Introduction
The
aryan invasion theory has been one of the most controversial historical topics
for well over a century. However, it should be pointed out that it remains just
that – a theory. To date no hard evidence has proven the aryan invasion theory
to be fact. In this essay we will explain the roots of this hypothesis and how,
due to recent emergence of new evidence over the last couple of decades, the
validity of the aryan invasion theory has been seriously challenged.
It is indeed ironic
that the origin of this theory does not lie in Indian records, but in 19th
Century politics and German nationalism. No where in the Vedas,
Puranas or Itihasas is there any mention of a Migration or
Invasion of any kind. In 1841 M.S. Elphinstone, the first governor of the
Bombay Presidency, wrote in his book History of India:
'It is opposed to their (Hindus)
foreign origin, that neither in the Code (of Manu) nor, I believe, in the
Vedas, nor in any book that is certainly older than the code, is there any
allusion to a prior residence or to a knowledge of more than the name of any
country out of India. Even mythology goes no further than the Himalayan chain,
in which is fixed the habitation of the gods... .To say that it spread from a
central point is an unwarranted assumption, and even to analogy; for,
emigration and civilization have not spread in a circle, but from east to west.
Where, also, could the central point be, from which a language could spread
over India, Greece, and Italy
and yet leave Chaldea, Syria and Arabia
untouched? There is no reason whatever for thinking that the Hindus ever
inhabited any country but their present one, and as little for denying that
they may have done so before the earliest trace of their records or tradition.’
The Birth of a Misconception
Interest in the field of Indology during the 19th
Century was of mixed motivations. Many scholars such as August Wilhelm von
Schlegal, Hern Wilhelm von Humboldt, and Arthur Schopenhauer lauded praise upon
the Vedic literatures and their profound wisdom, others were less than
impressed. To accept that there was an advanced civilization outside the
boundaries of Europe, at a time before the
Patriarchs Abraham and Moses had made their covenant with the Almighty was
impossible to conceive of for most European scholars, who harbored a strong
Christian tendency. Most scholars of this period were neither archeologists nor
historians in the strict sense of the word. Rather, they were missionaries paid
by their governments to establish western cultural and racial superiority over
the subjugated Indian citizens, through their study of the indigenous religious
texts. Consequently, for racial, political and religious reasons, early
European indologists created a myth that still survives to this day.
It was established by
linguists that Sanskrit, Iranian and European languages all belonged to the
same family, categorizing them as ‘Indo-European’ languages. It was assumed
that all these people originated from one homeland where they spoke a common
language (which they called ‘Proto-Indo-European’ or PIE) which later developed
into Sanskrit, Latin, Greek etc. They then needed to ascertain where this
homeland was. By pure speculation, it was proposed that this homeland was
either southeast Europe or Central Asia.
Harappa and Mohenjo-daro
Harappa
The discovery of ruins
in the Indus Valley
(Harappa and Mohenjo-daro) was considered by
indologists like Wheeler as proof of their conjectures – that a nomadic tribe
from foreign lands had plundered India. It was pronounced that the
ruins dated back to a time before the Aryan Invasion, although this was
actually never verified. By assigning a period of 200 years to each of the
several layers of the pre-Buddhist Vedic literature, indologists arrived at a
time frame of somewhere between 1500 and 1000BC for the Invasion of the Aryans.
Using Biblical chronology as their sheet anchor, nineteenth century indologists
placed the creation of the world at 4000BC1 and Noah’s flood at 2500BC.
They thus postulated that the Aryan Invasion could not have taken place any
time before 1500BC.
Archeologists excavating the sites at Harappa and
Mohenjo-daro
found human skeletal remains; this seemed to them to be undeniable evidence
that a large-scale massacre had taken place in these cities by the invading
Aryan hordes. Prof. G. F. Dales (Former head of department of South-Asian
Archaeology and Anthropology, Berkeley University, USA) in his ‘The
Mythical Massacre at Mohenjo-daro’, states the following about this
evidence:
Mohenjo-daro
‘What of these skeletal remains that
have taken on such undeserved importance? Nine years of extensive excavations
at Mohenjo-daro (1922-31) - a city of three miles
in circuit - yielded the total of some 37 skeletons, or parts thereof, that can
be attributed with some certainty to the period of the Indus
civilizations. Some of these were found in contorted positions and groupings
that suggest anything but orderly burials. Many are either disarticulated or
incomplete. They were all found in the area of the Lower Town
- probably the residential district. Not a single body was found within the
area of the fortified citadel where one could reasonably expect the final defense
of this thriving capital city to have been made…Where are the burned
fortresses, the arrow heads, weapons, pieces of armor, the smashed chariots and
bodies of the invaders and defenders? Despite the extensive excavations at the
largest Harappan sites, there is not a single bit of evidence that can be
brought forth as unconditional proof of an armed conquest and the destruction
on the supposed scale of the Aryan Invasion.’
