1. Political aspects of the Aryan
invasion debate
1.2. THE ARYAN INVASION
THEORY IN INDIAN POLITICS
1.2.1. The AIT and the
“anti-national forces”
There
are quite a few cases worldwide of late-medieval and modem history having
repercussions on contemporary politics, witness the role of bad memories
in ex-Yugoslavia. By contrast, I do not know of any question of ancient
history which is as loaded with actual political significance as is the
AIT in India. The AIT was turned into a political tool in order to
question the Indian identity of the Indians, and thereby weaken the claims
of Indians to their own country. This political use of the AIT continues
till today, especially at the hands of what Hindu nationalists call “the
anti-national forces”. Christian “liberation theologians”, Islamic
missionaries, assorted separatists and like-minded anti-Hindu or anti-India
activists are still highlighting the AIT in order to:
1) Mobilize
lower-caste people, supposedly the “subdued natives” forced into the Apartheid
prisonhouse of caste by the invaders, against the upper-caste people, supposedly
the progeny of the “invading Aryans”. All this propaganda is carried
out in the name of the low-caste leader Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, eventhough Ambedkar
himself had strongly rejected the AIT and the notion that caste status
has a racial origin: “European students of caste (…), themselves impregnated
by colour prejudices, very readily imagined it to be the chief factor in
the Caste problem. But nothing can be farther from the truth, and
Dr. Ketkar is right when he insists that ‘all the princes whether they
belonged to the so-called Aryan race or to the so-called Dravidian race,
were Aryas. Whether a tribe or a family was
racially Aryan or Dravidian was a question which never troubled the people
of India until foreign scholars came in and began to draw the line.’”32
2) Mobilize
Dravidian-speakers against speakers of IE languages, esp. through the Dravidian
separatist movement which was started under British patronage in 1916 as
the Justice Party, later refounded as the Dravida Kazhagam, and which reached
its peak in the 1950s. One of its gimmicks
was the glorification of the “black Dravidian” hero Ravana against the
“white Aryan” hero Rama, disregarding the Ramayana information that Ravana
was actually an Aryan coloniser of Sri Lanka and a performer of Vedic rituals,
while Rama was dark-skinned.33 Its most consequential
success was the sabotage (masterminded by the English-speaking elite in
Delhi, not in the Dravidians’ but in its own interest) of the implementation
of the Constitutional provision that Hindi, a North-Indian IE language,
replace English as official language by 1965.
3) Mobilize
the tribals, who have been given the new name “aboriginals” (AdivAsI)
as part of this strategy, against the non-tribals, who are to be treated
on a par with the European invaders of America and Australia. This
in spite of the demonstrable foreign (East-Asian) origin of the Munda and
Tibeto-Burmese languages spoken by the most vocal tribes.
4) Mobilize
Indian politicians towards delegitimizing Sanskrit, that “foreign language
brought by the Aryan invaders”, as India’s culture language and as a school
subject, in order to further dehinduize India and weaken her cultural unity: “Sanskrit
should be deleted from the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution because
it is a foreign language brought to the country by foreign invaders - the
Aryans.”34
5) Mobilize
world opinion against the “racist Aryans”, meaning the Hindus, since they
are the “Aryan invaders who imposed the caste system as a kind of Apartheid
to preserve their racial purity and dominance”, never mind the fact that
the association of “Aryan” with “race” is a strictly European invention
unknown to Hindu tradition. Now that “idolater” and “heathen” have
lost their force as swearwords, “racist” is a brilliant new way of demonizing
Hinduism.
1.2.2. Crank racism
The
explicit use of the AIT for political purposes is in evidence in a string
of publications aimed at pitting the lower castes and the tribals against
Hinduism, from Swami Dharma Theertha’s The Menace of Hindu Imperialism
(1941) to S.K. Biswas’s Autochthon of India and the Aryan Invasion
(1995).35 It is most obvious in the militant
anti-Brahmin movement spearheaded by the Bangalore fortnightly Dalit Voice,
edited by V.T. Rajshekar, a former Indian Express journalist fired
because of his links with Khalistani terrorism. This
extremist wing of the broader Dalit movement (Dalit meaning “oppressed”,
ex-Untouchable)36 has
formulated an Indian variant of Afrocentric history, copied from the Black
Muslims in the USA, with whom it co-operates closely.37
Thus,
the theory of continental drift, first suggested by Abraham Ortelius
in the 16th century, and formulated scientifically by Alfred Wegener in
1915, is harnessed to the cart of Dalit Afrocentrism: “The Dalits were
the original inhabitants of India and resemble the African in physical
features. It is said that India and Africa
were one land-mass until separated by the ocean. So both the Africans
and the Indian Untouchables had common ancestors.”38
Actually, the break-up of the Urkontinent Gondwanaland took place
millions of years before mankind spread across the face of the earth.
More importantly,
physical anthropology does not bear out the African connection of India’s
lowest castes: though their ancestors may well have migrated from Africa
along with those of every other homo sapiens, they are racially
far closer to the Indian upper castes than to the Africans. It
does not even bear out the racial dividing-line between upper and lower
castes: lower castes are genetically closer to the upper castes of their
own region than to people of the same caste rank in other parts of India.39
A recent survey has yielded this conclusion: “Detailed anthropomorphic
surveys carried out among the people of Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra,
Bengal and Tamil Nadu revealed significant regional
differences within a caste and a closer resemblance between castes of different
varnas within a region than between sub-populations of the caste from different
regions.”40 Yet, cranky as it is, Dalit
Voice is strongly supported by militant Islamic centres, by Christian
Liberation Theology circles and by many Western academics because they
share its anti-Brahminism.41 Their reason
probably is that they share Dalit Voice’s motto: “What
Hindus hate, we must love, and what Hindus love, we must hate.”42
In fairness
to the Dalit cause, it must be emphasized that Dalit Voice is not representative
(and often diametrically opposed to the goals) of the broader Dalit movement
as envisaged by Dr. Bhimrao Ambedkar (1891-1956), a most necessary movement
given the slackness of the other castes in implementing social reform.
Thus, while Ambedkar became a Buddhist, Dalit Voice downplays the
liberating message of Buddhism in favour of Christianity and Islam, religions
criticized and rejected by Dr. Ambedkar.
