I am amazed at the comments from Muslims taking umbrage as if they are being personally insulted and of Hindus replying with equally ridiculous notions! This is an exhibition on a historical period in the 1600s not yesterday not 10 years ago! I suggest you read the article properly, understand it then comment. Aurangzeb's cruelty does not mean that all Muslims today are cruel, nor does it mean that Hindus and Muslims cannot survive together. We used to live quite happily until recent political interests started creating divisions among the people. As Indians I repeat, we share a common history. There have been no end of cruel kings, emperors, rulers, dictators in the world irrespective of religion or race. If we can read history books without getting upset or reading insults where none exist, the world would be a better place. I suggest that whoever can should go and see the exhibition then comment. If the contents have been wrongly interpreted then say so, if you understand more of that period and start thinking about what it meant to your motherland and ancestors, whether they were Hindus who were persecuted by Aurangzeb, or Hindus who converted to Islam by force or by choice. Think about where we have come today. If Aurangzeb had been wise probably we would not have been colonized by the British. Where might we be today with all the wealth we had? This is constructive retrospection (looking back), not the meaningless insults and divisions you are fomenting with senseless comments.