Applying the term “Arya” as a race has proven the
intellectual bankruptcy of the 19th century racist scholars. In
fact, discussion about this term itself is waste of time. Much so because it
had been a hypothetical, fanciful and proven to be a dangerous idea to the
humankind which had no material proof to support except some wild guesswork.
The term invoked racial ego in Europeans as well as in some classes of Indian
society causing sever irreparable social damage and unnecessary social
divide. Moreover, nowadays it seems to
be an intellectual entertainment for some scholars, who engage themselves in
the issue under the disguise of solving linguistic mysteries.
The term “Aryan” was invented in the mid-eighteenth
century. Prior to that, the term had never been used to refer to a race or
ethnic group, which existed anywhere on the globe. Max Muller was the first one
to refer to ‘Aryans’ as a “race of people”. (1) (‘Lectures on the Science of
Languages’ Friedric Max Muller, Vol. 1, 1861). Of course, he later realized the
grave danger of doing so and apologetically took back his words. He also
explained that while using the word ‘Aryan’, he meant a group of languages and
not the ethnic race. Still the harm had
already been done.
Without getting into the detailed history of this
term, we shall focus on a few points, which explain what the term ‘Aryan’
really meant in the ancient societies.
In the Rig Veda, the word ‘Arya’ appears on only 36
occasions in 34 stanzas and it is used to address mostly to the lineage of
Sudasa clan and Gods as an epithet. Moreover, in the Verse 7.33.3, the term
‘Arya’ has been used for enemy also. This only does indicates that the Vedics
fought against each other too.
“Airyana Vaeja” in Yasna and Yasts, (Persian
scriptures) is the name of a mythical or poetically glorified land where Zarathustra
was born and delivered his first sermon. In Persian scriptures, it does not
refer to people or epithet. Moreover, the term rarely appears in the Avesta.
According to Gherardo Gnoli, ‘Ariya’ was not quite a racial
category. Later in Achaemenid times, ‘Ariya’ meant to be a cultural
and religious term to evoke the kings' origin, like a title of particular
nobility. In its very restricted, exclusivist nature, the term is quite
different from a racial category.
The words similar to ‘Arya’, like ‘Ariya’,
‘Ire’, ‘Ariana’, ‘Aristocrat’ etc. appear in several languages and they do not
represent any race anywhere. At some places, such words represent titles or
epithet and at some places, they represent certain geographies. According to
Max Muller, the term ‘Arya’ means ‘one
who ploughs or tills’ which later on came to be used as ‘Noble’, of a good
family. (‘Lectures on the Science of the Language’, Vol 1, by Friedrich Max
Muller, 1861, page 226)
Etymology of ‘Arya’ is yet not certain. Some
linguistics like Oswald Szemerény considers it most probably being a loan
word, meaning ‘kinsman, companion’ from non-Indo-European language ‘Ugaritc’. (“In
Search of Indo-Europeans by J. P. Mallory, 1991, page 276)
There has been exchange of several words within the
nomadic tribes in the so-called Indo-European language geographies though there
have been phonetic and denotative changes in every region.
The term ‘Aryan’ came into use as a race by the
politically and ideologically motivated people to prove the supremacy of the
Caucasian/Nordic race over other races.
The so-called Aryans who were described as ‘fair
haired, light or blue eyed Nordic warriors, who tamed the horses and invented
wheel and conquered most of the Europe, Northern India and much of the Middle
East thousands of years ago, were indeed a fairy tale.’ More so, because so far
no remains of skeleton that would resemble to such Nordics have ever been found
in the vast of Indus civilization or Iran so far. Such complex is the nature of
the ethnic diversity in the so-called Indo-European language speaking regions
that no material proof of the Aryan Race theory and its so-called supremacy is found.
Though the Aryan race theory has been abandoned,
discarded by the scholars of present times, the Indo-European Languages group
theorists still continue to propose the same, carefully replacing the term
“race” with “PIE languages group” in their theories. Though racial elements
looks like to have been removed from the new theories of the Indo-European
Language group, the underlying intentions are the same… supremacist and racially
prejudiced.
Iranian
scholar Reza Zia-Ebrahimi stated, “Today, the talk of the "Aryan
race" in the West is restricted to white supremacist circles in North
America and neo-Nazi militants in Europe. The very concept of "race",
although it is still used in political discourses, especially in the United
States, is scientifically bankrupt. Leading scientific associations assert that
genetic variations between human groups are so gradual that drawing lines is
inevitably an arbitrary and subjective exercise. "Indo-European"
today refers to languages, not to people, let alone people supposed to assume
inherent characteristics. Even its now limited use has been questioned.