1.2.3. Anti-Brahminism
and anti-Semitism
Describing
the Brahmins as the “Jews of India”, V.T. Rajshekar combines anti-Brahminism
with anti-Semitism: “Since the Brahminical Social Order is much more ancient
it is quite likely that the Zionist founding fathers got their inspiration
from the BSO (…) Dalit Voice has thus proved
right in predicting that the Jews and the ‘Jews of India’ will join hands
to crush Muslims, Blacks and India’s Dalits.”43 He
publishes calls to “get a copy of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion
from the Iranian embassy in Delhi to understand the Zionist hatred against
Blacks and Muslims.”44
Rajshekar
also copies some of the classics of anti-Semitism: “The First World War,
the Second World War, the establishment of Communism, the rise of Hitler,
were also systematically planned and executed by Zionists.”45
With his sex scandal, Bill Clinton was the “victim
of a Zionist conspiracy”, for the Zionists, who “control the entire American
politics, economy and the media as well”, are “angry that Clinton refused
to finish the ‘demon’ of Islam and render all-out support to Israel”.46 Rajshekar’s
constant railing against the CIA-Zionist-Brahminical world conspiracy
has earned him a mention in a recent authoritative survey of contemporary
anti-Semitism.47
Even apart
from this confabulated conspiracy, an analysis of anti-Brahmin rhetoric
shows that it is approximately, and in considerable detail, the Indian
equivalent of anti-Semitism. Thus, Brahmins think they are the chosen
ones; they (at least the orthodox) distinguish themselves by funny dress
and hairstyle; they are cowards but past masters at manipulation and pitting
outsiders against one another; they are pale bookworms with a transregional
language of their own; they always help their own kind and deceive the
others; and they monopolize wealth. For an early example, Jotirao
Phule wrote: “The Brahmin’s natural (instinctive)
temperament is mischievous and cantankerous, and it is so inveterate that
it can never be eradicated.”48
Moreover,
just as in the Nazi view the antagonism between Soviet “Judeo-Bolshevism”
and American “Jewish plutocracy” was but a deceptive front for the omnipresent
Jewish hand, the Indian conflict between traditionalist Brahmins
and socialist Brahmins (e.g. the founders of the Communist Party of India,
mostly Brahmins) is also a mere puppet-show masking the hand-in-glove cooperation
between these two types of Brahmins.49 Even
their occasional shows of goodness and concern for the common good always
turn out to be exercises in manipulation. And worst of all, as per
the AIT, the Brahmins are foreigners, usurping the rightful inheritance
of the sons of the soil.
This line
of anti-Brahmin rhetoric on the model of anti-Semitism comes full circle
with the following allegation, originally made in 1971 by K.K. Gangadharan,
a Leftist sociologist from Maharashtra working in Christ College in Kanpur,
and since then adopted by the likes of V.T. Rajshekar: the Chitpavan Brahmins,
a caste in Maharashtra which immigrated from Afghanistan (hence their taller
build and lighter colour) when that region was islamized in the 10th century, and
which took a leadership role in the struggle against the Moghuls, the British
Raj and Congress secularism, are so “arrogant” and “fanatical” because,
unbeknownst to other Indians, they actually have Jewish ancestors!50
That Brahmins
monopolize wealth has even less basis in fact than the same stereotype
of Jews. Brahmins always had an ideal of “simple living and high
thinking”, and observed a prohibition of “selling” their Vedic knowledge
and ritual status; Brahmins with lucrative posts counted ipso facto
as lower in rank. Moreover, the traditional sources of wealth for
certain Brahmin families have dried up (abolition of maharaja courts, nationalization
or expropriation of temples) and today poverty is rampant among most non-westernized
Brahmins. But it is easy to sell the notion that the ritually highest
caste must also be the richest, esp. to Western audiences brought up on
one-dimensional materialism.
However,
the wealth aspect of anti-Semitism does find an Indian counterpart in the
Bania merchant caste, which in the past few centuries and particularly
in the most islamized parts of the Subcontinent occupied exactly the same
niche in society as the Jews in medieval Europe: often they were the only
Hindus who could buy themselves the safety which allowed them to preserve
their Hindu identity, and as non-Muslim money-lenders they were allowed
to practise “usury”, which is prohibited to Muslims. As a devout
and vegetarian class, they are stereotypical Hindus, and at the same time
they are a natural object of envy, just like their successful Hindu relatives
in Britain and Africa. This makes them another excellent scapegoat
for anti-“Aryan” crank racism in India, as exemplified by Dalit Voice’s
regular tirades against the most famous Bania, Mahatma Gandhi, and against
the Bania core constituency of the BJP.
1.2.4. Foreign support
for anti-Brahminism
According
to the politicized version of the AIT, the following is the grim truth
about the situation of the pre-Aryan populations of India: “The Aryan invasion
has been a disaster for India, just like for all the other Alpino-Mediterranean
peoples invaded by the steppe nomads. Let
us imagine that the Huns had overpowered us, destroyed our civilization,
and that we would be their slaves till today, as well as our descendents
for thousands of years to come, and we will understand the drama of the
defeated Harappan civilization.”51 These are
the words of a locally well-known Belgian yoga teacher, André van
Lysebeth, someone who owes a lot to Hindu tradition and who is probably
dubbed “that Hindu” by his neighbours. Yet, in attacking the Brahmins he
is merciless.
The chief
instrument of this racist enslavement was the caste system. In describing
the horrors of caste, Mr. Van Lysebeth has the good sense to draw attention
to the two separate concepts of jAti (the thousands of actual endogamous
communities) and varNa (the theoretical four layers of society:
Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaishyas, Shudras), which Europeans have lumped together
in the Portuguese term caste. But the
next thing he does is to re-equate them, this time as being both terms
of racial purity: “The Sanskrit term jati, which designates what
we call the castes, means ‘race’, neither more nor less. It’s simple, it’s
clear.”52 And: “The
prime criterion of discrimination, purely racial, is varna, a Sanskrit
word meaning colour (evidently of the skin).”53
Actually, jAti has all the meanings which the word “race” had in
the 18th-19th century: kinship group, nation, race, species. Thus,
mAnava-jAti means “the human race”, or more accurately, “the human
species”. And varNa, “colour”, has nothing to do with skin
colour, but refers to symbolic colours allotted to the elements, the cardinal
directions, and likewise also to the layers of society.
