
The blockbuster film Chhaava—starring Vicky Kaushal as Maratha king Sambhaji and Akshaye Khanna as Aurangzeb—has ignited debates across Asia and the Middle East. While it glorifies Sambhaji as a Hindu warrior resisting Mughal tyranny, critics argue it distorts history to fuel modern religious divisions. But how much of Chhaava is fact, and how much is fiction? Let’s dissect the film’s claims, expose its omissions, and analyze its political undertones.
- Did the film actually portray the history or a medium to fuel the Hindus and Sikhs against Muslims?
- Who was aurangzeb? a tyrant?a Hindu hater? jizya imposer? What was the dispute between Aurangzeb and Sambhaji?
- Is Chhaava only an electoral strategy of some people to gain votes? Is it igniting a fire between Hindus and Muslims?
- Is 300-year-old history more important than today’s inflation?
- Why is the spending ₹300 crores to rename Aurangabad “Sambhajinagar” while a film like “Chhaava” floods theaters?
- Why the some people funding films that turn torture into patriotism?
Chhaava: Fact vs. Fiction
1. The Myth of Sambhaji’s Heroism
Film Claim:
Sambhaji is depicted as a divine warrior who spares Aurangzeb’s life and dies defiantly shouting “Jai Bhavani!”
Reality:
No Direct Confrontation: Aurangzeb and Sambhaji never met in battle before Sambhaji’s capture in 1689.
Betrayal, Not Bravery: Sambhaji was captured after his general, Ganoji Shirke, revealed his hiding place—not in open combat.
Agonizing Death: Mughal accounts (e.g., Khafi Khan) describe Sambhaji begging for water as his tongue was cut—far from the film’s heroic last stand.
2. Aurangzeb: Tyrant or Nuanced Ruler?
Film Claim:
Aurangzeb is a one-dimensional Hindu-hating villain who imposes jizya (tax on non-Muslims) and destroys temples.
Reality:
Temple Patronage: Aurangzeb funded Hindu temples like Chitrakoot’s Balaji and employed Hindu officers (e.g., Raja Jai Singh).
Political Pragmatism: His jizya was a fiscal tool, not purely religious persecution. He also punished Muslims for harassing Hindus.
Selective Destruction: While he demolished some temples (e.g., Kashi Vishwanath), others were protected—a fact omitted in Chhaava.
3. Historical Omissions
Sambhaji’s Scholarship: Fluent in 13 languages, he authored Budhbhushan, a Sanskrit treatise on governance—ignored in the film.
Maratha-Mughal Alliances: Sambhaji allied with Golconda and Bijapur Sultanates against the Mughals—a strategic complexity erased for a Hindu-vs-Muslim narrative.
Soyarabai’s Conspiracy: Sambhaji’s stepmother plotted with his half-brother Rajaram to overthrow him, a dynastic struggle downplayed in the film.
They Weaponizing History
1. Renaming Aurangabad to Sambhajinagar
- The BJP allocated ₹300 crores to rename Aurangabad, leveraging Chhaava’s hype to symbolically erase Mughal legacy.
- Political Backlash: Riots erupted in Nagpur after VHP activists burned Islamic texts, tarnishing the BJP’s “law and order” image.
2. Funding Hate?
- Propaganda Over Patriotism: Critics argue Chhaava is a ₹200-crore campaign ad, painting modern Muslims as “Aurangzeb’s heirs” to polarize voters.
- Selective Outrage: While the film demonizes Aurangzeb, it ignores Maratha atrocities like the Bargi raids in Bengal, where Hindu villagers suffered.
3. Distraction from Inflation?
- As inflation soars, the BJP prioritizes historical revisionism—renaming cities, funding divisive films, and stoking communal tensions
Conclusion: Why Chhaava Matters
Chhaava isn’t just bad history—it’s a blood-soaked blueprint for hate. By reducing Sambhaji and Aurangzeb to caricatures, it fuels the BJP’s narrative of Hindu victimhood and Muslim villainy. The film’s distortions—like Sambhaji’s fictional tiger rescue of Aurangzeb or the myth of Raigad’s siege—reveal a deliberate agenda 48.
Final Question: Should 300-year-old history dominate our discourse while inflation cripples millions? Or is Chhaava just a tool to distract and divide?
Stop watching. Start questioning.
References
- Wikipedia: Chhaava
- India Today: Historical Inaccuracies in Chhaava
- The Wire: Religious Propaganda in Chhaava
- Daily Country: Distortions in Chhaava
- Economic Times: Riots Post-Chhaava
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