The main idea used to interpret the ancient history of India,
which we still find in history books today, is the theory of the Aryan invasion.
According to this account, which I will briefly summarize, India was invaded
and conquered by nomadic light-skinned Indo-European tribes (Aryans) from
Central Asia around 1500-1000 BC. They overran an earlier and more advanced
dark-skinned Dravidian civilization from which they took most of what later
became Indian civilization.
In the process they never gave the indigenous people whom they took their
civilization from the proper credit but eradicated all evidence of their conquest.
All the Aryans really added of their own was their language (Sanskrit, of
an Indo-European type) and their priestly cult of caste that was to become
the bane of later Indic society.
The so-called Aryans, the original people behind the Vedas, the oldest scriptures of Hinduism, were reinterpreted by this modern theory not as sages and seers - the rishis and yogis of Hindu historical tradition - but as primitive plunderers. Naturally this cast a shadow on the Hindu religion and culture as a whole.
The so-called pre-Aryan or Dravidian civilization
is said to be indicated by the large urban ruins of what has been called the
"Indus Valley culture" (as most of its initial sites were on the Indus
river), or "Harappa and Mohenjodaro," after its two initially largest
sites.
In this article we will call this civilization the "Harappan" as its
sites extend far beyond the Indus river. It is now dated from 3100-1900 BC.
By the invasion theory Indic civilization is proposed to have been the invention
of a pre-Vedic civilization and the Vedas, however massive their literature,
are merely the products of a dark age following its destruction.
Only the resurgence of the pre-Vedic culture in
post-Vedic times is given credit for the redevelopment of urban civilization
in India. The Aryan invasion theory has become the basis of the view that Indian
history has primarily been one of invasions from the West, with little indigenous
coming from the subcontinent itself either in terms of populations or cultural
innovations.
The history of India appears as a series of outside invasions: Aryans, Persians,
Greeks, Scythians, Huns, Arabs, Turks, Portuguese, British, and so on. Following
this logic, it has even led to the idea that the Dravidians also originally
were outsiders. The same logic has resulted in the proposition of a Dravidian
migration into India from Central Asia, a few thousand years before the Aryan
invasion, overrunning the original aboriginal people of the region (now thought
to be represented by the tribal of the area).
Though this "Dravidian invasion" has
not been brought into the same prominence as the Aryan invasion theory it shows
the same bias that for civilization we must look to Western peoples and cultures
and not to India as any separate center of civilization. The Aryan invasion
theory is not a mere academic matter, of concern only to historians.
In the colonial era the British used it to divide India along north-south, Aryan-Dravidian
lines, an interpretation various south Indian politicians have taken up as the
cornerstone for their political projection of Dravidian identity. The Aryan
invasion theory is the basis of the Marxist critique of Indian history where
caste struggle takes the place of class struggle with the so-called pre-Aryan
indigenous peoples turned into the oppressed masses and the invading Aryans
turned into the oppressors, the corrupt ruling elite.
Christian and Islamic missionaries have used the theory to denigrate the Hindu religion as a product of barbaric invaders and promote their efforts to convert Hindus. Every sort of foreign ideology has employed it to try to deny India any real indigenous civilization so that the idea of the rule of foreign governments or ideas becomes acceptable.
Every sort of foreign ideology has employed it
to try to deny India any real indigenous civilization so that the idea of the
rule of foreign governments or ideas becomes acceptable. Even today it is not
uncommon to see this theory appearing in Indian newspapers to uphold modern,
generally Marxist or anti-Hindu political views. From it comes the idea that
there is really no cohesive Indian identity or Hindu religion but merely a collection
of the various people and cultures who have come to the subcontinent, generally
from the outside.
Therefore a reexamination of this issue is perhaps the most vital intellectual
concern for India today. The Aryan invasion theory was similarly applied to
Europe and the Middle East. It proposed that the Indo-Europeans were invaders
into these regions in the second millennium BC as well. Thereby it became the
basis for maintaining a Near Eastern view of civilization, which places the
earliest civilization in Mesopotamia and tries to derive all others from it.
Thereby the invasion theory has been used to try
to subordinate Eastern religions, like Hinduism and Buddhism, to Western religions
like Christianity and Islam, which are supposed to represent the original civilization
of the world from Adam, the Biblical original man, who came from Mesopotamia.
This is the case even though the ancient civilization which has been found in
Mesopotamia resembles far more the Hindu, with its Gods and Goddesses and temple
worship, than it does these later an iconic traditions.
The Aryan invasion theory has been used for political and religious advantage
in a way that is perhaps unparalleled for any historical idea. Changing it will
thereby alter the very fabric of how we interpret ourselves and our civilization
East and West. It is bound to meet with resistance, not merely on rational grounds
but to protect the ideologies which have used it to their benefit.
Even when evidence to the contrary is presented,
it is unlikely that it will be given up easily. The evidence which has come
up that has disproved it has led to the reformulation of the theory along different
lines, altering the aspects of it that have become questionable but not giving
up its core ideas. Yet with the weight of much new evidence today, the Aryan
invasion theory no longer has any basis to stand on, however it is formulated.
There is no real evidence for any Aryan invasion - whether archeological, literary
or linguistic - and no scholar working in the field, even those who still accept
some outside origin for the Vedic people (the so-called Aryans), accepts the
theory in its classical form of the violent invasion and destruction of the
Harappan cities by the incoming Aryans.
