On 7-10 January 2014, a Vedic conference has been taking
place at Kozhikode (Calicut), Kerala, India. This is the town where Vasco da
Gama first landed in 1498, thus starting the colonial entreprise in Asia. It
was very well-organized and took place in the Gateway hotel. This is a very
expensive place, but so far, I think every rupee spent was worth it.
The first non-personnel person I met here was, of all
people, conference convenor Michael Witzel, Wales professor of Sanskrit at
Harvard. For quite some time now I have taken my distance from the
counterproductive Hindu habit of treating him as a hate figure. Feelings about
persons stand in the way of a focus on ideas, and all these fulminations
against Witzel or against Max Müller have not contributed anything at all to a
solution of the Aryan debate. In fact, I had a rather positive impression of
Witzel, and seeing the old man with his Japanese wife made all doubts
disappear. I guess divorced men tend to admire couples growing old together.
AIT assumptions
Apart from a number of Nambudiri Brahmin as well as
non-Nambudiri Keralite traditions, most of the conference concerned technical
points of Vedic philology, with which I will not bore my readership. But one of
the reasons for me to participate here was that I expected some speakers who
assume an Aryan invasion to nonetheless give specific data that, when well
considered, give “testimony against interest”, viz. support the Out-of-India
theory. The same thing has happened at the Indo-European conferences I
participated in during the past six months (Leiden, Louvain-la-Neuve, Münster
and Leipzig): speakers who had never even considered the OIT innocently gave
information that contradicted their AIT assumption and supported the OIT.
Many participants here never even think about Aryan origins.
They study the Nambudiri traditions of transmission, the way the Vedas are
taken to underpin the Shastras (lawbooks), or the distinctive interpretation by
some medieval commentator. Those who bring it up, usually have learned it in
university and never seen an occasion to question it. Those who, like Witzel,
actually try to underpin it with arguments, are few and far between. There are
only a handful of scholars competently arguing for the OIT, but on the AIT
side, it is not really different.
T.P. Mahadevan wove the invasion narrative into his
(otherwise very interesting) presentation about the genealogies of the Vedic seers and their descendants, so
I asked him straightaway if he had any
evidence for the framework he was using. As expected, he admitted he had no
evidence but “knew” that the invasion scenario just had to be true and that it
had been certified by the linguists. Yes, in this debate, there is always someone
else who has the evidence.
Finally the evidence?
Kanad Sinha, a young researcher from Jawaharlal Nehru
University, presented a paper on the early Rg-Vedic Battle of the Ten Kings and
of the use made by posterity of the antagonism between the seers for both
contending sides, Vasishtha and Vishvamitra. Though he had announced during a
conversation beforehand that his paper would give evidence for the AIT, I
waited in vain for this evidence. He used the AIT-generated categories of “Aryan
invaders” versus “natives” profusely to explain all kinds of later developments,
but assuming the Aryan invasion framework is not the same as proving it. The 19th-century
translator Ralph Griffith frequently refers to an Aryan invasion in his
footnotes (taking every reference to “black” as referring to the skin colour of
the natives, for instance), but you will scan his book in vain for any “proof”
of this invasion. Sinha’s chosen subject at any rate concerned a battle whose
parties were “already” based in India, so no evidence of the invasion could be
expected.
If he had given any evidence for the Aryan invasion, his
name would be made instantly. After all, at least 90% of his audience consisted
of people who assume the same framework but have never seen any evidence for
it. If specifically dealing with the Aryan question, they have generally conceded
in writing that the Vedas contain no reference to an invasion, nor does the
archaeological record. So they would applaud him if he came up with the
long-awaited proof.
Is Kanad Sinha a bad person, as Hindu nationalists with a conspiratorial
mindset are sure to allege? I, for one, did not have that impression. But like
most youngsters in India, he has imbued a large dose of Aryan invasion
propaganda, and he has been put off AIT paradigm and applying AIT-derived
categories then subjectively fortifies their belief in the theory. As long as
this approach doesn’t land them in consciously experienced contradictions, they
think that they have “proven” the theory.
Lazy-minded Hindus, no doubt good
at making money but thoroughly bad at analysing historical problems, have been
saying for at least fifteen years that “nobody believes in the AIT anymore”,
when the reality once more proves to be that one half of the scholars
consciously uphold the AIT while the other half just assumes it without even
knowing that it is being challenged.
Avesta younger than
Rg-Veda
A British professor from Oxford, Elizabeth Tucker, read a
paper on the worship of the waters in the Atharva-Veda and the Avesta. To
explain water names like praskadvari
and takvari, she first focused on the
suffix –vari, which in the Rg-Vedic
family books formed the feminine counterpart of the masculine –van, but in the later books became an
independent suffix. For the Avesta, she did not find this ancient Vedic
pairing. As for the water goddesses, this was a cult typical of the Avesta and
the Atharva Veda but not of the family books, where another mythology
prevailed, viz. of Indra releasing the waters by defeating the reptile Vrtra.
In both cases, the linguistics of -vari and the religious status of the waters, the situation in the
Avesta differed from that in the family books but was the same as in the later
Vedic literature. I deduce that the Avesta is younger than the family books but
synchronous with the younger layers of the Vedas, as parts of a common Indo-Iranian
culture. The AIT-necessitated scenario given by the speaker, viz. that there
first was an Indo-Iranian culture with the worship of the water goddesses,
which was preserved in the Avesta but lost in the family books and later
revived in the Atharva-Veda, doesn’t hold water.