Evidence from the Vedas
It was therefore concluded that light-skinned
nomads from Central Asia who wiped out the
indigenous culture and enslaved or butchered the people, imposing their alien
culture upon them had invaded the Indian subcontinent. They then wrote down
their exploits in the form of the Rg Veda. This hypothesis was apparently
based upon references in the Vedas that point to a conflict between
the light-skinned Aryans and the dark-skinned Dasyus.2 This theory was
strengthened by the archeological discoveries in the Indus Valley
of the charred skeletal remains that we have mentioned above. Thus the Vedas
became nothing more than a series of poetic tales about the skirmishes between
two barbaric tribes.
However, there are other references in the Rg
Veda3 that point to India
being a land of mixed races. The Rg Veda also states that "We
pray to Indra to give glory by which the Dasyus will become Aryans."4
Such a statement confirms that to be an Aryan was not a matter of birth.
An inattentive skimming through the Vedas
has resulted in a gross misinterpretation of social and racial struggles
amongst the ancient Indians. North Aryans were pitted against the Southern Dravidians, high-castes against low-castes,
civilized orthodox Indians against barbaric heterodox tribals. The hypothesis
that of racial hatred between the Aryans and the dark-skinned Dasyus has no sastric
foundation, yet some ‘scholars’ have misinterpreted texts to try to prove that
there was racial hatred amongst the Aryans and Dravidians (such as the Rg
Veda story of Indra slaying the demon Vrta5 ).
Based on literary analysis, many scholars
including B.G. Tilak, Dayananda Saraswati and Aurobindo dismissed any idea of
an Aryan Invasion. For example, if the Aryans were foreign invaders, why is it
that they don’t name places outside of India as their religious sites? Why
do the Vedas only glorify holy placeswithin India?
What is an ‘Aryan’?
Max Mueller
The Sanskrit word ‘Aryan’
refers to one who is righteous and noble. It is also used in the context of
addressing a gentleman (Arya-putra, Aryakanya etc).6
Nowhere in the Vedic literature is the word used to denote race or language.
This was a concoction by Max Mueller who, in 1853, introduced
the word ‘Arya’ into the English language as referring a particular
race and language. He did this in order to give credibility to his Aryan race
theory. However in 1888, when challenged by other eminent scholars and
historians, Mueller could see that his reputation was in jeopardy and made the
following statement, thus refuting his own theory -"I have declared again and again
that if I say Aryas, I mean neither blood nor bones, nor hair, nor skull; I
mean simply those who speak an Aryan language...to me an ethnologist who speaks
of Aryan race, Aryan blood, Aryan eyes and hair, is as great a sinner as a
linguist who speaks of a dolichocephalic dictionary or a brachycephalic
grammar." (Max Mueller, Biographies of Words and the Home of the Aryas,
1888, pg 120)
But the dye had already been cast! Political and
Nationalist groups in Germany
and France
exploited this racial phenomenon to propagate the supremacy of an assumed Aryan
race of white people. Later, Adolf Hitler used this ideology to the extreme for
his political hegemony and his barbaric crusade to terrorize Jews, Slavs and
other racial minorities, culminating in the holocaust of millions of innocent
people.
According to Mueller’s
etymological explanation of ‘Aryan’, the word is derived from ‘ar’
(to plough, to cultivate). Therefore Arya means ‘a cultivator, or
farmer’. This is opposed to the idea that the Aryans were wandering nomads.