But
the notion of caste as a form of racism is well-entrenched: “Compared with
the imposed racism of the Aryans in India, the Apartheid in South Africa
is a gentle joke, and I am weighing my words.”54 The
villain of the piece is easily identificable: “Aryanized India is under
the thumb of the racist Brahmins, smug and full of their superiority over
all other human beings, even over all of creation.”55 They
set the tone for all the ills of Hindu society: “Venality, hypocrisy, callous
unconcern, are the characteristic traits of the Aryans, starting with the
Brahmins.”56
But Mr.
van Lysebeth, who equates Brahminism with Hitlerism, sees the problem as
even larger than India: “From India to Europe, the same drama has repeated
itself everywhere. Leaving their icy steppes, from 3000 BC onwards
nomadic plunderers invade the pre-Aryan civilizations, making the defeated
natives their serfs. These barbarians were neither of pure race,
nor superior, except in brute force. Everywhere they have destroyed
civilizations.” The only revenge left to the natives
was to smuggle their own traditions, supposedly centred around a Mother
Goddess cult, into the new orthodoxies as a counter-current against “the
foreign patriarchal system, imported from the cold”.57
In this age of multiculturalism, we had just learned to scrap the word
“barbarian” from our dictionaries, and that we should see the complex cultural
motifs and structures even in the most illiterate and primitive cultures.
But the Barbarian is back, and his name is Brahmin.
It is
perfectly OK to say about Brahmins those things which anti-racist legislation
has prohibited in many countries in the case of Blacks and others.
Be that as it may, the remarkable point here is the zeal with which a Western
yoga adept has thrown himself into the anti-“Aryan” struggle. That
is how deep the AIT has moulded public opinion in an anti-Hindu sense:
the very people whom you would expect to sympathize with India and with
the community which has preserved ancient traditions through the millennia,
have been enlisted in the opposite camp, for no other reason than their
belief in the AIT and the concomitant racial understanding of caste.
The same
thing is true of the Western Indology departments, where many professors
share the positions of anti-Brahminism to a greater or lesser extent.
In my student days in Leuven University’s Asian Studies department, I saw
students of Chinese develop into zealous defenders of the Chinese occupation
of Tibet, and students of Islam become apologists of Islam. The Indology
students, by contrast, never developed such feelings for Hinduism, and
this was in large measure due to the negative light cast on Hinduism by
its original sin of the Aryan invasion and the “racist imposition of caste”.
Of course it is legitimate to criticize caste; but it is perverse to do
so on the basis of false history.
1.2.5. The Aryan conspiracy
The anomaly
that the Aryan invasion is the key event in Indian history but that no
Hindu ever heard of it, has led to a new species of paranoia. Wherever
an invasionist looks around in India, he will always see reminders of the
devastating Aryan invasion. Often, these reminders are of an “occult”
type: those who pass them on to future generations are not aware of their
true meaning. It sounds like the story, popular among enthusiasts
of the divinatory Tarot cards, that Egyptian Masters of Wisdom decided
to encode their secret knowledge in the designs of ordinary playing-cards,
so that man’s propensity to play games would ensure the transmission of
the ancient knowledge to future generations until such time as people would
once more be worthy of being initiated into it. In the case of the
Aryan invasion, the time has come: after 3000 years of silence and forgetfulness
about the Aryan invasion, the secret has been uncovered, and the hidden
meaning of all manner of cultural elements is finally being understood.
Thus,
Malati Shendge claims that a number of hymns of the Rg-Veda were composed
to celebrate the victory of the Aryans over the non-Aryans, while at the
same time incorporating some of the traditional lore of the more civilized
defeated non-Aryans. In her view, this explains the prohibition for
Shudras (low-caste people supposed to be the natives) of listening to Vedic
recitation: “The Shudras were especially debarred from the practice of
the Vedic religion. This was not so much for preserving the purity
or the monopoly as for the fear which constantly haunted the Aryan mind
and of which it could never be free, viz. the revolt of the non-Aryans
leading to their (Aryan) expulsion from this land. Thus the Shudra
was prohibited even from listening to the Vedic literature simply because
if he understood the basis of this religion he might rebel, jeopardizing
the social peace. Secondly, if he understood
the dirty trick that was played on him, i.e. the borrowal of the Asura
lore and its transformation into an Aryan religion, he may once again be
reminded of his past glory.”58
One wonders
why these natives, who vastly out-numbered the Aryans and lived their separate
lives in their designated corner of the caste system, were unable to preserve
the true story about the usurpation of their land and power by these foreign
invaders. But then, gullible Westerners listening to the invasionist
reinterpretation of Hindu lore by Indian agitators have been made to believe
that the true story has effectively been preserved in the popular Tantrik
tradition.
Thus,
Mr. Van Lysebeth suspects that Hindu ritual and symbolism is all about
the struggle between Aryan invaders and Dravidians. Even Shiva’s
trident, now a symbol of militant Hinduism as well as a mystical symbol
into which all manner of philosophical profundities have been read, is
really a symbol of pre-Aryan resistance against the Aryan invaders: “India
is a volcano where the pressure mounts under the crust constituted by the
millennarian Aryan structure.(…) Shiva’s trident is ‘officially’ the three
gunas [the three qualities: light, turbid, dark] of Samkhya
[=cosmological philosophy], or the three nadis (subtle energy channels)
of yoga. But for those who know, it is all different, for
the trident was the preferred weapon of the Dravidians, while its Aryan
counterpart had four teeth. The Rgveda says: ‘With their four-pointed
weapon (caturashri) Mitra and Varuna kill the bearers of the trident.’ The
Indian Rajmohan Nath (…) comments on this verse: ‘This gives an indication
of the ancient conflict between the two camps which still continues in
India.’”59
Those
who care to look up the Vedic verse (1:152:2) will find that it merely
says, in Ralph Griffith’s literal translation, that “the fearful four-edged
bolt smites down the three-edged”. The passage as a whole is one
of the many difficult points in Vedic translation, and every modem translator
has a different version; but though they are mostly well-grounded in the
AIT, no serious translator has turned this passage into a reference to
aboriginal tridents against invaders’ quadridents. The most logical
explanation available is the one given by the classical commentator Sayana:
in glorifying the might of the truth (satya) in the sage’s power-word
(mantra), mentioned in the first half of
the verse, it is asserted in general (as if it were a well-known proverb
at that time) that he who has more or stronger weapons defeats him who
has fewer or less effective ones.60
As
for the meaning of trirashri, which was translated as “(Shivaite)
trident”, its dictionary meaning is simply “three-cornered”61; it
is part of a series which includes caturashri and even shatashri,
“having a hundred angles or edges (said of the thunderbolt)”.62 There
is no hint that the trident is meant.63 More
decisively, there is nothing un-Aryan about the trident, considering that
it was an attribute of the Greco-Roman god Poseidon/Neptune, both names
with IE etymologies. In Germanic and Celtic folk art, three-armed
(triskel) and four-armed (tetraskel) variations of a given symbol (fylfot,
swastika) coexist. That the three-armed version is anti-Aryan and
the four-armed one pro-Aryan, is without foundation.
