Moneycontrol
HomeNewsIndia'Communities should stop glorifying barbarians of the past': Sanjeev Sanyal's Pakistan reference at Rising Bharat Summit

'Communities should stop glorifying barbarians of the past': Sanjeev Sanyal's Pakistan reference at Rising Bharat Summit

Speaking on the the delicate separation of history and politics, Sanyal added that historical events will have a bearing on the happenings of the present. However, how past events dictate the political discourse of the day is up to the politicians to decide.

April 09, 2025 / 17:46 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Sanjeev Sanyal

Amid the ongoing discourse on the need to revisit certain aspects of Indian history and political parties allegedly weaponizing history against certain communities, acclaimed historian and Columnist Vikram Sampath on Tuesday observed that it is essential to de-hyphenate certain periods of history or rulers from communities while revisiting 'uncomfortable moments' of history.

Partaking in a discussion with renowned economist Sanjeev Sanyal during the News 18's Rising Bharat Summit, the historian also noted that just as de-hyphenation is important to have a richer reading of our past, communities should refrain from idolizing barbarians of the past. Economist and academician Sanyal also added that glorifying barbarians of the past can have dire consequences, citing the example of Pakistan-- the country in naming their missiles after Mahmud of Ghazni and Muhammad of Ghori.

Story continues below Advertisement

Speaking on the the delicate separation of history and politics, Sanyal added that historical events will have a bearing on the happenings of the present. However, how past events dictate the political discourse of the day is up to the politicians to decide.

The primary facts are that Aurangzeb did carry out large number of massacre of Hindus for religious bigotry. Now what Aurangzeb did in the past does to the politics of today, that is for politicians to decide. We won't have peace of any kind if we don't confront the past, remarked Sanyal.