Guest guest Posted August 12, 2002 Report Share Posted August 12, 2002 vijinuk wrote: > This chalenge is not an indological one, but a pedagogic one. Some > Indologists are concerned about Indians getting their history wrong, > but should they also be not be concerned about their home countries > getting it wrong? > > Around 1500 BCE northern India was invaded by the Aryans, people who > came from Iran and Southern Russia. The Aryans were light-skinned > wandering tribes who forced the local dark-skinned people of Northern > India, called Dravidians, southwards. For this reason, the Northern > Indians are believed to be the descendants of the Aryans and the > Southern Indians are considered descendants of the Dravidians. > -------------------------- This version of the AIT sounds a bit like the jocular summary of Ibsen's play "The Master Builder": "Elderly man falls in love with young woman but falls down from a ladder and breaks his neck." Nothing very wrong there, the summary just misses the point of the play. If you keep the format given above, you would have to change the timeline by a couple of centures either way (1700 - 1200, perhaps) since we now assume several migrations over several centuries, and we would have to say that the "invading" Aryans were not much different racially speaking from the people of the Harappan culture (I believe it is called the Indo-Afghan type, with whom the Aryans mixed on their way to the Punjab and beyond). Rather than running the Dravidians southwards, it is likely that the Aryans mixed with them to some extent. The most controversial point of view (which used to be popular) is of course not that they were relegated to the South but rather to the bottom of the social ladder. Matters now seem a bit more complicated. Ideally speaking, Indologists should definitely take care to change imprecise descriptions of Indian history. Which is precisely what they do: the question has been thoroughly debated among the professionals, but the results have not yet sifted down to the popular presentations of the subject. Hopefully, they will do so eventually. Lars Martin Fosse > To give another sample, under "Exercises" the school children are > asked to ponder on this "3.1 What are the most important > differences between Vedism and Hinduism? " as if these two entities > are different. To Academic Indology they are different. Vedic religion is the oldest stage, Brahmanism the second oldest and Hinduism the last version of India's "Hindu" religion. They are organically connected, but different. I believe any introduction to the Hindu religion produced in the West will explain the difference between these stages. Lars Martin Fosse Dr. art. Lars Martin Fosse Haugerudvn. 76, Leil. 114, 0674 Oslo Norway Phone: +47 22 32 12 19 Fax: +47 22 32 12 19 Fax: +47 22 32 12 19 Email: lmfosse Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 13, 2002 Report Share Posted August 13, 2002 getting their history wrong,> It seems to me that Indologists whose field of specialization is the origins of Indian civilization are the ones who are/should be concerned with this question, not all Indologists. Furthermore, their scholalrly/research interests should not have anything to do with whether they are "Indians" or not, as the question seems to imply. After all, there are also many respectable, competent, and highly regarded Indian Indologists. It would be unfortunate if we assume that only non-Indians are Indologists. 2. <but should they also be not be concerned about their home countries getting it wrong?> This question, which follows from the unwarranted assumption in the last one, seems to be indifferent to scholarly specialization. How can a French Indologist, for example, speak with any authority (i.e. as a scholar) on the correctness or otherwise of the history of his/her own country? Also, contrary to the assumption in this statement, many Western historians are engaged in correcting the mistakes and misrepresentations in their own history. I believe that Indian scholars who specialize in European/American history, should likewise correct and straighten out the mistakes in European/American history. Some of them do. 3. Please note that I am not defending Western Indologists here, but only clarifying the question that has been posed. 4. My own view is that at this sensitive juncture in humanity's history, commentaries and analyses of cultures and history are best left to the inheritors of particular cultures and histories, at least for some time, until the air is cleared of all the mistrust and misunderstandings that have accumulated as a result of a few centuries of Western hegemony. But that is only a personal FEELING, not a RECOMMENDATION. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 14, 2002 Report Share Posted August 14, 2002 INDOLOGY, "Lars Martin Fosse" <lmfosse@o...