Four main points have emerged, which this article
will elaborate:
The main center of Harappan civilization is the newly rediscovered Sarasvati
river of Vedic fame. While the Indus river has about three dozen important Harappan
sites, the Sarasvati has over five hundred. The drying up of the Sarasvati brought
about the end of the Harappan civilization around 1900 BC. As the Vedas know
of this river they cannot be later than the terminal point for the river or
different than the Harappan who flourished on its banks.
Harappan culture should be renamed "the Sarasvati culture" and the Vedic culture must have been in India long before 2000 BC. No evidence of any significant invading populations have been found in ancient India, nor have any destroyed cities or massacred peoples been unearthed. The so-called massacre of Mohenjodaro that Wheeler, an early excavator of the site claimed to find, has been found to be only a case of imagination gone wild. The sites were abandoned along with the ecological changes that resulted in the drying up of the Sarasvati.
So-called Aryan cultural traits like horses, iron,
cattle-rearing or fire worship have been found to be either indigenous developments
(like iron) or to have existed in Harappan and pre-Harappan sites (like horses
and fire worship). No special Aryan culture in ancient India can be differentiated
apart from the indigenous culture. A more critical reading of Vedic texts reveals
that Harappan civilization, the largest of the ancient world, finds itself reflected
in Vedic literature, the largest literature of the ancient world.(*1)
Vedic literature was previously not related to any significant civilization
but merely to "the destruction of Harappa." How the largest literature
of the ancient world was produced by illiterate nomadic peoples as they destroyed
one of the great civilizations of the ancient world is one of the absurdities
that the Aryan invasion leads to, particularly when the urban literate Harappans
are not given any literature of their own remaining.
Putting these points together we now see that the Vedas show the same development
of culture, agriculture and arts and crafts as Harappan and pre-Harappan culture.
Vedic culture is located in the same region as the Harappan, north India centered
on the Sarasvati river. The abandonment of the invasion theory solves the literary
riddle.
Putting together Vedic literature, the largest of the ancient world, with the
Harappan civilization, the largest of the ancient world, a picture emerges of
ancient India as the largest civilization of the ancient world with the largest
and best preserved literature, a far more logical view, and one that shows India
as a consistent center from which civilization has spread over the last five
thousand years.
Therefore it is necessary to set aside the discredited idea of the Aryan invasion and rewrite the textbooks in light of the new model, which is an organic and indigenous development of civilization in India from 6500 BC with no break in continuity or evidence of significant intrusive populations such as the invasion theory requires.(*2)
Ancient India now appears not as a broken civilization
deriving its impetus from outside invaders but as the most continuous and consistent
indigenous development of civilization in the ancient world, whose literary
record, the ancient Vedas, remains with us today. Based on such new evidence
an entire group of scholars has arisen from both India and the West who reject
the Aryan invasion theory on various grounds considering the evidence of archeology,
skeletal remains, geography, mathematics, astronomy, linguistics and so on.
Such individuals include S.R. Rao, Navaratna Rajaram, Subhash Kak, James Schaffer,
Mark Kenoyer, S.P. Gupta, Bhagwan Singh, B.G. Siddharth, K.D. Sethna, K.D. Abhyankar,
P.V. Pathak, Srikant Talageri, S. Kalyanaraman, B.B. Chakravorty, Georg Feuerstein,
and myself, to name a few.(*3) Their views generally support those of earlier
Indian scholars and yogis, like Sri Aurobindo or B.G. Tilak, who proposed a
Vedic nature for the civilization of India going back to early ancient times.
The few scholars today who continue to hold an
outside origin for the Aryans have also generally given up the invasion/destruction
idea, though they may still be proposing an outside origin for the Aryans. They
are proposing an Aryan migration, diffusion, or mixing with indigenous people
which is quite different from the violent and intrusive form of the original
Aryan invasion idea (note Romila Thapar in this regard *4).
Some of these scholars accept an Aryan element in the Harappan culture itself,
owing to Vedic traits like fire altars which have been found in Harappan sites,
though they still may not regard the Harappan culture as a whole as Aryan.
Yet whether the Vedic people were the original
people of India, which is the majority view, or whether they migrated gradually
into India, the image of the invading and destructive Aryans is totally discredited
and should be removed. The image of the Indo-Aryans as proto-fascists, which
is how the Aryan invasion theory has been used to represent them, is totally
false.
The idea misrepresents Hindu-Vedic culture, which has traditionally been peaceful
and never invaded any country, inflames Dravidian sentiments, and casts a shadow
of violence on ancient India for no real reason. In this article I will summarize
the main points which demonstrate the invalidity of the invasion theory. This
is a complex subject which I have dealt with in depth in my book GODS, SAGES
AND KINGS: VEDIC LIGHT ON ANCIENT CIVILIZATION (Salt Lake City USA: Passage
Press, 1991 and New Delhi, India: Motilal Banarsidass 1993), for those interested
in a more extensive examination.
FOOTNOTES
1. Navaratna Rajaram and David Frawley, VEDIC ARYANS AND THE ORIGINS OF CIVILIZATION:
A Literary and Scientific Perspective (Ottawa and New Delhi, World Heritage
Press, 1994)
2. For the archeological work in this regard note CHRONOLOGIES IN OLD WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY, Third Edition, edited by Robert W. Enrich, Vol. 1. (University of Chicago Press, 1992), Chapter 26, The Indus Valley, Baluchistan, and Helmand Traditions: Neolithic through Bronze Age.
3. For several such views note B.U. Nayak and N.C. Ghosh, NEW TRENDS IN INDIAN ART AND ARCHAEOLOGY (New Delhi, Aditya Prakashan, 1992).
4. Romila Thapar, "Archaeology and Language at the Roots of Ancient India," Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bombay, Vol. 64-66 1989-1991.
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