Likewise,
Malati Shendge and others have made much of the Vedic myth of the Dragon-slayer:
Indra defeating the dragon Vrtra would be the Aryan invader defeating the
native Vrtra. Since this killing is associated with the release of
the waters which were withheld by Vrtra, it is also imagined that the Aryans
had destroyed the impressive waterworks with which the Dravidian Harappans
ensured the fertility of their lands. However, the myth of the Dragon-slayer
is a pan-IE myth, even known among non-IE people like the Babylonians (Marduk
defeating Tiamat). Have they all invaded Harappa and killed its chief
water-engineer?
Mr. Van
Lysebeth was invited to attend a Vedic fire ceremony (agnihotra)
once, but those wily Brahmins were not able to deceive him: “They are careful
not to tell us that it is in commemoration of the destruction of the enemies,
the Dasas, that several ingredients are thrown
into the fire, among which the grains symbolize the destruction of the
harvest, the cities and the forts, nor [do they tell us] that the pieces
of meat represent the enemies burned to death.”64
Is it not far-fetched to explain the ritual use of fire, which exists in
a great many cultures that have flourished on earth, as a commemoration
of the burning down of Harappan cities? And the ingredients of the
offering as representing the enemies who were burnt alive in those genocidal
bonfires? Especially when no traces of this Aryan campaign of burning
and destruction have ever been discovered.
Numerous
allegorical interpretations can be imposed on any text or symbol; in New
Age bookstores, you can find books on the “esoteric meaning of fairy tales”.
But this is mostly just what the Germans call Hineininterpretieren,
“interpreting meanings into the text”. None of the authors
imposing an invasionist interpretation on Hindu scriptures, rituals and
symbols, has ever shown how their reading is anything more than just that.
They are merely, as the saying goes, elated to discover the Easter eggs
which they themselves have concealed.
1.2.6. Indian Marxism
Among
the most active and determined academic opponents of any serious reopening
of the AIT debate, we find Marxists such as Prof. Romila Thapar (whose
positions will be discussed below) and Prof. Ram Sharan Sharma.65
Let us make it clear from the outset that there is nothing controversial
about the label “Marxist”: in India, Marxism is still the dominant paradigm
in the Humanities, and hundreds of academics are still proud to call themselves
Marxists. It is therefore a bit bizarre when Romila Thapar insinuates
that the non-AIT school merely uses the label “Marxist” as a cheap way
to dismiss the Indian pro-AIT scholars like Sharma and herself without
proper refutation: “Those that question their theories
are dismissed as Marxists!”66 If
confirmation from an unsuspect Marxist source is needed, Tom Bottomore’s
standard dictionary of Marxism mentions and quotes both R.S. Sharma and
Romila Thapar as representatives of Indian Marxism.67
The Marxist
dominance of India’s cultural sphere is not a convenient rumour, it can
easily be documented and its genesis traced and explained. Nehru
was fond of Communism though personally too bourgeois to join it.
It was chiefly his daughter Indira Gandhi (guided by her secretary P.N.
Haksar) who, when she was critically dependent on Communist support during
her intra-Congress power struggle, promoted Communists (often unregenerate
Stalinists till today) and created many new institutes for them, including
Jawaharlal Nehru University. In 1975, when the Communist bid to take
over the Congress Party from within was thwarted by Indira’s son Sanjay
Gandhi, the Communist power position in the intellectual sector was left
untouched: its importance escaped the Gandhi family, who only focused on
immediate political power. When in 1998, the new BJP Government nominated
people of its own choice to the Indian Council of Historical Research,
a roar of indignation went up among Indian Marxists against this “politicization
of scholarship”, highlighting to the alert observer the extent to which
the Marxists themselves had treated the ICHR as their own playground, and
how, like spoilt children, they couldn’t stand losing it.68
Marx’s
Indian followers have a confused but predominantly negative attitude to
the question of India’s legitimacy as a united republic. They are
willing to accept the unified Indian state as long as it is useful to their
own ends (as in 1959-62, after their election victory in Kerala gave them
hope of taking over India, a hope crushed by the embarrassing Chinese invasion
of 1962), but they are just as ready to discard it, because they do not
believe in it and have no loyalty towards it. Around the time of
independence, they actively campaigned for the Balkanization of India,
hoping to gobble up one fragment after another. They
never tire of denouncing anything that bolsters India’s unity as a “myth”.
For them, India is an artificial unit, a prisonhouse of nations, bound
to fall apart.69
In contrast
with other colonized countries, Marxists in India played no important role
in the freedom movement, except negatively. According
to a Western Marxist observer: “Uncompromising opposition to Gandhi and
his cherished Hindu convictions meant that communists were cut off in a
considerable measure from the mainstream of the patriotic struggle”.70
Ever since, they have supported every antinational cause: the crushing
of the Quit India movement (1942), Partition (1947), the Razakar
terror campaign to prevent the merger of Hyderabad with India (1948), the
Chinese claims to Indian territory (up to 1962: “China’s chairman is also
India’s chairman”). As late as 1997, Communist
leader Sitaram Yechury refused to admit that China had been the aggressor
in 1962.71 In the 1990s,
they have threatened secession of the states they control in the event
of a Hindu-nationalist election victory.72
It is a different matter that by the time this victory took place, in 1998,
the Communist movement had become too weak and grey to hazard such action.
To complete
the picture, it should be realized that as born upper-caste Hindus alienated
by westernization, Indian Marxists are animated by a seething hatred of
their ancestral culture. Unlike the British who felt some patronizing
sympathy for the heathens whom God had entrusted to their civilizing care,
anglicized Hindus feel a need to exorcize the remainders of Hindu heritage
from themselves and their surroundings.