According to prominent linguists such as Merritt Ruhlen and the late Joseph
Greenberg, the theory which holds that Indo-European languages are unrelated to
other language groups such as the "Semitic" is overstated, if not
outright fictitious.” (Iranian Identity, the 'Aryan Race,' and Jake Gyllenhaal,
an article in Frontline by REZA ZIA-EBRAHIMI, August 2010)
He adds, “Throughout the nineteenth century,
Aryanism was wrapped into the discourse of science. Racial anthropology came
into being as a discipline claiming to classify humans into different racial
categories with immutable psychological features by measuring noses, skulls,
and ears. As we know all too well, Aryanists, in particular like Adolf Hitler,
became increasingly obsessed with the racial purity and elevated the opposition
between Aryan and Semite to the level of paradigmatic antagonism. This opened
the way for the next stage: extermination. Aryanism provided the ideological
backbone for Nazi atrocities.”
It will be pertinent here to note that all the
British ethnologists of the 19th century like Herbert Risley, Russel,
Heeralal etc. have classified the Indian population in different races based on
the physical measurements of the people. Their study is held in almost a
gospel-like reverence even in the present day India to make governmental and
judicial decisions on socio-ethnic issues and reservations. There has been no
attempt to relook into the social and ethnic history of India from a fresh
point of the view to correct the mistakes of the past, which is rather the need
of the time.
The Rig Veda or the Avesta nowhere indicates that
there ever was a distinct race of the Aryan and that it had any struggle with
the Dasas, Dasyus etc. on racial account. Rather, in the famous battle of ten
kings, among the enemy of king Sudasa, five tribes bore the title “Aryan” while
the five other tribes did not bear that title. The Dasas and the Dasyus were no
racial groups. They were rather groups of different religious faiths. In the
Rig Veda, Dasyus appear as “Avrata”,
which means without Vedic rites (RV 1.51.8, 9) or as Anagnitra, Ayajjyu or Ayajvan, which means without fire sacrifice
(RV 5:189:3, 1.131.44, 1.33.4). Apparently, with their religious conversion,
the Dasas too could become Aryas. The Rig Veda states, “Oh Vajri, though hast
made Aryas of Dasas” (RV 10.49.3). Thus, it seems that initially the Vedic society
had been welcoming the non-Vedics to the Vedic fold.
Similar terms like Dahae, Dakhyu do appear in the Avesta too but they connote men or
compatriots of the same society and not any different race. Zarathishtra’s
epithet is “Dakhyuma” though his
sacred land of birth is called as Airyanam Vaejo, which means in a way the
prophet was Dakhyu (Dasyu) and Airya (Arya) in same breath. People of those times developed the
designation of ‘Aryas’ to denote or express self-pride and independent religious
faiths. We may not know ever from where this term originated and how it
travelled across the regions adorning different meanings.
In the latter days, the term Dasa, Dasyu came to be used for slaves and robbers. Nevertheless,
the change in the meaning of the words over a time is not new phenomena. A
famous example of this is that the term Asura (The Lord) came to acquire the
exactly opposite sense, i.e. Demon in Vedic tradition. Of course, this, in no
way, suggests that the term Dasa-Dasyu was used to show any kind of racial or
linguistic distinctions.
In short, though the ‘Aryan as a race theory’ has
not been proved on any, even genetically count beyond doubt, the Indo-Aryan
language speaking people’s migration theories are in circulation in different
formats. Like the Aryan race theory, PIE group of languages theory too has
prerequisites such as a common habitat of single, closely-knit tribe and their
subsequent migrations to different directions, either in waves or in unison, in
the small span of time of the earliest settlement.
However, does this hypothesis stand up to the test
of logic? Does it require explaining some similarities in the various
languages? There are many unanswered questions in this regard.
The Indian nationalistic scholarship denied the
Aryan race theory completely or partially. However, it did not deny the Aryan
language theory (IE). The only change they have made recently is that the
Aryans migrated from India towards the west up to Europe and not otherwise as
suggested by the western scholars. Needless to mention that for them, the term ‘Aryan’
of India means just the Vedic people, i.e. three Varnas. Max Muller asserts
that, “In the later dogmatic literature of the Vedic age, the name of Arya is
distinctly appropriated to the three first castes- the Brahmans, Kshatriyas,
Vaishyas as opposed to the fourth, or the Sudras.” ( Ibid page 225) We will see in next chapters that how the Shudras meant those all who didn’t
follow the Vedic religion. Also kindly take the note that the term ‘Shudra’ is absent in the Rig Veda
except of Purushasukta. (RV 10.90)
The issue of original homeland of the Aryan (Vedic)
people has also been a matter of a great controversy since 19th
century. Various theories have been proposed vehemently to prove Vedic homeland
either within India or outside India. One must wonder what is so special about
the Vedic people engaging in the search of their original habitat! However, let
us not forget that “Original Habitat” itself is a flimsy concept. There is
nothing like original habitat when it comes to the human race. In no way it explains
the common features in the world cultures and languages. No race possesses any
special qualities on basis of which it can boast of superiority over others, as
declared by the UNESCO. (“Four Statements on the Race Question”, UNESCO
Publication, 1969)
Moreover, it would be wrong for the people to be
hyped about the Vedics for it being the oldest known religion codified in the
Rig Veda. Vedic, as we have already discussed, is neither the oldest religion
nor are the Vedas or even the Avesta the oldest scriptures. The oldest
religious script found so far was in Egypt (2400-2300 BCE) in the form of
Pyramid texts, that too in a written format which is not the case with either
IE scriptures like the Avesta and the Rig Veda.
