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Debunking 'The Taj Story': Brahminical politics behind Tejo Mahalay myth

By Aditya Krishna Deora* 
A new film titled “The Taj Story”—produced by CA Suresh Jha, written by Saurabh Pandey and Tushar Goel, and starring Paresh Rawal—has recently ignited controversy across India. Marketed as a “truth-telling” exploration of the Taj Mahal’s “hidden past,” the film claims that India’s most iconic monument is not a Mughal creation but an ancient Hindu temple—Tejo Mahalay. The film’s premise, directly derived from P. N. Oak’s long-debunked theory, attempts to reframe history through a lens of civilizational conflict, presenting Mughal India as a period of Hindu dispossession.
Yet the film’s real significance lies not in artistic merit but in ideological intent. It continues a project begun decades ago by P. N. Oak, a Maharashtrian Brahmin polemicist whose writings blended conspiracy, caste supremacy, and cultural chauvinism into a potent narrative. Oak’s Tejo Mahalay theory—dismissed by every serious historian as well as by the Archaeological Survey of India—continues to influence popular nationalist imagination. Beneath the spectacle of “historical reclamation” lies a more insidious purpose: Oak’s narratives work to consolidate Brahminical supremacy under the banner of cultural nationalism, while simultaneously erasing Rajput agency and demonising Muslims.
The Ideological Lineage: From Savarkar to Oak
P. N. Oak (1917–2007) emerged from the same ideological and cultural milieu as V. D. Savarkar, M. S. Golwalkar, and K. B. Hedgewar—Maharashtrian Brahmin thinkers who formulated the idea of India as a Hindu Rashtra under Brahminical hegemony. Their nostalgia for the Peshwa era reflected a longing for a Brahmin-led theocratic order combining scriptural conservatism with militant nationalism.
For these ideologues, the Peshwas represented a purified Hindu past—Sanskritic, hierarchical, and austere—unlike the syncretic ethos of the Rajputs or the cosmopolitan culture of the Mughals. To Oak, the Mughal empire epitomised “foreign domination,” while Rajput kingship, though Hindu, was morally suspect due to its pragmatic diplomatic and matrimonial relations with the Mughals. The Rajput tradition of honour, negotiation, and cultural synthesis did not fit the Hindutva binary of invader vs. resister. Thus Oak’s project was twofold: vilify Muslim rulers and discipline Rajput history into a Brahmin-approved Hindu narrative.
Tejo Mahalay: Appropriating Rajput Legacy
Oak’s most influential book—republished as “The Taj Mahal: The True Story” (1989)—claims that Shah Jahan merely took over a pre-existing Rajput palace or temple dedicated to Shiva and known as Tejo Mahalay. Oak speculated that it was built by either the Chandelas of Bundelkhand or the Kachhwahas of Amber.
This claim lacks any historical evidence, yet it serves a powerful ideological function. It allows Oak and later Hindutva propagandists to erase Muslim architectural innovation while appropriating Rajput heritage into a Brahminical cultural framework. In this retelling, Rajputs cease to be historical agents and become symbolic accessories to a narrative crafted by Brahminical nationalism. Once their history has performed its function—negating Islamic contributions—it is absorbed into a homogenised “Hindu past” controlled by Sanskritic ideology.
Thus Tejo Mahalay becomes a symbolic colonisation of Rajput heritage: Rajput agency is erased while the Brahmin is enthroned as custodian and interpreter of history.
Mina Bazar: Objectifying Rajput Women to Vilify Mughals
Another key element in Oak’s pseudohistory is the trope of Mina Bazar, a Mughal court fair where noble families interacted. Oak and later Hindutva writers depicted it as a site of debauchery and sexual exploitation, using it to demonise Mughals. In these narratives, Rajput noblewomen—who historically engaged in diplomacy and cultural mediation—are reduced to helpless “Hindu daughters” victimised by Muslim rulers.
Historical chronicles reveal a very different reality. Rajput and Mughal cultures shared similar notions of female honour and frequently defended one another. One often-cited episode—found in both Rajasthani oral history and Mughal sources—describes Raja Aniruddh Singh Hada of Bundi coming to the aid of Jahanara Begum during a Maratha attack. Jahanara declared:
“Asmat-e-Chaghtaiya wa Rajput yak ast” — The honour of a Mughal woman and that of a Rajput are one and the same.
Moved by this statement of shared honour, Raja Hada and his soldiers fought valiantly and won. Whether literal or symbolic, this story represents the mutual respect that defined many Rajput-Mughal interactions—far removed from the predatory caricature promoted by Hindutva polemicists.
The Mina Bazar myth is therefore not only anti-Muslim; it is anti-Rajput woman, reducing historically significant figures to instruments of patriarchal moralising.
The Brahminical Core of Hindutva Historiography
Oak’s writings reveal the Brahminical foundation of Hindutva historiography. His narratives elevate the Brahmin as the sole intellectual authority, while marginalising Rajput martial honour and Muslim cultural brilliance. By glorifying the Peshwas and appropriating Rajput heritage, Oak reinforced a hierarchy in which Brahmins claim ownership of historical interpretation, and others exist merely as instruments.
Thus the “Tejo Mahalay” myth is not eccentric but ideological—a Brahminical takeover of historical memory that excludes Muslims as “foreign” and subordinates Rajputs within a Brahmin-dominated civilisational narrative.
From Fringe Pseudohistory to State-Sanctioned Narrative
For decades, Oak’s theories were dismissed as fringe conspiracy. Today, they echo through petitions, broadcast debates, schoolbooks, and social media. The release of “The Taj Story” marks their mainstreaming. By dramatising Oak’s fiction in a courtroom format—where the Taj Mahal is “put on trial”—the film converts propaganda into public theatre, encouraging audiences to view pseudohistory as suppressed truth.
This is not about discovering history—it is about owning it. Monuments are turned into ideological battlegrounds to redirect public frustration away from real crises—caste discrimination, unemployment, agrarian distress—and towards imagined internal enemies. Rajputs, once sovereign agents, are repurposed as symbolic warriors in a Brahminical nationalist narrative.
This trend is illustrated by a viral X post by Brahmin influencer Amit Schandillia, who appropriates pre-16th-century Rajput jauhars to vilify Muslims, while erasing the centuries of complex and harmonious Rajput-Muslim relations that followed.
Conclusion
P. N. Oak’s legacy is not historical revision but ideological engineering. His Tejo Mahalay myth and Mina Bazar fantasy are not only anti-Muslim—they are anti-Rajput and fundamentally Brahminical. They convert Rajput history into an accessory for Brahminical nationalism and exploit Rajput women to moralise history through patriarchal codes.
Behind the spectacle of “Hindu pride” lies a deeper agenda: the reassertion of caste power over India’s collective memory. What appears as the reclamation of the Taj Mahal is, in truth, the conquest of the past by caste hierarchy. Films like “The Taj Story” transform history into a battlefield of social dominance.
To defend the integrity of India’s past, one must see through these saffron myths and recognise their caste logic. The struggle is not over monuments but over meaning—between those who seek historical truth in its complexity and those who reduce it to propaganda for a Brahminical state.
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*Social science enthusiast 

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