So, this is a modest case of a scholar who assumes the AIT
but presents data that are more logically explained by the OIT. By contrast, not
a single speaker managed to prove the AIT (which most didn’t think necessary
anyway), let alone present data that were force-fitted into the AIT but somehow
fit the OIT better.
Postscript: Why the AIT won't go away
(In reply to a very good question, I quickly formulated the following comment:)
(1) You can continue to assume the AIT paradigm because, practically,
society encourages you to do so, in the West because of inertia, in India
because it is still politically useful to various powerful group interests; and
theoretically, because the time concerned is distant enough so that any errors
following from a wrong theory are not too intrusive.
Postscript: Why the AIT won't go away
(In reply to a very good question, I quickly formulated the following comment:)
The AIT is not going away because (1) it is not felt to be problematic, and
(2) there is no credible alternative, or at least it is not brought home to the
scholars.
(2) Hardly any alternative is available. Most of the available OIT
literature is polemical, questioning the established narrative rather than
telling its own narrative. (I take is as a priority now to sit down and produce
such an independent and innovative narrative of ancient Indian history.) Of
these, there are hardly a handful of admittedly polemical pro-OIT publications I
could recommend, and these rarely circulate in the channels which scholars read.
Most pro-OIT publications mix truth with untenable propositions (e.g. a very
high chronology) and factual observations with shrill language, often arrogant
and abusive. This puts neutral and competent observers off. Often they are also
conspiratorial, of one piece with Edward Said's conspiratorial work Orientalism,
viz. pretending that all Asian Studies scholars of the past two hundred years
were but servants of a grand imperialist project. If you want the Aryan debate
to go anywhere, OIT writers have to observe a complete moratorium, without ifs
and buts, on references to the last two hundred years. No more Max Müller or
Michael Witzel! When you are asked to describe a tree standing across the road,
you don't start talking about the glasses through which you see the tree; and
when discussing the Aryan question of some four thousand years ago, you don't
start talking about the way the ancient past was approached in the recent past.
There are exciting discoveries to be made about the ancient past, and only
losers prefer to focus on the drab and well-known colonial and Nehruvian
history.
Having spent time in the real world, interacting with real scholars, I know
the real situation, which is that the AIT is still taught from all the important
platforms. People who tell you diferently, live in a fantasy world and only
interact with village bumpkins who accept their word for it; so as feedback they
ultimately only hear their own opinions. Fortunately, we can ignore recent
history including these Hindu will-o-the-wisps, and start work on the really
available testimonies to ancient history.
8 comments:
Hello Sir, I think the last line of your post written as - let alone present data that were force-fitted into the OIT but somehow fit the AIT better - should actually read as "force fitted into AIT but somehow fit the OIT better".
Regards,
Pankaj.
As an informed layman, I would ove to believe that Aryans are natives of India. But, OIT protagoinists have yet to explain the reference to Vedic deities in Boghasqia inscription, or any evidence at all to support migration of Aryans out of India.
So, I think it gives an indication that you are about to start a serious work on OIT.
Hindus indeed are too lazy, and too self serving to do his on their own!
Best wishes, Sir!
An attempt to synchronize the Vedic and Harappa civilization is made here. http://ithihas.wordpress.com/2013/05/02/the-vedic-civilization-part-i/
http://ithihas.wordpress.com/2013/05/04/the-vedic-civilization-part-ii/
Dr. Elst, I am the Italian Indologist who spoke with you at the workshop (and first at the Mumbai airport).
I approve many observations, particularly that AIT is still well alive, but I think that the dualism AIT/OIT is too simple. AIT normally means (and I got this impression also in your writings) an invasion of Aryans in the 2nd mill. BC according to the academic vulgata, denying the Aryan identity of the Harappan civilization. But other theories has been presented recently, different from OIT but supporting the Aryan Harappans. Bellwood for instance supports the arrival of IEs with the Neolithic, and also Bouckaert supported an ancient espansion from Anatolia to India. I have discovered yesterday that even Mallory has some criticism for the Pontic-Caspian model of a 'recent' invasion of India: http://www.jolr.ru/files/(112)jlr2013-9(145-154).pdf
On my blog you can find also a link to the interesting theory of R.Bradley Kar: http://new-indology.blogspot.jp/2010/12/indian-origin-for-western-law.html
All these theories are not OIT but very different from the common AIT.
G. Benedetti
Dear Giacomo,
Am currently reading the papers you refer to. Clearly, something is moving. More to follow.
As I continue to interpret the Vrtra myth in terms of historical events, I believe I have found evidence that the myth might be a reference to the end of the last ice age in the Himalayan region. The end of the ice age resulted in water locked in glaciers in the Himalayas to flood the various Vedic rivers.
There are verses in Mandala VI that suggest this may be the case. And if indeed this is true, it means the remote ancestors of the Bharadvajas were in the Indian subcontinent 10,000 years ago and passed this memory down for posterity.
So where does this leave us with the AIT or OIT? Food for thought!
Reference: Evidence for the end of ice age and resulting flooding of Vedic rivers
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