CONTROVERSY:ORIGINS
OF THE ARYAN DRAVIDIAN DIVIDE
Aryan-Dravidian divide is a modern political-missionary
creation with no scientific or historical support.
- N.S. Rajaram
Science on Aryans and Dravidians
Even fifty years after independence, it is unfortunate
but true that most educated Indians continue to view themselves
and their history through colonial glasses. The education
system for the most part continues to be based on the
Macaulayite model. This is especially so in subjects like
history, which include long discredited theories like
the Aryan invasion and the Aryan-Dravidian conflicts.
What is the truth? Here is what science has to say.
A recently published study comparing the genetic composition
of Western Eurasian and Indian populations shows that
the supposed Aryan invasion of India 3000 to 4000 years
ago postulated by historians in the nineteenth century,
and still found in many textbooks is contradicted by genetics.
In articles that appeared in the British journal Current
Biology, T.R. Disotell, T. Kivisild and their coworkers
observe that the "supposed Aryan invasion of India
3000 4000 years ago was much less significant than
is generally believed." A key mitochondrial DNA of
the Western Eurasian strain accounts for at most 5.2 percent
in Indian populations as compared to 70 percent in Europe.
This rules out a recent common origin as postulated by
the 'Aryan invasion'. Any split that occurred from a common
population must have taken place more than 50,000 years
ago, according to the study.
This is in agreement with other genetic data, showing
that there were major migrations out of Africa into Southeast
Asia at approximately the same time. It is worth noting
that according to a widely accepted theory, humans evolved
in Africa and spread into other parts of the world beginning
perhaps 200,000 years ago.
This was during the last Ice Age, when much of the Northern
Hemisphere was uninhabitable due to extreme cold. The
Puranas also record that during an extended cold period,
people from all parts of the world sought shelter in India
in caves and rock shelters. This goes to explain the presence
of ancient cave- and rock art at places like Bhimbetka
in Central India.
Here is something really interesting. The authors of
the genetic study note that this West Eurasian strain
is not only insignificant, but also present in roughly
the same proportions in North and South India. This means
that there is no correlation between the languages of
the population and their supposed Eurasian origin.
The 'Aryan invasion' theory holds that ancestors of speakers
of 'Aryan' languages like Hindi, Punjabi, Bengali and
others were Eurasian invaders, whereas speakers of 'Dravidian'
languages of South India were the original inhabitants
of India. The genetic study contradicts this by showing
both to have the same insignificant proportion of the
West Eurasian DNA strain. So, according to science, there
is no Aryan-Dravidian divide.
The recent decipherment of the Indus script shows that
these findings are in agreement with findings from archaeology.
Jha and I have read more than 2000 Harappan seals and
they show that the Vedic literature already existed by
3000 BC. The literary evidence of the Rigveda also contradicts
any invasion from Eurasia.
Some recent attempts to place the Rigvedic land in Afghanistan
are seriously misguided. The Rigveda describes an established
maritime society in which references to the ocean, ships
and navigation are very common. It is not easy to see
how such a society could flourish in land-locked Afghanistan.
All in all both science and literature shatter the notion
of any Aryan invasion. It is one of the aberrations of
scholarship that belongs to what the great physicist Irving
Langmuir called pathological science. Let
us next look at its history and politics.
Aryans according themselves
The first point to note is that the idea of Aryans and
Dravidians as separate, even mutually hostile people is
of very recent origin. It is a creation of European scholars
of the colonial era, having no basis in Indian history
or literature. The Amarakosha, the authoritative lexicon
of the Sanskrit language (5th century AD) defines Arya
as mahakula kulinarya sabhya sajjana sadhavah.
This means that an Arya is one who hails from a distinguished
family, and conducts himself with decency and gentleness.
According to the Rigveda the children of Arya follow
the light, meaning they seek enlightenment. It has
nothing to do with race, language or nationality. (Sanskrit
has no word for race.)
This fact that the Aryan-Dravidian theory was
of recent origin was noted by Dr. Ambedkar also.
As he wrote: All the princes, whether they belonged
to the so-called Aryan race or the so-called Dravidian
race, were Aryas. Whether a tribe or a family was racially
Aryan or Dravidian was a question that never troubled
the people of India, until foreign scholars came in and
began to draw the line.
This is supported also by the Manusmriti, another ancient
authority. It tells us that Dravidians (in the geographic
sense) are also Aryans who at one time had fallen from
the Aryan fold when they stopped following certain Vedic
practices and rituals. (Was this the reason that Sage
Agastya went south of the Vindhyas, taking Vedic knowledge
with him?)
