Akbar the Mughal in a WWII Bunker
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| One of the 2 WWII bunkers that constitute the Navy Museum |
India’s new history-writers haven’t entered the WWII
bunkers of Fort Kochi yet. So you’ll meet “Akbar the Great” as well as a few
other Muslim rulers of older India there in their glory of the pre-BJP days. We
meet a handsome young Akbar on the inner wall of a bunker which has been
converted into a museum by the Indian Navy. Akbar is credited with founding the
Mughal Navy which had “over 3000 vessels… (which) played a key role in
defending trade routes (and) suppressing piracy.”
While Akbar and Tipu Sultan are known to Indians who studied
history before the NCERT started doctoring it, the Kunjali Marakkars of Kerala
are likely to be new to most. There were four Kunjali Marakkars who served the king
of Calicut (Kozhikode) in the 16th century. The Indian Naval
Maritime Museum in Fort Kochi honours them for organising the first naval
defence of the Indian coast, successfully resisting Portuguese colonial
expansion for nearly 100 years (1507-1600).

Maggie with Kunjali Marakkar IV
Behind: Vasco da Gama and his Gujarati Pilot
Kunjali Marakkar IV (the last of them) was betrayed by
his own king, the Zamorin (Samoothiri) of Calicut. The Hindu Zamorin
Manavikraman betrayed Muslim Kunjali Marakkar to the Christian Portuguese. It
was an act of blatant political chicanery.
Kunjali Marakkar’s fame had spread from the Cape of
Good Hope to China and it’s only natural that his king didn’t like that.
Moreover, Marakkar was claiming certain hegemony for himself. He started taking
certain autonomous decisions and called himself the “King of the Moors.” ‘Moor’
was the label given to Muslims by the Portuguese.
Zamorin Manavikraman decided to put the Marakkar in
his place. He formed an alliance with the Portuguese, who were his former
enemies, and asked them to attack the Marakkar’s fort in Kottakkal. Subduing
the Marakkar was no easy task even for the mighty Portuguese. After a long
siege, Kunjali Marakkar IV surrendered to the Zamorin on a promise of pardon.
However, the Zamorin handed him over to the Portuguese who took him to Goa
where he was paraded in chains and executed. His body was quartered, and the
head was sent back to Kerala to be exhibited as a warning to potential rebels.
Today Kunjali Marakkar IV stands tall in Kochi’s Navy
Museum. The ancestral home of the Marakkars in Kottakkal is also a museum
today, known as the Kunjali Marakkar Museum.
How much of this history will remain in India’s
official records is not certain. Too many things are undergoing changes in the
country and not for the better. For example, the education minister of Kerala
has had to issue a warning to certain right-wing political forces which prohibited
Christmas celebrations in the state’s schools. Such a situation would have been
unimaginable in Kerala, though they keep happening in other states, especially in
the North. Kerala has always allowed every religion to celebrate their
festivals with pomp and show. The present threats that non-Hindu festivals face
made me recall some old history as Maggie and I visited the maritime museum in a
place where volumes of history lie dormant even in a war-bunker.
PS. Recently I wrote a 4-part
series on Fort Kochi and its history.




Thanks for making Kunjai Marikkars, especially the IV come alive. Also Akbar. You might as well dig deeper into the defeat of the Dutch, at the Kolachal war.
ReplyDeleteYes, I'll do it. Five years ao, I reviewed a book which dramatised the war and its aftermath.
Deletehttps://matheikal.blogspot.com/2020/10/devasahayam-pillais-statue-in-one.html