite their racial differences their
linguistic similarities shows they must be the citizens of ancient
Chandra kingdom.
Durinng the 9th Century there was records of Chandra invasion of Chittagong. Hindus of Chittagong believe that the name Chittagong was derived from the original Sanskrit name "Chatta gram" into "Chaitigaon." However, the Arakani historians claim that the name Chittagong was originally given by an Arakanese mongoloid king. It says, an Arakani king eracted a pillar at Chittagong in the nineth century A. D. with a remark "to make war is improper." Interestingly, during this time a Chandra king (not a Mogh king) ruled Arakan. It is hard to believe, because there was no Rakine Mogh kingdom in Arakan yet. At this time, Arakan was ruled by Chanda king Shoe Ratan. The language of the king was not the Burmese Moghhi "Tsit-ta-gungin", "to make war is improper" seems was made up later on. "To make war improper" seems more like the declaration of a peace treaty between two parties than as it was originally presented as the declaration of victory by an Arakani king. Under the circumstance of the nonexistence of Burmese language in Arakan at the time, instead of the Burmese "Tsit-ta-gungin", it would seem that the Chandras's Sanskrit expression "Shoukeet Thakom" (Choutagon, in English meaning you live in peace) The latter expression in Chittagonian or in Chandra-Rohingya language seems historically more consistent. One might wonder how this misinterpretation of a huge magnitude "Tsit-ta-gungin", "to make war is improper" remained as truth for so long.
Many
of the contemporary research on Arakan show that after the event of
1784 Burmese invasion of Arakan, Burmese king took the Arakani
chronicles to Burma proper. To Burmanize Arakan, we know the Arakani
Sanskrit chronicles were rewritten in Burmese along with a tendentious
interpretation of events entered into the present Arakani history.
957-1430 MONGOLOID BURMESE MOGH INVASION OF ARAKAN: RISE OF THE RAKHINE MOGH
(Arakan's two solitudes: Rakhine in the South and Rohingya in the North. Mongoloid invasion of Arakan and the beginning of "Kula" (Chandra Rohingya) exodus to North Arakan and Chittagong.) (11)
957 A.D. Something
happened in the year 957 A.D. and historians’ record this as a
significant date when Tibeto-Burman people in large numbers entered
Arakan and took its control by defeating the Chandra Mahayanas
Buddhists, imposing their Theravada Buddhism, the latter was adopted
from the Mons in the South who in their turn took it from Sri Lanka.
Similar changes didn’t happen in Bengal. (10) In Bengal, most Mahayana
Buddhists were converted to Islam by Sufi mystics. With the fall of
Arakan to the Tibeto-Burmans, the Chandra Indians were either pushed to
the north of Arakan or some even left Arakan for Bengal. Around this
time, the defeated Chandra Royal family was found to settle in
Chittagong proper.The Dev Pahar, in Chittagong city named after Dev
Chandra was the site of this new Mohayana Buddhist kingdom.(12)
In
North Arakan, mostly Chandra Hindus (lower casts also known as the
Rakkhas) slowly adopted Islam converted by the already existing Muslims
of Arakan and most Buddhist elites perhaps joined the Tibeto-Burnan
Theraveda group or perhaps a defeated small number of Buddhist adopted
Islam. Arakan became on one hand Theraveda Buddhist with largely Tibeto
Burman stock, later came to be known as the “Mog/ Mug”/ Rakhines and the
others were Rohingya Hindus and Muslims. Moghs settled in the south and
Muslims, Hindus of Indian look alike people settled in the North.
During the Chandra times and to its end in Arakan, we see the traces of
Arabic names such as Rambree, Sufi sites on Myu Mountain tops, and Badre
Patis in the Northern part of Arakan.
From
the 11th century, clearly with the Tibeto-Burman rule, Arakan began to
have two solitudes, Rakhine Mogh and the Rohingya Muslims but Arakan
began to look East to its mongoloid Buddhist neighbors only until the
year 1430; the year Arakan’s king Noromi Kla would be deposed by Burmese
invasion and he would take shelter in Gaur of Bengal.
Revisionist History Writing and Rakhine Crusader like Activism: Ethnic cleansing of the Arakani Indo sematic traces
A
footnote to the above discussion that Rakhine ultranationalists in
their attemts to purify Arakan of Muslim traces for their only Buddhist
mongoloid race prove that the Buddhist civilization was there for the
past 3000 years, and even Buddha visited Arakan and the Mohamuni was
made in Buddha’s presence. In this ethnocentric attempt, they are not
only getting rid of Muslim names from Arakan sites in Mrohaung city and
in its vicinity, in doing anti Indo semantic ethnic cleansing, by
getting rid of both Hindu traces and the Mohayana Buddhist traces from
Dhannwadi and Vasali kingdom sites in favour of the Theraveda Rakkhapuri
ultra nationalist Buddhism.
