Joe Shearer
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- Apr 19, 2009
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I have np if you hate khakhi history out of your prejudice and embrace colonial history which is full of false assertions and fantasies of those indologists who know absolutely nothing about what they are asserting except degrading Indians and denying their history.
My assertions are based on the excavations and also assertions based on the postulates proposed in AIT theory.
If one looks into the assertion of AIT and apply the same to OIT theory, OIT theory seems to be true and strong.
I do hate khaki history, as I hate any tendentious history, anything written to order, including colonial history.
The trouble is that you and people of your camp know nothing of history or historical writing other than what you have picked up for polemical purposes. So you know of nothing but your own tribal writings and what you assume is the rest, packed under one label. Sometimes that label is colonial history; sometimes it is Marxist writing of the JNU school. That itself makes two, and contradictory streams, but you never seem to understand that one is devoted to deconstructing the other.
Naturally you also don't know anything about other historians: the original revisionists, J. N. Sircar, R. C. Majumdar, Qanungo and a host of others, who wrote critical re-examinations of everything the colonial school wrote; nor do you know anything about the huge numbers of international historians writing very advanced and sophisticated examinations of the Indian past: but then, how would you? These matters are never mentioned in the web-sites and on YouTube, from which you get most of your information.
Coming to some of your remarks above, which Indologists are you referring to, when you talk of ".....false assertions and fantasies of those indologists (sic) who know absolutely nothing about what they are asserting except degrading Indians and denying their history"? And in what ways have they, according to you, degraded Indians and denied their history?
I would like some answers to these questions, because it is fascinating that you and the rest of the Sangh Parivar, the religious right wing political factions in short, are so agitated by the questions of history, when history was actually brought into our sphere of knowledge through one instance in early mediaeval times, the Rajatarangini by Kalhana, and through numerous instances in late mediaeval times. That being the case, either you should accept what native Indians wrote as history, or you should accept what the foreigners write, or a mix of the two, a rational mix prepared after critically reviewing both sets of conclusions.
Next you assert that you are basing your views on the excavations and on the postulates proposed in AIT (the T in AIT stands for Theory, so you needn't write AIT theory, after all).
You are probably aware of the uncomfortable truth that the Sangh Parivar's version of history depends on one-sided information, on the information revealed by excavations exclusively on the Indian side, and circulated and publicised on the Indian side. There is actually considerable work being done on the other side of the border, and most of it is unknown to our heroic re-write experts. But they bash on regardless. The excavations are said to prove that
- Most of the civilisation was on the Indian side, on the banks of the Sarasvati, hence it is wrong to call it the IVC;
- The Sarasvati being mentioned in the Rg Veda clearly indicates that the IVC was extant at the time of the Rg Veda, since much of it was on the banks of the Sarasvati, or even in the river bed, meaning that since the Rg Veda was actually quite some time before the drying up of the river, it was therefore contemporaneous with the IVC;
- The IVC merged gradually and conclusively with that layer of pottery that is supposed to represent the Aryan speakers in India, so the IVC may be held to have been part of the unbroken Indic tradition, not a one-off as had been thought before.
- The settlements on the Ghaggar/Hakra are, almost wholly, smaller and less developed than the mega-cities of the main IVC; they are hardly the representative locations;
- It is argued that the weakness of the AIT is that there is no mention of any other homeland from which the mythical Aryans might have travelled, but simultaneously, there is an adamant refusal to acknowledge that the Sarasvati could have been the Iranian river Haraote. So the mention of the Sarasvati in the Rg Veda is not at all conclusive. It certainly doesn't lead to the conclusions that the revisionists have got to.
- There is in fact no conclusive archaeological evidence about the merger of the later stages of the IVC with the early stage of north Indian pottery. It is wrong to say on the basis of archaeological evidence that the descendants of the IVC were in fact the Aryan speakers who composed the Rg Veda.
According to some archaeologists, more than 500 Harappan sites have been discovered along the dried up river beds of the Ghaggar-Hakra River and its tributaries, in contrast to only about 100 along the Indus and its tributaries;[34] consequently, in their opinion, the appellation Indus Ghaggar-Hakra civilization or Indus-Saraswati civilization is justified. However, these politically inspired arguments are disputed by other archaeologists who state that the Ghaggar-Hakra desert area has been left untouched by settlements and agriculture since the end of the Indus period and hence shows more sites than found in the alluvium of the Indus valley; second, that the number of Harappan sites along the Ghaggar-Hakra river beds have been exaggerated and that the Ghaggar-Hakra, when it existed, was a tributary of the Indus, so the new nomenclature is redundant. "Harappan Civilization" remains the correct one, according to the common archaeological usage of naming a civilization after its first findspot.
Next you say that applying the arguments and logic of the AIT to the OOI theory (not OIT, actually) makes the OOI very persuasive, in your view.
That is good to know.
It is a very good thing to form one's views on important matters.
However, while I rejoice in your individual epiphany, it is also a regrettable duty to point out that your individual convictions do not take the place of peer review within an academic framework.
The OOI theory is still unaccepted by the academic community. Sad, but true. They still do not accept YouTube as an academically sound forum.
There is a book called "the lost river" by Micheal Danino.
Book Review: The Lost River
Perhaps you should go through this book and the excavation evidence that is pointing to what I have written in my post. Excavation evidence I mean the new sites that are found in India believed to be on the banks of now dried up Saraswathi river.
Michel Danino is one more revisionist mushroom with no academic credentials. Neither his book nor his theories have any professional support. He is, like all the other revisionist historians, except for Elst, a self-taught expert with no acceptance.
Coming to the new sites that are found in India, I hope that you realise that many of them are in what would have been the bed of the supposed river.
Even if one takes into account the similarities between Indo-Aryan Languages, OIT can explain all the migrations and spread of language than AIT.
P.S : I have debated lot of points on this topic and it seems you have changed some of the views on this topic over time. Regarding the negative rating you gave, I consider it as your frustration.
Let us have a separate argument over the AIT and the OOI theory.