V.S. Apte's Sanskrit-English Dictionary relates the word Arya
to the root ‘r-’ to which the prefix ‘a’ has been added in
order to give a negating meaning. Therefore the meaning of Arya is
given as ‘excellent, best’, followed by ‘respectable’ and as a noun, ‘master,
lord, worthy, honorable, excellent,’ ‘upholder of Arya values, and
further: teacher, employer, master, father-in-law, friend.’
No Nomads
Kenneth Kennedy of Cornell
University has recently proven that
there was no significant influx of people into India during 4500 to 800BC.
Furthermore it is impossible for sites stretching over one thousand miles to
have all become simultaneously abandoned due to the Invasion of Nomadic Tribes.
There is no solid evidence that the Aryans
belonged to a nomadic tribe. In fact, to suggest that a nomadic horde of
barbarians wrote books of such profound wisdom as the Vedas and Upanisads
is nothing more than an absurdity and defies imagination.
Although in the Rg Veda Indra is
described as the ‘Destroyer of Cities,’ the same text mentions that the Aryan
people themselves were urban dwellers with hundreds of cities of their own.
They are mentioned as a complex metropolitan society with numerous professions
and as a seafaring race. This begs the question, if the Aryans had indeed
invaded the city of Harrapa,
why did they not inhabit it after? Archeological evidence shows that the city
was left deserted after the ‘Invasion’.
Colin Renfrew, Prof. of Archeology at Cambridge, writes in his
book Archeology and Language: The Puzzle of Indo-European Origins’ -‘It is certainly true that the gods
invoked do aid the Aryas by over-throwing forts, but this does not in itself
establish that the Aryas had no forts themselves.Nor does the fleetness in battle,
provided by horses (who were clearly used primarily for pulling chariots), in
itself suggest that the writers of these hymns were nomads. Indeed the chariot
is not a vehicle especially associated with nomads’
Horses and
Chariots
The Invasion Theory was linked to references of
horses in the Vedas, assuming that the Aryans brought horses and
chariots with them, giving military superiority that made it possible for them
to conquer the indigenous inhabitants of India. Indologists tried to credit
this theory by claiming that the domestication of the horse took place just
before 1500BC. Their proof for this was that there were no traces of horses and
chariots found in the Indus
Valley. The Vedic
literature nowhere mentions riding in battle and the word ‘asva’ for
horse was often used figuratively for speed. Recent excavations by Dr.S.R. Rao
have discovered both the remains of a horse from both the Late Harrapan Period
and the Early Harrapan Period (dated before the supposed Invasion by the
Aryans), and a clay model of a horse in Mohenjo-daro.
Since Dr. Rao’s discoveries other archeologists have uncovered numerous horse
bones of both domesticated and combat types. New discoveries in the Ukraine also
proves that horse riding was prevalent as early as 4000BC – thus debunking the
misconception that the Aryan nomads came riding into history after 2000BC.
Another important point in this regard is that
nomadic tribes do not use chariots. They are used in areas of flat land such as
the Gangetic plains of Northern India. An
Invasion of India from Central Asia would
require crossing mountains and deserts – a chariot would be useless for such an
exercise. Much later, further excavations in the Indus Valley
(and pre-Indus civilizations) revealed horses and evidence of the wheel on the
form of a seal showing a spoked wheel (as used on chariots).
An Iron Culture
Similarly, it was claimed that another reason why
the Invading Aryans gained the upper hand was because their weapons were made
of iron. This was based upon the word ‘ayas’ found in the Vedas,
which was translated as iron. Another reason was that iron was not found in the
Indus Valley region.
However, in other
Indo-European languages, ayas refers to bronze, copper or ore. It is
dubious to say that ayas only referred to iron, especially when the Rg
Veda does not mention other metals apart from gold, which is mentioned
more frequently than ayas. Furthermore, the Yajur and Atharva
Vedas refer to different colors of ayas. This seems to show
that he word was a generic term for all types of metal. It is also mentioned in
the Vedas that the dasyus (enemies of the Aryans) also used ayas
to build their cities. Thus there is no hard evidence to prove that the ‘Aryans
invaders’ were an iron-based culture and their enemies were not.
Yajna-vedhis
Throughout the Vedas, there is mention
of fire-sacrifices (yajnas) and the elaborate construction of vedhis
(fire altars). Fire-sacrifices were probably the most important aspect of
worshiping the Supreme for the Aryan people. However, the remains of yajna-vedhis
(fire altars) were uncovered in Harrapa by B.B. Lal of the Archeological Survey
of India, in his excavations at the third millenium site of Kalibangan.