1.2.7. Marxism against
India
To understand
the compulsion on Indian Marxists to hold out against changes in the dominant
AIT paradigm as long as possible, we should know a few things about their
unique position as compared to that of Marxists elsewhere. Their
animosity against the native culture of India and against a theory which
would strengthen their own country’s prestige is somewhat surprising, for
in most Third World countries, Marxists have also been ardent nationalists
in the struggle for cultural as well as political and economic decolonization.
In Communist countries, national history was rewritten not only to vilify
the reactionary forces (e.g. Confucius) but also to highlight and glorify
the nation’s contribution to material culture and scientific progress.
This is or was true of China, the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, and of their
supporters abroad. Thus, Cambridge scientist historian Joseph Needham’s
loyalty was to Mao’s version of Stalinism as a system, but he got enamoured
with China itself and wrote a very Sinocentric history of Science and
Civilization in China, highlighting the unexpectedly large contribution
which China has made to human progress.
Along
the same lines, we must note in India the lone Marxist historian Bhagwan
Singh, who has contributed to the critique of the AIT, focusing specifically
on the material culture and the economic data available in Vedic literature
and the archaeological record of the Harappan cities, to show that the
two match.73 Also, Western Marxists of an
earlier generation have protested against the imperialist projection of
colonial racism onto the colonized native society, as in the AIT-related
racial theory of caste: “The early Indo-Aryans could
no more have thought in modern terms of race prejudice than they could
have invented the airplane.”74 Finally,
Soviet historians have extolled ancient Hindu contributions to science
and political culture which were ignored by their political allies in India.75
Most Indian
Marxists, by contrast, along with their supporters in Western Indology
departments (when it comes to controversial issues, most Western India-watchers
are incredibly gullible parrots of whatever their privileged Indian contacts
tell them), go out of their way to belittle India and to vilify as “chauvinistic”
or worse any attempt to revalue India’s contribution. The mainstream
of contemporary Indian Marxism is true to Karl Marx’s own contempt for
and worst-possible interpretation of all things Indian. Marx
thought that Hinduism “was the ideology of an oppressive and outworn society”;
he “shared the distaste of most Europeans for its more lurid features.
(…) he was as sceptical as his Hindu followers were to be of any notion
of a Hindu ‘golden age’ of the past.”76
Marx acknowledged
the colonialists' historical mission of eliminating the “Asiatic mode of
production”, and claimed that colonial rule could only be compared (to
its obvious advantage) to the memory of Turkish or the threat of Czarist
rule, but not to native rule, for which India was historically unfit because
it had never been a nation. In an 1853 letter, Marx wrote that “Indian
society has no history at all, at least no known history. What
we call its history, is but the history of the successive intruders who
founded their empires on the passive basis of that unresisting and unchanging
society.”77
The idea
of a continuous and glorious civilization in North India dating back more
than 5,000 years does not fit in well with this vision. That of the
barbaric Aryans imposing foreign rule on the hapless natives is much more
useful, esp. for characterizing Indian society as “oppressive”. This
way, lingering colonial prejudices of Western scholars and the class interests
of India’s anglicized elite and anti-Hindu intelligentsia reinforce each
other to create the strange spectacle of Indians and indologists virulently
opposing any rethinking of India’s past which might increase the weight
of India’s own contribution to her own history.
For instance,
Romila Thapar questions the term “Indus-Saraswati civilization”, which
“evokes the Rigveda” (by bringing the Vedic river Saraswati, where the
biggest concentration of Harappan cities has been found, into the picture),
for its “ideological and political dimensions”, and she imputes to its
proponents the following motive: “The equating of
the Harappan and Vedic culture is not essentially an attempt at correlating
archaeological and literary sources (…) There are other agendas which are
being addressed in the attempt.”78 It is bad
form and bad scholarship to bypass someone’s arguments to attack his motives,
and even worse to replace his stated motives with imputed motives, but
this is one phenomenon which outside observers of the debate will have
to get used to: Indian Marxism has given wide currency to the approach
of “I don’t care what arguments you come up with, I’m going to tell
you what your true motives are, you reactionary pig”.
But then,
even if reprehensible, this imputation of motives may once in a while hit
upon the truth. 1 believe Prof. Thapar is right when she guesses this reasoning
in the minds of Indian AIT critics: “If it can be argued that the Harappan
culture is in fact Vedic or that the Rigveda is earlier even than the Harappan,
then the Vedas continue to be foundational to the subcontinental civilisation
of South Asia and also attract the encomium of representing
an advanced civilization, superior even to the pastoral-agrarian culture
actually described in Vedic texts.”79 However,
I think that in saying this, Prof. Thapar has also revealed what exactly
goes on in the minds of Indian Marxist critics of AIT criticism.
Indeed, Vedic tradition does gain in stature by being identified with the
vast and advanced Harappan civilization: that is why Indian nationalists
like it, and just as precisely, it is why Indian Marxists abhor it.
1.2.8. The establishment
vs. the outsiders
Since
the Marxists have occupied the seats of academic and media power for decades,
it is no surprise that their attacks on others often take the form of a
haughty dismissal. David Frawley’s contributions are laughed off with reference
to his lack of western academic training (he studied the Vedas in a traditional
Indian setting, becoming an acknowledged vedacarya). The fact
that he published about Ayurveda and Vedic astrology are sufficient to
denounce him as a “quack”. With reference to Subhash Kak and N.S.
Rajaram, indeed complete outsiders to the Indian history establishment,
Romila Thapar dismisses the contribution of these “American-trained
professional scientists researching on ancient India” as essentially “nineteenth-century
tracts [though] peppered with references to using the computer so as to
suggest scientific objectivity”, typical for amateurs who do history “as
a hobby”.80
Should
people be allowed to speak out on subjects not mentioned on their diplomas?
Romila Thapar seems to think so when it comes to her own case, e.g. as
a non-linguist she invokes the authority of the linguistic evidence several
times: “Such an early date for the Rigveda is untenable
on the available linguistic evidence nor is there support for the argument
of a westward flow of people from northern India, neither from linguistic
nor from archaeological sources”81 And: “These
reconstructions disregard the linguistic data, probably because it would
puncture their argument. It is conveniently
stated that the linguistic models arise out of political and cultural factors
and presumably therefore may be ignored.”82
The latter
sentence is an incorrect rendering of N.S. Rajaram’s rejection of the linguistic
evidence. Though he does make much of the
political context behind the linguistic theory of an East-European Urheimat,
his point is, rather, that the reconstruction of a proto-language can never
reach beyond the stage of mere hypothesis, for it cannot pass the decisive
scientific test of empirical verifications.83
This critique is pertinent, though by no means as devastating for the scientific
value of historical linguistics as Prof. Rajaram assumes; it is at any
rate more than a “convenient” excuse.
