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A recent Western academic paper argues that the Aryan invasion theory
is wrong and that there is an indigenous development of civilization in India
going back to at least 6000 BCE (Mehrgarh). It proposes that the great Harappan
or Indus Valley urban culture (2600 - 1900 BCE), which it notes was centered on
the Sarasvati river of Vedic fame, had much in common with Vedic literary
accounts. It states that the Harappan culture came to an end not because of
outside invaders but owing to environmental changes, most important of which was
the drying up of the Sarasvati. It argues further that the movement of
populations away from the Sarasvati to the Ganges, after the Sarasvati dried up
(c. 1900 - 1300 BCE), was also reflected in the literature. It thereby proposes
a complete continuity of cultural development in India revealed both through
archaeology and through ancient Indian literature.
Perhaps more shockingly, the article states that the Aryan invasion
theory reflects colonialism and Eurocentrism and is quite out of date. Such
statements echo those about ancient India that various Hindus have been making
since Sri Aurobindo nearly a century ago. Note the conclusion of the long
article. The ie. notes and emphases were added by me.
"That the archaeological record and ancient oral and literate traditions of
South Asia (ie. the Vedic tradition) are now converging has significant
implications for regional cultural history. A few scholars have proposed that
there is nothing in the 'literature' firmly placing the Indo-Aryans, the
generally perceived founders of the modern South Asian cultural tradition(s),
outside of South Asia, and now the archaeological record is confirming this.
Within the context of cultural continuity described here, an archaeologically
significant indigenous discontinuity occurs due to ecological factors (ie. the
drying up of the Sarasvati river). This cultural discontinuity was a regional
population shift from the Indus Valley, in the west, to locations east and
southeast, a phenomenon also recorded in ancient oral (ie. Vedic) traditions. As
data accumulates to support cultural continuity in South Asian prehistoric and
historic periods, a considerable restructuring of existing interpretive
paradigms must take place. We reject most strongly the simplistic historical
interpretations, which date back to the eighteenth century, that continue to be
imposed on South Asian culture history. These still prevailing interpretations
are significantly diminished by European ethnocentrism, colonialism, racism, and
antisemitism. Surely, as South Asian studies approaches the twenty-first
century, it is time to describe emerging data objectively rather than perpetuate
interpretations without regard to the data archaeologists have worked so hard to
reveal."
Is this the statement of a Hindu political ideologue? No, it is by a
noted Western archaeologist specializing in ancient India, James Schaffer of
Case Western University, who has nothing to do with Hindutva or even Hindu
spirituality. It is part of his new article Migration,Philology and South
Asian Archaeology soon to appear in Aryan and Non-Aryan in South Asia:
Evidence, Interpretation andHistory, edited by J. Bronkhorst and M.
Deshpande, University of Michigan Press 1998.
This article doesn't mean that Schaffer accepts a Hindu interpretation of
history as a whole or that he is even aware of the political implications of
this issue in India. He is simply stating his objective position based upon the
evidence he sees as an archaeologist. It doesn't mean that all Western
archaeologists have come to this conclusion, though most archaeologists in India
like B.B. Lal, S.P. Gupta or S.R.Rao have argued similar points for several
years now. But it does mean that views are changing and one can no longer reject
those who question the Aryan invasion theory as academically unsound or
politically motivated Hindus.
The archaeological record shows nothing like an Aryan invasion but rather
an indigenous urban based culture on the Sarasvati that shifted to the Ganga
after the Sarasvati dried up. This reflects the shift from theSarasvati based
Vedic literature to the Ganga based Puranas.
The Aryan invasion theory, as Schaffer notes, arose from a Eurocentric
view that was hostile to an Indic basis for Western civilization or peoples. The
discovery of close affinities between the Indo-European languages in the
eighteenth century required an explanation. By placing the original Aryans in
Europe, who later migrated to India where they got absorbed by the indigenous
population, it took away any need to connect the ancient Europeans with India,
which was not pleasing to the colonial mindset of the time. The theory
eventually developed an antisemetic tone. It was used to trace Western culture
not to the Jews and their Biblical accounts but to an proposed European homeland
dominated by Nordic peoples. Thus the invasion theory eventually became one of
the pillars for Nazi historians (yet strangely the communists in India have
become strong supporters of the theory and accuse those who question it of being
fascists!).
Unfortunately some scholars today, particularly Indian leftists, argue
that the rejection of the Aryan invasion theory is just a political ploy of
Hindu fanatics.They point out how Hindu texts like the Vedas and
Puranas, though mentioning different regions and rulers, contain many
fanciful and unscientific ideas. How therefore can we take their history
seriously? They fail to note that all ancient accounts like the Bible, Egyptian,
Greek, or Sumerian records have their mythic and legendary elements and this is
not used to so completely reject them. They similarly argue that Hindus today
have many fanciful ideas about history, like placing the events of the
Ramayana over a million years ago, as if this barred any Hindus from ever
having valid historical notions.