The Manusmriti has been revised many times to reflect
changes in society and practices. In one particular place
it describes Arya Desha as: The land bounded by
the mountain of Reva (Narmada), the Eastern Sea (Bay of
Bengal) and the Western Sea (Arabian Sea) is Arya Desha.
This is the land where black-skinned deer roam freely.
That is to say, the Manusmriti identifies Arya Desha as
none other than Peninsular India, which includes Dravidians.
It also tells us that the inhabitants of this country
are exemplary Aryans, worthy of emulation by all.
What this means is that the terms 'Arya' and 'Aryadesha'
were assigned to people and their habitat depending on
their conduct and culture and not race or language.
This also means that the assignment could change depending
on whether the people had lapsed from their expected standards
of behavior. So at the time when this passage in the Manusmriti
was composed, the people of Peninsular India were considered
exemplary Aryans. And this was because of their conduct
not language or race.
Race science: Colonial-missionary politics
The notion of Aryan and Dravidian as separate races, though
a colonial European imposition continues to influence
intellectual discourse in India. This is unfortunate because
it rests on scientifically discredited beliefs. Writing
as far back as 1939, Sir Julian Huxley, one of the great
natural scientists of the century, observed: In
England and America the phrase Aryan race
has quite ceased to be used by writers with scientific
knowledge, though it appears occasionally in political
and propagandist literature.
In Germany, the idea of the Aryan race received
no more scientific support than in England. Nevertheless,
it found able and very persistent literary advocates who
made it appear very flattering to local vanity. It therefore
steadily spread, fostered by special conditions.
Huxley was referring of course to the rise of Nazism
around the notion of the Aryan race. It should make one
suspicious of the motives of the English, who, while denouncing
racial theories in Europe, continued to classify their
Indian subjects along racial lines.
It was simply a politically convenient tool in their divide
and rule strategy. They appealed to the vanity of
one group to make them feel superior to others (but still
inferior to the English). They knew well that it had no
scientific basis, but found it a convenient tool for use
in India!
The British were by no means the only colonists to indulge
in such propaganda in the name of science.
This idea of dividing a
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conquered people in the name of race science
was a standard ploy of colonial officials and Christian
missionaries. Much of the bloodletting in ethnic conflicts
in Africa today is due to such mischief. Speaking of the
recent Hutu-Tutsi conflicts, the French anthropologist
Jean-Pierre Langellier wrote: The idea that the
Hutus and the Tutsis were physically different was first
aired in the 1860s by the British explorer John Speke
The history of Rwanda [like that of much of Africa] has
been distorted by Pere Blancs [White Fathers] missionaries,
academics and colonial administrators. They made the Tutsis
out to be a superior race, which had conquered the region
and enslaved the Hutus.
Missionaries taught the
Hutus that historical fallacy, which was the result of
racist European concepts being applied to an African reality.
At the end of the fifties, the Hutus used that discourse
to react against the Tutsis. Sound familiar? The
Aryan-Dravidian conflicts are a carbon copy of the same
racist divide, or the convert and conquer
policy. Fortunately that there is enough indigenous scholarship
in India to fight and refute such political charlatanism,
though it did succeed in dividing the people into mutually
hostile camps.
This was mainly due to the patronage extended to them
by the ruling authorities first the British and
then the Marxist dominated Congress. Better sense is now
beginning to prevail, though much too slowly. To their
eternal disgrace, the Secularist and Marxist
historians of India and their political allies continue
to peddle this racist nonsense. Having lost much of their
political influence, they have turned to pseudo-science,
seeking to find support in genetics. They shall live in
infamy.
The basic problem with these race theories is that they
are based not on any laws of nature, but man-made classifications
that use externally observable features. As one scholar
put it: The race concept has no scientific basis.
Given any two individuals one can regard them as belonging
to the same race by taking their common genetic characteristics,
or, on the contrary, as belonging to different races by
emphasizing the genetic characteristic in which they differ.
As an illustration, instead of choosing skin- and eye
color as defining parameters, if one were to choose height
and weight, one would end up with African Zulus and Scandinavians
as belonging to the same race. Noting such anomalies,
Luigi Cavalli-Sforza, widely regarded as the worlds
foremost human geneticist, observed that such external
features simply indicate changes due to adaptation to
the environment.
He points out that the rest of the genetic makeup of the
human family hardly differs at all. The latest data from
genome research that humans share at least 99 percent
of their genes in common. In fact, some scientist say
that it might be as high as 99.9 percent!