The geometry of these yajna-vedhis is
explained in the Vedic texts such as the Satpatha-brahmana. The University of California
at Berkley has compared this geometry to the
early geometry of Ancient Greece and Mesopotamia
and established that the geometry found in the Vedic scriptures should be dated
before 1700BC. Such evidence proves that the Harrapans were part of the Vedic
fold.
Objections in the
Realm of Linguistics and Literature
There are various objections to the conclusions
reached by the indologists concerning linguistics. Firstly they have never
given a plausible excuse to explain how a Nomadic Invasion could have
overwhelmed the original languages in one of the most densely populated regions
of the ancient world.
Secondly, there are more
linguistic changes in Vedic Sanskrit than there are in classical Sanskrit since
the time of Panini (aprox.500 BC). So although they have assigned an arbitrary
figure of 200 year periods to each of the four Vedas, each of these
periods could have existed for any number of centuries and the 200 year figure
is totally subjective and probably too short a figure.
Another important point is that none of the Vedic
literatures refer to any Invasion from outside or an original homeland from
which the Aryans came from. They only focus upon the region of the Seven Rivers
(sapta-sindhu). The Puranas refer to migrations of people out
of India, which explains the
discoveries of treaties between kings with Aryan names in the Middle
East, and references to Vedic gods in West Asian texts in the
second millenium BC. However, the indologists try to explain these as traces of
the migratory path of the Aryans into India.
North-South Divide
Indologists have concluded that the original
inhabitants of the Indus
Valley civilization were
of Dravidian descent. This poses another interesting question. If the Aryans
had invaded and forced the Dravidians down to the South, why is there no
Aryan/Dravidian divide in the respective religious literatures and historical
traditions? Prior to the British, the North and South lived in peace and there
was a continuous cultural exchange between the two. Sanskrit was the common
language between the two regions for centuries. Great acaryas such as
Sankara, Ramanuja, Madhva, Vallabha, and Nimbarka were all from South, yet they
are all respected in North India. Prior to
them, there were great sages from the South such as Bodhayana and Apastamba.
Agastya Rsi is placed in high regard in South India as it is said that he
brought the Tamil language from Mount
Kailasa to the South.7
Yet he is from the North! Are we to understand that the South was uninhabited
before the Aryan Invasion? If not, who were the original inhabitants of South India, who accepted these newcomers from the North
without any struggle or hostility?
Saivism
Pasupati Siva
The advocates of the
Invasion theory argue that the inhabitants of Indus valley were Saivites
(Siva worshippers) and since Saivism is more prevalent among the South Indians,
the inhabitants of the Indus valley region
must have been Dravidians. Siva worship, however, is not alien to Vedic
culture, and is certainly not confined to South India.
The words Siva and Sambhu are not Dravidian in origin as some
indologists would have us believe (derived from the Tamil words ‘civa’
- to redden, to become angry, and ‘cembu’ - copper, the red metal).
Both words have Sanskrit roots – ‘si’ meaning auspicious, gracious,
benevolent, helpful, kind, and ‘sam’ meaning being or existing for
happiness or welfare, granting or causing happiness, benevolent, helpful, kind.
These words are used in this sense only, right from their very first
occurrence. 8 Moreover, some of the most important holy places for
Saivites are located in North India: the traditional holy residence of Lord
Siva is Mount Kailasa situated in the far north. Varanasi is the most
revered and auspicious seat of Saivism. There are verses in the Rg Veda
mentioning Siva and Rudra and consider him to be an important deity. Indra
himself is called Siva several times in Rg Veda (2:20:3, 6:45:17,
8:93:3).
So Siva is not a Dravidian divinity only, and by
no means is he a non-Vedic divinity. Indologists have also presented
terra-cotta lumps found in the fire-alters in Harappa and taken them to be Siva-lingas,
implying that Saivism was prevalent among the Indus
valley people. But these terra-cotta lumps have been proved to be the measures
for weighing commodities by shopkeepers and merchants. Their weights have been
found in perfect integral ratios, in the manner like 1 gm, 2 gms, 5 gms, 10 gms
etc. They were not used as the Siva-lingas for worship, but as the
weight measurements.