> wrote: > vijinuk wrote: > > > > This chalenge is not an indological one, but a pedagogic one. Some > > Indologists are concerned about Indians getting their history wrong, > > but should they also be not be concerned about their home countries > > getting it wrong? > > > > Around 1500 BCE northern India was invaded by the Aryans, people who > > came from Iran and Southern Russia. The Aryans were light-skinned > > wandering tribes who forced the local dark-skinned people of Northern > > India, called Dravidians, southwards. For this reason, the Northern > > Indians are believed to be the descendants of the Aryans and the > > Southern Indians are considered descendants of the Dravidians. > > -------------------------- > > If you keep the format given above, you would have to change the timeline by > a couple of centures either way (1700 - 1200, perhaps) since we now assume > several migrations over several centuries, and we would have to say that the > "invading" Aryans were not much different racially speaking from the people of > the Harappan culture (I believe it is called the Indo-Afghan type, with whom the > Aryans mixed on their way to the Punjab and beyond). Rather than running the > Dravidians southwards, it is likely that the Aryans mixed with them to some > extent. The most controversial point of view (which used to be popular) is of > course not that they were relegated to the South but rather to the bottom of the > social ladder. Matters now seem a bit more complicated. Matters are so complicated that history records no people such as dravidians and no such events such as being pushed either out or down by aryas. Message #1923 deals with this. If dravidians of vedic age are merely defined as language family, then the above version is a logical absurdity since people kill (or drive out)people, they don't kill language families and abstactions like language family don't have colour. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 14, 2002 Report Share Posted August 14, 2002 INDOLOGY, vvrsps@r... wrote: > getting their history wrong,> > > It seems to me that Indologists whose field of specialization is the origins of > Indian civilization are the ones who are/should be concerned with this > question, not all Indologists. I agree with what you say, but it is a question of accent. Indology is supposed to concerned with the whole of Indian civilization and history and no doubt only some Indologists specialise in it's early history and others accept their writings as true. Furthermore, their scholalrly/research interests > should not have anything to do with whether they are "Indians" or not, as the > question seems to imply. After all, there are also many respectable, competent, > and highly regarded Indian Indologists. It would be unfortunate if we assume > that only non-Indians are Indologists. While what you say is correct as far as assumptions go, at a pragmatic level, it is still western indology. 99% of what the educated people , both in India and abroad, consider as Indological results, output and grand synthesis come from the west. > 2. <but should they also be not be concerned about their home countries getting > it wrong?> > > This question, which follows from the unwarranted assumption in the last one, > seems to be indifferent to scholarly specialization. How can a French > Indologist, for example, speak with any authority (i.e. as a scholar) on the > correctness or otherwise of the history of his/her own country? There is some misunderstanding here. I meant Western Indologists getting Indian history and communicating it to the wider public. What I said was that Indologists are concerned that Indians are getting Indian history wrong, but should they also not be concerned with their home countries getting Indian history wrong like the web site I quoted, which relies on a crude version of AIT. While I appreciate your taking time to consider the assumptions in my small post, I hope same critical attitude is directed towards history of India written in the west, wherein assumptions such as Racial group = Linguistic group Arya=North India = White skin= Aggressor and Dravida= South India = black skin = victim is rife and is disseminated as the state-of-art wisdom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 15, 2002 Report Share Posted August 15, 2002 > While I appreciate your taking time to consider the assumptions in > my small post, I hope same critical attitude is directed towards > history of India written in the west, wherein assumptions such as > > Racial group = Linguistic group > Arya=North India = White skin= Aggressor and > Dravida= South India = black skin = victim > > is rife and is disseminated as the state-of-art wisdom This is a crude misrepresentation of Western Indology as it is today. No Western Indologist would be so naive as to claim that racial group = linguistic group. There is data showing that such an assumption holds in a rough manner (see the work by Cavalli-Sforza), but everybody knows that there are lots of exceptions: e.g. Afro-Americans speak English without being Indo-Europeans. As for point 2, it is assumed that the Aryans who reached India were not much different from the ethnic types we find in North India today - they had mixed with non-Aryans (in the "racial" sense) on their way. However, we know that they were aggressive (read the Rigveda), and that they were involved in fighting both with each other and with non-Aryans. As for the Dravidians, they tend to be rather dark, but you will find non-Dravidians who are dark, and you will find dark people who speak non-Dravidian languages. The basic point: Dravidian is primarily a linguistic term, not a racial one. Whether Dravidians always were victims, is a different matter. Probably, they were as warlike as most other peoples on earth. But we know little about this. Reconstructing early Indian history on the basis of the very scant data we have, is necessarily difficult. Mind you: Dravidians of low-caste origin have no problems seeing themselves as victims of high-caste (i.e. "Aryan") aggression, and this is the reason why "Western" Indology is so controversial. In an attempt to create social harmony (without having to solve the social problems responsible for the disharmony), India now tries to rewrite history as if you could create harmony with a magical sleight of hand. It would have been better to leave it to professional historians (and not only Westerners) to ponder the intricacies of early Indian history in the academic context and instead deliver a frontal attack against casteist ideas, social discrimination, maltreatment of untouchables etc. If India solves its problems, it can live with any kind of distant past. Other peoples' distant past was not much better. Lars Martin Fosse Dr. art. Lars Martin Fosse Haugerudvn. 