I believe
AIT critics are wrong to disregard the linguistic evidence, but I also
believe that for those who rightly choose to take it into account, evaluating
the linguistic evidence requires specific competence. The US-based
scientists’ exaggerated skepticism vis-à-vis linguistics has at
least made them abstain from dabbling in a subject they don’t sufficiently
understand. By contrast, Romila Thapar discusses
not only the linguistic but also the astronomical evidence, if only to
dismiss it as unreliable.84 Now, here is a
subject on which I would rather trust a NASA scientist like Prof. Rajaram
than a bookworm from JNU’s History department. Likewise, the evidence of
Vedic mathematics (Baudhayana’s Shulba Sutra as logical ancestor of Babylonian
and Greek mathematics) is a subject which I would rather leave in the care
of professional mathematicians like Rajaram and Subhash Kak. If anything
looks “19th-century” in this debate, it is the conspicuous negligence by
Prof. Thapar and other invasionists of the input from the exact sciences,
an input which has gone far in strengthening the anti-AIT case.
True,
there is often something naive about exact scientists when they enter the
field of the Humanities. But then, people from the Sciences have
a logic and a lucidity and a healthy aversion to compromise with prevalent
opinion (natural laws not being bendable to opinion), so that, once they
have learned the ways of the Humanities, they often do much better than
the established authorities. This is particularly true in India,
where bright students are invariably guided towards the scientific departments,
so that the Humanities typically attract the second-rate students, quite
a few of whom go on to become professors. Anyone can master the art
of providing erudite footnotes, but the Vedic and Harappan evidence, particularly
the evidence reachable through the “hard” sciences (astronomy, geology),
is a much more serious nut to crack.
Another
Marxist historian, Parvathi Menon, has ridiculed Dr. Natwar Jha, who has
elaborated a Sanskrit-based decipherment of the Indus script, as “just
a schoolmaster”.85 Comments N.S. Rajaram: “This
is not true, but it doesn’t matter. The great mathematician Ramanujan
was a clerk in the Madras port, while Einstein himself was serving as a
clerk in the Swiss patent office when he discovered Relativity. (…) The
idea of objectivity is beyond such minds; status means everything.”86
Mercifully,
Romila Thapar and her friends haven’t found occasion to comment on Shrikant
Talageri yet. His bright and innovative contributions, quite literally
written after working hours “as a hobby”, would not suggest to the readers
that he actually makes a living as a bank clerk. There was a time
when Marxists denounced academic ivory towers and applauded the contributions
of working people, but in India they have been too privileged to be even
polite towards people who make an honest living.
1.2.9. Indian Marxists
abroad
In their
campaign against India and Hinduism, Indian Marxists get plenty of patronage
from Western universities. When Non-Resident Indians raise money
to fund a chair of Indian Studies in a Western university, what they get
for their money is in most cases the appointment of an Indian Marxist academic
who comes to confirm the Western audiences in their most negative stereotypes
about India, e.g. by reducing every single aspect of Hindu civilization
to “caste oppression” (it is Axioma 1 of contemporary Indian Studies that
Hinduism is caste, wholly caste and nothing but caste). Thus, the
Hinduja Foundation has set up an Indic Studies programme in Columbia University,
but its staff includes determinedly anti-Hindu characters who even vilify
their own sponsors at conferences elsewhere.
One occasion
where I saw US-based Indian Marxists in action was at the 1996 Annual South
Asia Conference in Madison, Wisconsin, in a panel purportedly dealing with
the AIT debate. I knew that excellent and innovative papers by N.S.
Rajaram and Shrikant Talageri had been rejected by the organizers, so I
felt entitled to expect presentations of top-notch scholarship dwarfing
even that of Rajaram and Talageri. Instead, what the audience got,
was a canvassing session for the “Forum of Indian Leftists” without any
scholarly papers. The speakers disdained to
even mention any of the argumentative contents of the AIT debate, except
“David Frawley’s paradox” (the AIT’s puzzling implication pointed out by
Frawley, viz. that the Harappan civilization had numerous cities but no
literature, while Vedic civilization had a vast literature but no cities)87,
which they simply laughed off without discussion ad rem.
But Frawley’s
paradox is entirely pertinent: what are the chances that a literate culture
leaves the biggest conglomerate of archaeological sites behind, but only
a handful of short inscriptions as the complete corpus of its literature;
while the illiterate conquerors produce a vast and sophisticated literature
within a few centuries, but leave no sizable architecture behind? What
are the chances that the largest civilization of the world loses its language
to a conquering band of nomadic tribesmen? The AIT has the weight of probability
against it.
The one
interesting piece of information in the whole session was presented by
Vijay Prashad: about the impact of the Aryan race theory on the position
of (Asian) Indians in the USA in the past century. It turns out that
for much of the time, they were counted as “white” thanks to their IE connection,
and that they strongly held on to this profitable classification rather
than to show solidarity with other non-white minorities. But in the
1970s, when the policy of positive discrimination for ethnic minorities
started to have a serious impact, Indians were not slow to parade their
skin colour as entitling them to minority privileges. If true, this
is yet another interesting instance of the political use of the AIT.
However, Prashad revealed his destructive intentions when he called Dalit
Voice “a wonderful paper” and praised its disruptive positions, esp.
its division of Indians in aboriginals and invaders.
Biju Matthew
insisted on the Stalinist position that in the social sciences, no theory
ever comes without a political agenda. So, he reduced the whole AIT
debate to a question of cultural policy of the Indian bourgeoisie, which
was badly trying to be European. This was indeed part of the motive
for the 19th-century acceptance of the AIT by the likes of Keshab
Chandra Sen, but not of the present-day rejection of the AIT. But
Matthew had not cared to notice the diametrical opposition between the
former, colonial, and the latter, anti-colonial positions, perhaps because
he counted on a knee-jerk reaction of hostility to anyone who merely utters
the word
He was
all the more serious about deciding the burning question whether Non-Resident
Indians should call themselves “Indian” or “South-Asian”; he himself opted
for the latter “because it has the advantage of being antinational”.