The same is true of misconceptions that lie at the root
of the Aryan and Dravidan linguistic divide. The idea
that different languages of a family branched
off from a single root language sometimes called
a proto-language can be traced to the story of
the Tower of Babel found in the Bible. Biblical beliefs
like the creation of the world on October 23, 4004 BC
have had great influence on the interpretation of Indian
history and culture by nineteenth century Europeans.
The great Max Muller himself admitted this Biblical belief
was the reason why he used 1500 BC as the date of the
Aryan invasion. W.W. Hunter, another well-known Indologist
from the same period was even more candid when he wrote:
"... scholarship is warmed with the holy flame of
Christian zeal."
It is a fact that even in linguistics, the study of Dravidian
languages has been dominated by Christian missionaries
from Bishop Caldwell in the nineteenth century to Father
Kamil Zvelebil today. As a result, theological arguments
rather than any scientific method is used in propagating
their beliefs. The following as an example.
Murray Emeneau, a prominent Dravidian linguist, wrote
as recently as 1954: At some time in the second
millennium BC, probably comparatively early in the millennium,
a band or bands of speakers of an Indo-European language,
later to be called Sanskrit, entered India over the northwest
passes.
This is our linguistic doctrine, which has been held now
for more than a century and a half. There seems to be
no reason to distrust the arguments for it, in spite of
the traditional Hindu ignorance of any such invasion.
Such a statement based on faith has no place in science.
By no stretch of the imagination can such scholars be
called scientific or even objective.
Cultural differences
Culturally the differences that we find between North
and South Indian temples can be attributed to the historical
experience of the last few centuries. The Islamic onslaught
destroyed centers of learning in North India.
Alberuni who accompanied Mahmud of Ghazni on his campaigns
in India wrote: Mahmud utterly ruined the prosperity
of the country, and performed there, wonderful exploits,
by which the Hindus became like atoms of dust scattered
in all directions. ... Their scattered remains cherish,
of course, the most inveterate aversion of all the Muslims.
This is the reason, too, why Hindu sciences have retired
far away from those parts of the country conquered by
us, and have fled to places, which our hand cannot yet
reach.
A historical fact worth noting that the last great school
of Indian mathematics flourished in far away Kerala in
the 14-15th century, where Madhava and his students worked
on problems of Calculus and Infinite Series more than
two centuries before Newton and Gregory. India before
the coming of Islam had many great centers of learning.
Taxila, Nalanda, Vikramashila, Sarnath and many more used
to attract students from all over the world. Following
the establishment of the Delhi Sultanate, for the next
six hundred years, not a center of learning worth the
name was established. (I leave out Islamic theological
centers.) It was only in the nineteenth century that universities
began to reappear. Even Jantar Mantar, the observatory
in Delhi, was set up by a Hindu prince and not the Moghuls.
It is a historical fact that the influence of Islam has
been much greater in the North than the South. This resulted
in a loss of tradition and skills, which had to be more
or less re-acquired beginning in the 18th century. The
main influence in the north has been of the Moghul Empire,
while in the south it has been that of the Vijayanagar
Empire and its successors like the kingdoms of Mysore,
Travancore and Tanjavur. It would be a serious error to
project this back into early history something
like projecting back the Portuguese influence on Goa into
the remote past.
At the same time, the differences should not be exaggerated.
For instance, in Kashmir, priests are recruited from Karnataka,
while temples in Nepal have priests from Kerala. The very
fact that Shakaracharya established centers in all corners
of India shows that he was not considered an outsider
by North Indians even in those days. Just as Agastya took
Vedic knowledge south, Sri Shankaracharya revived it in
the north.
All this brings us back to politics as the main contributor
to the Aryan-Dravidian divide including linguistics. The
originator of the Dravidian language theory was Bishop
Caldwell, the author of the highly influential Comparative
Grammar of Dravidian Languages (1856, 1875). He placed
Dravidian languages in what he called the Scythian Language
Family.
When another linguist (Gover) criticized Caldwell for
his unsound theories about the Scythian family and Dravidian
languages, it drew the following response: It would
have been well, if Mr. Gover had made himself sure of
perfectly apprehending Dr. Caldwell's Scythic theory before
regarding its refutation ... as not only of considerable
moment from a philological point of view but of vast moral
and political importance.
By moral and political he obviously meant
Christian missionary and British colonial interests. To
the disgrace of Indian education authorities and secularist
scholars, this is still the version of history taught
in Indian schools.
References
The Politics of History by N.S. Rajaram (1995), New Delhi:
Voice of India.
The Vedic Dravidians in A Hindu View of the
World by N.S. Rajaram (1998), New Delhi: Voice of India.
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