76, Leil. 114, 0674 Oslo Norway Phone: +47 22 32 12 19 Fax: +47 22 32 12 19 Fax: +47 22 32 12 19 Email: lmfosse Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 17, 2002 Report Share Posted August 17, 2002 INDOLOGY, "Lars Martin Fosse" <lmfosse@o...> wrote: > vijinuk wrote: > To Academic Indology they are different. Vedic religion is the oldest stage, > Brahmanism the second oldest and Hinduism the last version of India's "Hindu" > religion. They are organically connected, but different. I believe any > introduction to the Hindu religion produced in the West will explain the > difference between these stages. But would you also say that Religion of Abraham is different from the Religion of Moses is different from the religion of Duetronomy which is different from the religion of Religion of Rabbi Hillel which is supposed to be different from the religion of Rabbi Kahane. Do they see them as "diffrent but organically connected". Would you also say that the religion of St.Paul is different from that of St.Augustine is different from that of Luther which is different from that of Pope John Paul II. Pre-1850s Christians by and large accepted slavery and sexism. So, would you say that the western religions before and after 1850 are "different but organically connected" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2002 Report Share Posted August 19, 2002 INDOLOGY, "Lars Martin Fosse" <lmfosse@o...> wrote: > This is a crude misrepresentation of Western Indology as it is today. No Western > Indologist would be so naive as to claim that racial group = linguistic group. It is not me who represented it like that. You have agreed a few lines below "Dravidian is primarily a linguistic term, not a racial one". If this priciple is consistantly followed , then there would not be much confusion. But if you go through your own posts, you will find that is not the case. > As for the Dravidians, they tend to be rather dark, but you will find > non-Dravidians who are dark, and you will find dark people who speak > non-Dravidian languages. The basic point: Dravidian is primarily a linguistic > term, not a racial one. Whether Dravidians always were victims, is a different > matter. Probably, they were as warlike as most other peoples on earth. But we > know little about this. Reconstructing early Indian history on the basis of the > very scant data we have, is necessarily difficult. These difficulties must be stated as they are, instead of creating peoples and events ex-nihilo, in order to give an impression that we know everything. > > Mind you: Dravidians of low-caste origin have no problems seeing themselves as > victims of high-caste (i.e. "Aryan") aggression, and this is the reason why > "Western" Indology is so controversial. "Western" Indology is controversial on it's own terms without the benefit of caste tensions in India, Paksian, Nepal or Srilanka . "Western" Indology is controversial because it sees peoples and events where none existed. About 40% of Sikhs are classified "Scheduled Castes". They don't blame the other 60% Sikhs for aryan aggression. Recently , you would have read newspaper reports of caste tensions in Pakistan wherein a woman was gang raped by high caste muslims. They are not blaming aryan aggression for that. In an attempt to create social harmony > (without having to solve the social problems responsible for the disharmony), > India now tries to rewrite history as if you could create harmony with a magical > sleight of hand. In India, things more substantial than magic wands are used to create social harmony. Anything from 20% to 80% of the seats in the schools, Universities and jobs are reserved to create social harmony. The whole country was divided into language based states to create social harmony. There are whole raft of laws, courts and other institutions to bring out a social harmony, though they are far from efficient. It would have been better to leave it to professional historians > (and not only Westerners) to ponder the intricacies of early Indian history in > the academic context and instead deliver a frontal attack against casteist ideas, > social discrimination, maltreatment of untouchables etc. Many times historians take up the chore of attacking what they see as "communalism", "hindu fundementalism", etc instead of pondering the intricacies of early Indian history in the academic context. Political parties have arisen in India which base themselves on some view of early Indian history and hence it cannot be left to the academics completely. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2002 Report Share Posted August 19, 2002 INDOLOGY, "Lars Martin Fosse" <lmfosse@o...