In
his book, Vasali and the Indianization of Arakan, Noel Singer notes,
“Dhanyavti and Vasaishali on which stood Hindu temples, now been taken
over by Buddhists. There is a tendency to transform Hindu gods into
Buddhist deities.” “Regretably, despite Rakhine determination to
eradicate Brahmanic evidence, this is unlikely to happen for a
considerable time.” (13)
Their
narrative about the Rohingyas (Hindu-Muslim) of Arakan by the Rakhine
xenophobes “starts with the British colonization of the territory in
1826 after the first Anglo-Burma War of 1824-26, as if Rohingyas had no
past connection to the soil of Arakan.”(14) In this propaganda campaign,
there are several Rakhine crusader like historians; they are Kanbawza
Win, Aye Chan, Maung Maung, and U Khin Maung Saw. One
such historian is also San Tha Aung. Noel Singer remarks: “whose
vehement claims that the inhabitants of the kingdom throughout its
history were devout Theravada Buddhist, it should be noted that Svarga,
the Hindu paradise, and not a Buddhist one was indicated in the
inscription.” He “investigated the document further in the 1970’s apart
from his biased version his labors failed to produce any new
revelations.” (15) No doubt, the works of these tendentious Rakine
historians belittling the Rohingya presence in Arakan must have played a
significant role in the present ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya people
in Arakan.
1044-77
Rise of Burmese pagan king Anwardhta in Burma proper with Teraveda
political Buddhism, "reduces North Arakan"from a kingdom to a province
of Burma.
1044-77
Rohingyas (Arakani Hindus and Muslims) left Arakan for Chittagong.
Chakma Royal history says that in this war against the Burmese, Chakmas
sided with the Bengalis (the Chandras) but were defeated.
1287 - Mongols under Kublai Khan conquer Pagan. Arakan revives again as a kingdom.
1406
Burmese King Min Khaung Yaza invades Arakan and Noromi-kala the king of
Arakan along with his followers took asylum at Gaur court of Bengal. The Sultan welcomed Noromi kla to serve as an officer in the army.
1431
Noromi Kla was helped by the Bengal Sultan with General Wali Khan
leading 20, 000 troops to restore him to throne of Arakan, at the same
time Arakan became an autonomous province of Bengal, paying taxes to the
Sultan.
(Continues to Part 2)
ENDNOTES:
(1)Abid
Bahar, “Dynamics of Ethnic Relations in Burmese Society”: An Unpublihed
MA thesis, University of Windsor, Canada, 1981, p. 25, Abid Bahar,
“Mystery behind the Chakma and the Rohingya’s linguistic similarities”http://www.kaladanpress.org/v3/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1721:mystery-behind-the-chakma-and-the-rohingyas-linguistic-similarities&catid=35:rohingya&Itemid=29
(2)Habib Siddiqui, Analysis of Muslim Identity and Demography in Arakan - parts 1 and 2 http://drhabibsiddiqui.blogspot.ca/2011/10/analysis-of-muslim-identity-and.html
(3)Ibid
(4) Ibid
(5) Ibid
(6) Ibid
(7) M.S. Collins,Burma, 1925, p.39-43.
(8) Habib Siddiqui, Analysis of Muslim Identity and Demography in Arakan - parts 1 and 2
(9) R.B. Smart, Burma Gazetteer Akyab district, Vol. 1, 1957, p.17
(10) Purna Chandra Chowdhury, Chottagramer Ithas, 2008, p. 31
(11) Michael Smith,The Muslim Rohingyas of Burma, 1995.
(12) Purna Chandra Chowdhury, Chottagramer Ithas, p. 31
(13) Noel Singer, Vasali and the Indianization of Arakan, 2008, p108;San Tha Aung, Wathali, in Noel Singer, Vasali and the Indianization of Arakan, 2008
MP U Shwe Maung's Parliamentary Speech in Burmese Parliament https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=YTUdcLAq8ag
(14)Ibid
(15)Ibid,
News Night With Talat - 25th July 2012 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GtQjgIZdVt8;
Inside Story - Why is the world ignoring Myanmar's Rohingya? http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=RfC0aJwZjFI;Thousands of Muslims Massacred by Burma's Government and People (Myanmar) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4uO4leI66Ko&feature=related;Tell Me, What is Rohingya Genocide: http://danyawadi.wordpress.com/2012/05/21/tell-me-what-is-rohingya-genocide-in-burma-by-abid-bahar-phd/;http://danyawadi.wordpress.com/2012/07/07/religiously-motivated-racism-and-the-ongoing-rohingya-genocide-in-burma/, http://danyawadi.wordpress.com/2012/07/07/religiously-motivated-racism-and-the-ongoing-rohingya-genocide-in-burma/
(Dr. Abid Bahar teaches in Canada)
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