He wanted South-Asians in North America to shake off their religious and
national identities and develop an “identity project” on the model of the
African-Americans, which would only leave race as the distinctive trait
of South-Asians in the US, a self-identification which approximates racism
in its original meaning. I am in no position to berate African-Americans
for defining their own identity in racial terms, for the reduction of their
complex ethno-religio-linguistic identities (Yoruba, Ashanti etc.) to their
skin colour was forced on them by Arab (7th-20th century) and later also
by European slave-traders (15th-19th century); but to deliberately drop
existing non-racial identities for a racial one, that is another matter.
Footnotes:
32Thus
spake Dr. B.R. Ambedkar in his paper “Castes in India”, reproduced in his
Writings and Speeches, Gvt. of Maharashtra, 1986, vol. 1, p.21,
with reference to S.V. Ketkar: History of Caste in India, Low Price
Publ., Delhi 1990 (1909), p.82. Though he condemned the Hindu caste system
in the strongest terms and ended up converting to Buddhism, Dr. Ambedkar
shared may doctrinal points with the Hindu nationalists, often even being
more outspoken than they: he was a merciless critic of Islam, opposed the
conversion of low-castes to foreign religions, ridiculed Mahatma Gandhi’s
extremist pacifism and religious fantasizing, lambasted Jawaharlal Nehru’s
foreign policy, and rejected the AIT.
33Note
the agreement between the Indian Left and the European racists. In his
L’arc de Civa. poèmes antiques, the 19th-century French poet
Charles Leconte de Lisle wrote: “Rama, toi dont le sang est pur, toi
dont le corps est blanc, (…) dompteur étincelant de toutes les races
profanes” (“Rama, you whose blood is pure, you whose body is white,
bright subduer of all the profane races”). In fact, the Ramayana is about
a struggle between two heroes who were both Aryan and both dark-skinned.
34Frank
Anthony, a Christian former Member of Parliament, quoted with strong approval
by Razia Ashraf, a Muslim protester against the Sanskrit news service on
All-India Radio, in a letter to Indian Express, 9-2-1991.
35Swami
Dharma Theertha’s book has been republished as History of Hindu Imperialism,
Dalit Educational Literature Centre, Madras 1992.
36The
term Dalit as a social category was introduced by the Hindu reform
movement Arya Samaj in the late 19th century in its campaign for dalitoddhAra,
“upliftment of the oppressed”. Its English counterpart “depressed
classes” was used by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar as a more precise alternative to
Mahatma Gandhi’s religious term Harijan, “people of God”, a term
which has recently given way to Dalit or to the legal term scheduled
Caste in ordinary usage.
37E.g.,
a few years ago, Black Muslims opposed the renaming of a street in Atlanta,
Georgia, as Mahatma Gandhi Square, in deference to the hatred of
the Mahatma’s integrationist views by the polarizationist Dalit Voice
group. It must be admitted, though, that they had a case in collecting
all the statements by Gandhi (during his South-African period 1893-1914)
which could be construed as derogatory to Blacks, see e.g. “Gandhi’s anti-African
racism”, chapter 2 of Fazlul Huq: Gandhi Saint or Sinner?, Dalit
Sahitya Akademy, Bangalore 1992.
38V.T.
Rajshekar: Dalit - the Black Untouchables of India, Clarity Press,
Atlanta 1987, p.43.
39This
was already argued by Dr. Ambedkar, e.g. in Writings and Speeches
(1989 ff.), vol.7, p.301, with reference to G.S. Ghurye: Caste and Race
in India, Popular Prakashan, Mumbai 1969 (1932). It is significant
that the vast majority of the numerous publications on caste fail to mention
Ghurye’s important work even in their biblography; as for Ambedkar, his
explicit rejection of the AIT-cum-racial explanation of caste goes equally
unmentioned in the copious pro-Dalit and Indian Marxist literature.
40Kailash
C. Malhotra interviewed by N.V. Subramaniam: “The way we are. An
ASI project shatters some entrenched myths”, Sunday, 10-4-1994.
41See
e.g. the Flemish missionary monthly Wereldwijd, March 1986 and February
1991; some of V.T. Rajshekhar’s separately published brochures (from Dalit
Sahitya Akademi, Bangalore) are transcripts of speeches given at Christian
conferences.
42Dalit
Voice, 16-2-1992.
43Dalit
Voice, 16-1-1993.
44Dalit
Voice, 1-12-1991.
45Dalit
Voice, 16-1-1993.
46“Clinton,
victim of Zionist conspiracy?” Dalit Voice, 1-9-1998.
47Léon
Poliakov, ed.: Histoire de l’antisémitisme 1945-93, Paris
1994, P.395. The phenomenon of anti-Semitism in a vocal though marginal
and unrepresentative section of the Dalit movement is attributed somewhat
patronizingly to the “mental confusion among India’s poor Dalits”.
48Collected
Works of Mahatma Jotirao Phule, vol.2, Government of Maharashtra, Mumbai
1992, p.73, quoted with approval in Dalit Voice, 16-12-1992.
49See
e.g. V.T. Rajshekar: Dialogue of the Bhoodevatas. Sacred Brahmins versus
Socialist Brahmins, Dalit Sahitya Akademy, Bangalore 1993.
50K.K.
Gangadharan is quoted to this effect in Gérard Heuzé: Où
va l’Inde moderne?, L’Harmattan, Paris 1993, p.87. As for V.T. Rajshekar
to this effect, see Dalit Voice, 1-2-1995 and 1-3-1995; and V.T. Rajshekhar:
Brahminism, Dalit Sahitya Akademy, Bangalore n.d., p. 28.
51André
Van Lysebeth: Tantra, le Culte de la Féminité, Flammarion
Fribourg 1988, p.59.
52A.
Van Lysebeth: Tantra, p.46.
53A.
Van Lysebeth: Tantra, p.47.
54A.
Van Lysebeth: Tantra, p.26.
55A.
Van Lysebeth: Tantra, p.58.
56A.
Van Lysebeth: Tantra, p.62.
57A.
Van Lysebeth: Tantra, p.30.
58Shendge:
The Civilized Demons. The Harappans in the Rg-Veda, Abhinav Publ.
Delhi 1977, p.378. Asura originally “god”, since late-Vedic times
“demon”, enemy of the Devas or “gods”. The shift is the result
of a confrontation between Iranians, who mostly addressed their gods as
Asura/Ahura (esp. Ahura Mazda), and Indians who mostly addressed
their gods as Deva. On both sides, the enemy’s term was forthwith demonized:
Asura for Indians and Daeva for Iranians were turned from “god” into “demon”.