> wrote: > Mind you: Dravidians of low-caste origin have no problems seeing themselves as > victims of high-caste (i.e. "Aryan") aggression, and this is the reason why > "Western" Indology is so controversial. VA: How do you know that? Is there a survey conducted in the 'Dravidian states' to show that the low caste Hindus see themselves as victims of 'Aryan' aggression? If it is indeed so, is this resentment against 'Aryans' traditional, or is it being thrust upon them by an Axis of Marxists, Mullahs, Missionaries and a section of Indologists? I also do not understand why you sometimes put 'western' between double quotes, when in your own post at INDOLOGY/message/2226 , you defend Western Indologists, without using the double quotes. Maybe you want to highlight your 'western' connections to get credit, and dismiss them when the skeletons in the cupboards are revealed. In an attempt to create social harmony > (without having to solve the social problems responsible for the disharmony), > India now tries to rewrite history as if you could create harmony with a magical > sleight of hand. It would have been better to leave it to professional historians > (and not only Westerners) to ponder the intricacies of early Indian history in > the academic context and instead deliver a frontal attack against casteist ideas, > social discrimination, maltreatment of untouchables etc. VA: And who are these 'professional historians'? I hope you are not endorsing Communists who these days get accolades from politically motivated Indologists at Chicago, Harvard, Helsinki, Oslo..... Sincerely, with the hope that the moderator will not censor this message. Vishal Agarwal Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2002 Report Share Posted August 19, 2002 > In an attempt to create social harmony > (without having to solve the social problems responsible for the disharmony), > India now tries to rewrite history as if you could create harmony with a magical > sleight of hand. If you're not aware of all the efforts of the Govt of India for the past fifty years in trying to empower the lower castes and the statistics involved, best for you to keep silent. > It would have been better to leave it to professional historians > (and not only Westerners) to ponder the intricacies of early Indian history in > the academic context and instead deliver a frontal attack against casteist ideas, > social discrimination, maltreatment of untouchables etc. If India solves its > problems, it can live with any kind of distant past. Other peoples' distant past > was not much better. What will work in a prosperous country need not necessarily work in a poor country. If people (non-scholars) have enough wealth they'll hardly have time to ponder over such issues - but in a poor country like India where due to a huge population there's intense competition for resources available, such "histories" can be misused/abused to serve vested interests. As noted before Indians who're aware of the ground realities in their country can handle such issues with greater understanding and effect. Best for western Indologists to stick to their professional interest and not dabble with the politics in India. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 19, 2002 Report Share Posted August 19, 2002 > But would you also say that Religion of Abraham is different from > the Religion of Moses is different from the religion of Duetronomy > which is different from the religion of Religion of Rabbi Hillel > which is supposed to be different from the religion of Rabbi Kahane. > Do they see them as "diffrent but organically connected". I am not familiar with the Jewish tradition, so I'll leave that out. > Would you also say that the religion of St.Paul is different from > that of St.Augustine is different from that of Luther which is > different from that of Pope John Paul II. Pre-1850s Christians by > and large accepted slavery and sexism. So, would you say that the > western religions before and after 1850 are "different but > organically connected" Most definitely. 1) Christianity is organically connected to Judaism and the Old Testament, but in many respects different. 2) Lutheranism (and other Christian sects are definitely different in many respects from Catholicism, but organically connected. 3) Modern Christianity is in many respects very different from forms that were prevalent 100 years ago, although Catholicism is more conservative than Protestantism. Hope this clarifies. Lars Martin Fosse Dr. art. Lars Martin Fosse Haugerudvn. 76, Leil. 114, 0674 Oslo Norway Phone: +47 22 32 12 19 Fax: +47 22 32 12 19 Fax: +47 22 32 12 19 Email: lmfosse Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 20, 2002 Report Share Posted August 20, 2002 INDOLOGY, "Lars Martin Fosse" <lmfosse@o...> wrote: > Most definitely. 1) Christianity is organically connected to Judaism and the Old Testament, but in many respects different. Since Christianity and Judiasm are different, it does not parellel the Indian situation 2) Lutheranism (and other Christian sects are definitely different in many respects from Catholicism, but organically connected. 3) Modern Christianity is in many respects very different from forms that were prevalent 100 years ago, although Catholicism is more conservative than Protestantism. > > Hope this clarifies. > > Lars Martin Fosse Unlike Protestant sects which arose by direct repudiation of Catholicism, which itself arose by the repudiation of Nestorianism and other eastern sects, latter day Hinduism did not reject or repudiate vedas or brahmins. Even Sikhism never repudiated vedic connections and the absense of brahmins in Sikhism is merely a reflection of local circumstances Hence, once can talk of a stronger historical continuity in Hinduism from early days - whenever it was- to the present than in Christianity, where developements take place by a rejection of the past Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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