Such scholars, who clearly have as much modern political as ancient
historical concerns themselves, highlight how important Hindu nationalists like
Savarkar and Golwalkar argued against the invasion theory. They are afraid that
the rejection of the Aryan invasion theory will help pro-Hindu forces to stress
the indigenous nature of Hinduism in India, which could be used to brand other
religious groups asforeign and anti-national. Particularly they are afraid that
it could be used to make Islam an intrusive invader religion and become a
pretext to oppress the Islamic minority in the country.
Since some Hindu nationalists like Golwalkar who argued against the
invasion theory (though he never claimed to be an historian) had strange ideas
like trying to place the north pole in India in the early Aryan period, these
Hinduphobic scholars would like us to believe that anyone who rejects the Aryan
invasion must have similar unsound ideas about history, as well as a political
bias, and therefore must be without credibility. They also project the idea that
the Aryan invasion theory has somehow proved itself, though there is as yet no
real archaeological evidence for it and all such proposed evidence, like
Wheeler's massacre at Mohenjodaro, have themselves been disproved as
fanciful.
That the Aryan invasion theory itself has been persistently used to
promote anti-Hindu politicalagendas is similarly ignored. The invasion theory
has been used like a stick to beat Hindus for the last two hundred years (some
of these same scholars who are rasing the political bogey about the rejection of
the theory have used it to attack Hinduism themselves). That Hindus might use
the demise of the theory fortheir own benefit is only to be expected and is
perhaps little more than getting even or restoring balance on these issues.
The British used the theory to discredit any indigenous civilization in
the subcontinent, which was seen as succumbing to various waves of invaders from
the West, making for a patchwork culture derived from outside influences. This
made the British rule seem just another and perhaps necessary phase of a long
invasionist saga.
The communists used the Aryan Invasion theory as the basis for their
history of India, substituting the caste war of the Brahmin invaders from
Central Asia for the European class war model. Dravidian nationalists used it to
their advantage, claiming an older purer Dravidian culture that was different
from that of the Aryan invaders fromthe north. The Dalits used it to identify
themselves with the original inhabitants of the country enslaved by the invading
Brahmin dominated Aryans. Christian and Islamic groups have used it to brand the
Hindu Rishis as primitive poets leading nomadic hordes, making the Vedas, the
scriptures of Hinduism, as withoutany real spirituality! In fact, there is
probably no other theory of ancient history that has been used with such blatant
political intent or missionary aggression. The theory has even been used by some
scholars to make the Yoga tradition or such systems as Tantra, Shaivism,
Samkhya, Buddhism and Jainism non-Aryan (though, for example, original Buddhism
calls itself 'AryaDharma').
Given this scenario any group would use the demise of such a hostile
theory to reclaim value for their own traditions. But to use any possible
advantage that Hindus may derive from this historical revindication as a grounds
to reject it is ridiculous.>
The recent ICHR (Indian Council of Historical Research) controversy comes
in to play here. The new BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party) government, which has
pro-Hindu sympathies, dismissed the old council members whose term was up,which
was dominated by leftists and communists (including anumber of self-proclaimed
Stalinists). In their place it appointed scholars whose academic credentials
were sound but who did not subscribe to leftist views and generally did not
accept the Aryan invasion theory. The leftists cried foul and protested about a
possible Hindu rewriting or distorting of history for political ends. They
attacked senior scholars like B.B. Lal and branded his scholarship defective
because he rejected the Aryan invasion theory, dismissing his forty years of
work in the field as without basis. They projected anyone who questioned the
invasionist scenario as a Hindu fundamentalist and academically suspect.
By the same logic they ought to put Schaffer in this category. That some
Indian archaeologists may be Hindus and find pride in discoveries that give
antiquity to Hindu culture in India is not an adequate basis to reject their
archeological work. Western archaeologists have long used their discoveries to
find pride or justification for their Greek,Christian or Judaic traditions. They
are not banned from archeology for doing so.
Hindus might abuse the new historical scenario, just as other groups have
already long abused the old idea. But this is no reason to reject the new data
of history. The fact is that we use history to reflect or promote various
cultural, political or religious views. History as a human factor cannot be
viewed in a totally neutral cultural light. The very importance of history is
that it provides information on which we can build various interpretations of
civilization not only relative to the past but to the present and future as
well. Of course, we must be aware of the viewpoint, which may be a bias, of the
historian and try to separate that from historical facts, which may have other
possible interpretations.
Certainly Hindus can find much consolation in the new archaeological
data. It corroborates the Vedic historical record and shows a great urban
culture, the Harappan, to go along with this magnificent literary tradition of
the Vedas. The looming demise of the Aryan invasion theory is not a Hindu
political ploy. There is much archaeological and literary evidence against it
which continues to grow on a daily basis andhas moved far behind the sphere of
faithful Hindus. Schaffer's work shows this quite clearly.
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