As if ythe marathas didn't make it hindu vs muslim as well, they even destroyed their own hindu temple, siringiri temple is an example of that, what about vijayanagar empire, who when invading the muslim kingdoms butchered muslims ruthlessly and destroyed their mosques.
regards
I think you're being a little adamant here and not grasping something that is, in essence, rather simple. As the largest empire in India at the time and for many generations before, Mughals were the pole against which other kingdoms competed and compared. What they did was visible and set the benchmarks. Because one ruler here or one ruler there did something else, did not matter and was not half as visible as what Mughals did.
Akbar understood the situation clearly and that is why he was, more or less, benign on religious issues and cemented ties with other kingdoms strategically. That laid the foundations of the longevity of the Mughals.
This part is important for you to understand: In times of, let's say, Akbar, a Hindu in Awadh most likely would not have supported someone opposing Mughals but Aurangzeb through his actions made sure that Hindus across the country knew that their religion was under persecution and so they
had to support Shivaji. This is why Shivaji got support from Hindus bang in the middle of the Mughal empire - helped him escape, provided other support. This support led Aurangzeb to further persecute Hindus and temples which led to even more rebellions.
Even today, if you go to Kashi and many temple towns, the locals will share their ancestor's stories about how they built their houses and entire colonies so close to each other to the point that it's hard for one man to walk straight. Just so that Aurangzeb's army's horses, carriageways and soldiers could not pass through.
This is history and academics. There's no passion here, just reflection.
I don't care to indulge in labels of 'religious bigots' or anything of the sort. At the end of the day, Aurangzeb did not understand why Akbar did what he did. He went on a temple destroying spree and acted against Hindu holy places. He killed Sikh guru and waged war against the other kingdoms. Essentially his actions led to a consciousness amongst Hindus and Sikhs, across India, of the need to stand against the Mughals.
He changed the 'destroy temples because of war or politics' narrative of the Mughals to 'destroy temples because it's Hindu/Sikh' narrative and so laid the very foundations of why Mughals were eventually wiped out.
That is why I am perplexed on why Pakistanis adorn Aurangzeb so much when he led to the demise of the empire they are fond of. Perhaps, that admiration is what leads most Pakistanis to not realize that the political and religious landscape(or social contract) that Aurangzeb changed(relative to earlier Mughals) led to the demise of the Mughal empire in its entirety.