59A.
Van Lysebeth: Tantra, p.211, with reference to Rajmohon Nath: Rigveda
Summary, Shillong 1966, p-83.
60Ralph
A.T. Griffith: The Hymns of the Rgveda, Motilal Banarsidass reprint,
Delhi p. 102n.
61M.
Monier-Williams: Sanskrit-English Dictionary, entry Trir-ashri,
p.461.
62M.
Monier-Williams: Sanskrit-English Dictionary, entry Shatashri, p.1050.
63There
are non-weapon interpretations, e.g. on the model of shaDyantra
(literally “six-pointed star” but effectively “conspiracy”), trirashri
may, in opposition to caturashri (“square”), have a connotation
of “not (fair &) square” in a figurative sense. Swami Dayananda Saraswati
(Rigveda, vol.3, p.76) translates it as “wicked”.
64André
Van Lysebeth: Tantra, p. 196. Similarly on p. 195, with reference
to Malati J. Shendge: The Civilized Demons: the Harappans in Rigveda.
65See
e.g. R.S. Sharma: Looking for the Aryans, Orient Longman, Delhi
1995, and the interview with him in a programme by the Dutch Hindu broadcasting
foundation OHM, 1997.
66Romila
Thapar: “The theory of Aryan race and India”, Social Scientist,
January-March 1996, p. 17.
67Tom
Bottomore: Dictionary of Marxist Thought, Blackwell, Oxford 1988,
entry “Hinduism”.
68The
ICHR controversy is discussed in Arun Shourie: Eminent Historians, Their
Technology, Their Line, Their Fraud, ASA, Delhi 1998.
69This
assessment-cum-prediction is made quite cheerfully by Romila Thapar in
her 1993 interview in the French daily Le Monde.
70Tom
Bottomore: Dictionary of Marxist Thought, p. 205.
71“China
vs. India: who is Yechury batting for?”, Indian Express, 28.2.1997.
72According
to Ashok Mitra, a leader of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) in West
Bengal, in an interview in the Rotterdam daily NRC Handelsblad,
20-3-1993, “India was never the solution”.
73Bhagwan
Singh: The Vedic Harappans, Aditya Prakashan, Delhi 1995.
74Quoted
from Marxist theorist Oliver Cromwell Cox: Caste, Class and Race
(1948), p.91, in Ivan Hannaford: Race, the History of an Idea in the
West, John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore 1996, p.383. Hannaford
summarizes: “The relationship between Brahmans (white), Kshatriyas (red),
Vaishyas (yellow) and Shudras (black) was not a color [“varNa”]
relationship in the ‘racial’ sense but a metaphor identified with dharma
- ‘a way of life virtue complex (p.95) - that was acquired by “the mode
of livelihood” or “the inherent qualities of nature”. His fundamental
argument was that the case for color as a dominant factor in the development
of caste was not supported by the evidence of historical literature, and
that it was foreign scholars who had made it so.”
75K.
Antonova, G. Bongard-Levin, G. Kotovsky: A History of India, 2 vols.,
Progress Publ., Moscow 1979 (1973), discussed in Arun Shourie: Eminent
Historians, Their Technology, Their Line, their Fraud, p. 189ff.
76Tom
Bottomore: Dictionary of Marxist Thought, p. 203, paraphrasing K.
Marx: The First Indian War of Independence, Moscow 1959 (a compilation
of Marx’ columns on the 1857 Mutiny in the New York Daily Tribune),
p.156.
77Quoted
with approval by S.K. Biswas: Autochthon of India and the Aryan Invasions,
Genuine Publ., Delhi 1995, p.10.
78Romila
Thapar: “The theory of Aryan race and India”, Social Scientist,
January-March 1996, p.16.
79Romila
Thapar: “The theory of Aryan race and India”, Social Scientist,
January-March 1996, p. 16. It is one of Bhagwan Singh’s main theses (in
The Vedic Harappans) that the image of the Vedic people as rustic
pastoralists is wrong, e.g. it is in conflict With many indications of
long-distance and overseas trade. To the extent that the Rg-Veda describes
a more primitive cultural setting than what the ruins of Harappa suggest,
this is explained by identifying the Rg-Vedic culture with an earlier stage
of Harappan culture, before its most impressive urbanization, e.g. by K.D.
Sethna: KarpAsa in Prehistoric India: a Chronological and Cultural Clue,
Impex India, Delhi 1984.
80Romila
Thapar: “The theory of Aryan race and India”, Social Scientist,
January-March 1996, p.16-17.
81Romila
Thapar: “The theory of Aryan race and India”, Social Scientist,
January-March 1996, p.15.
82Romila
Thapar: “The theory of Aryan race and India”, Social Scientist,
January-March 1996, p.17.
83N.
S. Rajaram: Politics of History, pp. 174-196.
84“The
use of astronomy in dating an entire text is regarded as unreliable since
the references to planetary positions could have been incorporated from
an earlier tradition which need not have been Vedic”, according to Romila
Thapar: “The theory of Aryan race and India”, Social Scientist,
January-March 1996, p.12.
85Parvathi
Menon in the Communist fortnightly Frontline, 21-2-1997; see also
JNU professor Shereen Ratnagar’s hostile review of N.S. Rajaram’s work
in Frontline, 9-1-1996. The principle of the decipherment is presented
in N. Jha: Vedic Glossary on Indus Seals, Ganga Kaveri Publ., Varanasi
1996.
86N.S.
Rajaram: From Harappa to Ayodhya, p.12.
87D.
Frawley (with N.S. Rajaram): Vedic ‘Aryans’ and the Origin of Civilization,
WH Press, Québec 1995, p.23. Note that the authors, or their publisher,
took care to put “Aryans” in quotation marks; and that the publisher changed
his name from “World Heritage Press” to “WH Press” to obscure the word
“heritage” (German Erbe, as in Ahnenerbe, “Ancestral Heritage”,
the name of the SS research department): so intense is the fear that the
vaguest allusion to terms employed by the Nazis would be deemed indicative
of Nazi intentions. Also see Georg Feuerstein, Subhash Kak & David
Frawley: In Search of the Cradle of Civilization, Theosophical Publ.,
Wheaton IL 1995.
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