The Discovery of the Sarasvati River
Whereas the famous River Ganga is mentioned only
once in the Rg Veda, the River Sarasvati is mentioned at least sixty
times. Sarasvati is now a dry river, but it once flowed all the way from the
Himalayas to the ocean across the desert
of Rajasthan. Research by
Dr. Wakankar has verified that the River Sarasvati changed course at least four
times before going completely dry around 1900BC. 9 The latest
satellite data combined with field archaeological studies have shown that the
Rg Vedic Sarasvati had stopped being a perennial river long before 3000 BC.
As Paul-Henri Francfort of CNRS, Paris recently observed – "We now know, thanks to the
field work of the Indo-French expedition that when the proto-historic people
settled in this area, no large river had flowed there for a long time."
The proto-historic
people he refers to are the early Harappans of 3000 BC. But satellite photos
show that a great prehistoric river that was over 7 kilometers wide did indeed
flow through the area at one time. This was the Sarasvati described in the Rg
Veda. Numerous archaeological sites have also been located along the
course of this great prehistoric river thereby confirming Vedic accounts. The
great Sarasvati that flowed "from the mountain to the sea" is now
seen to belong to a date long anterior to 3000 BC. This means that the Rg
Veda describes the geography of North India
long before 3000 BC. All this shows that the Rg Veda must have been in
existence no later than 3500 BC. 10
With so many eulogies composed to the River
Sarasvati, we can gather that it must have been well known to the Aryans, who
therefore could not have been foreign invaders. This also indicates that the Vedas
are much older than Mahabharata, which mentions the Sarasvati as a
dying river.
Discoveries of New Sites
Since the initial
discoveries of Mohenjo-daro and Harappa on the
Ravi and Sindhu rivers in 1922, over 2500 other settlements have been found
stretching from Baluchistan to the Ganga and beyond and down to the Tapti Valley.
This covers almost a million and a half square kilometers. More than 75% of
these sites are concentrated not along the Sindhu, as was believed 70 years
ago, but on the banks of the dried up river Sarasvati. The drying up of this
great river was a catastrophe, which led to a massive exodus of people in
around 2000-1900BC. Some of these people moved southeast, some northwest, and
some to Middle-eastern countries such as Iran
and Mesopotamia. Dynasties and rulers with
Indian names appear and disappear all over west Asia
confirming the migration of people from East to West.
With so much evidence against the Aryan Invasion
theory, one wonders as to why this ugly vestige of British imperialism is still
taught in Indian schools today! Such serious misconceptions can only be
reconciled by accepting that the Aryans were the original inhabitants of the Indus Valley
region, and not a horde of marauding foreign nomads. Such an Invasion never
occurred.
References
1 In 1654 A.D. Archbishop Usher of Ireland
firmly announced that his study of Scripture had proved that creation took
place at 9.00am on the 23rd October 4004 B.C. So from the end of the
seventeenth century, this chronology was accepted by the Europeans and they
came to believe that Adam was created 4004 years before Christ.
2 Rg Veda (2-20-10) refers to
"Indra, the killer of Vritra, who destroys the Krishna Yoni Dasyus".
This is held as evidence that the "invading Aryans" exterminated the
"dark aboriginals"
3 RV.10.1.11, 8.85.3, 2.3.9
4 RV.6.22.10
5 RV. 1.32.10-11
6 In Valmiki's Ramayana, Lord
Ramacandra is described as an Arya as follows - aryah sarva-samas-caivah
sadaiva priya-darsana (Arya: one who cares for the equality of all and is
dear to everyone)
7 Tradition has it that Lord Siva requested
the sage Agastya to write the Tamil grammar, which was spoken prior to Sage
Agastya's work. Agastya chose his disciple Tholgapya's grammar for Tamil which
was considered much more simple than the grammar that Agastya had developed.
This laid the foundation for later classical Tamil literature, and also spawned
other Dravadian languages. Agastya Muni and Tholgapya are considered to be the
Tamil counterpart of Panini of Sanskrit.
8 Monier-Williams Sanskrit to English Dictionary
9 Gods, Sages and Kings by David Frawley
10 Aryan Invasion of india: The Myth and the Truth
by N.S. Rajaram
Swami B.V.
Giri
www.gosai.com
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