Did the Vedics (IE’s) come to India from Urasia?
According to most of the scholars who believe answer to this question is in affirmative,
suggesting most suitable candidate for the original habitat of the Vedic Aryans
is South Russia. Did the Vedics migrate from India towards the West spreading
their language and culture? Indic scholars like Shrikant Talageri place their
original habitat towards the east of the Ghaggar (which he believes to be the
Sarasvati) River.
Let us take an overview of both the theories and
check is they help us understand the reality of the history of the
humanity.
The general assumption is that for the spread of the
Vedic religion and so-called Indo-Aryan languages, the migrations of the people
belonging to that certain stock or common ancestry is the first requirement.
Wherever might have been their original habitat, migration is the precondition for the spread of cultural and linguistic elements as per the migration theorists.
Wherever might have been their original habitat, migration is the precondition for the spread of cultural and linguistic elements as per the migration theorists.
For the migration theorists we can raise few simple
questions:
Why do the migrations
in unison or in batches take place?
Are immigrants are
superior over the native populace wherever they migrate or could it be
otherwise?
Is the migration
essential for the spread of culture, languages or religion?
Many questions can be raised on this issue. However,
in this chapter, let us deal with the above questions only and try to find
answers.
Migrations are not a new phenomena occurring in the
human world. It is widely assumed that from the ancient times human race has
been moving from one place to other in the search of the food. Geographical
spread of the human beings is attributed as reason to this. However, the human
beings had almost started settling down in different regions in the Mesolithic
period (approx 15000 years BC).
C.K. Chase-Dunn (Institute for Research on
World-Systems (IROWS), University of California, Riverside, USA) states in his
paper ‘WORLD URBANIZATION: THE ROLE OF SETTLEMENT SYSTEMS IN HUMAN SOCIAL
EVOLUTION’, “The earliest sedentary societies were of diversified foragers in
locations in which nature was bountiful enough to allow hunter-gatherers to
feed themselves without migrating. These first villagers continued to interact
with still-nomadic peoples in both trade and warfare. The best known of these
is the Natufian culture of the Levant, villagers who harvested natural stands
of grain around 11,000 years ago. In many regions, the largest villages had
only about 250 people. In other regions there were larger villages, and regions
with different population densities were often in systemic interaction with
each other.”
On this basis, we can surmise that by 10,000 years
ago, most of the tribes had settled in their respective regions. They were
semi-nomadic for their profession of cattle herding and primal agriculture. In
2013, the archaeologists unearthed evidence of early agriculture at a
12,000-year-old site in the Zagros Mountains in eastern Iran. Mehrgarh site
indicates that the human beings of that region knew agriculture ten thousand
years ago. There might be more sites indicating to the earliest agriculture on
the globe. The fact remains that it helped human being to settle in the
respective regions. Kenoyer asserts
that, “….These data
indicate that foragers were present in the exact locations where we later see
the emergence of settled agro-pastoral communities during the Early Food
Producing Era (7000-5500 BCE) and the Regionalization Era (5500-2800 BCE).” (Changing
Perspectives of the Indus Civilization: New Discoveries and Challenges! By JONATHAN MARK KENOYER, Puratatva, Editor-K. N. Dixit,
Number 41, 2011, Indian Archeology Society, page 4)
Kenoyer furher declines the idea of any new influx of the populations in Indus valley and Gangetic regions. What does it means that the people who were progenitors of the IVC were settled in the same regions long before Harappan times. The technological advances led them to the urbanization and establish trade networks with the known world. Even after the decline of the IVC, due to the climatic changes, although people abandoned urban centers, they spread out nearby opting for to live in small settlements or towns, but they didn’t desert their habitat.
Kenoyer furher declines the idea of any new influx of the populations in Indus valley and Gangetic regions. What does it means that the people who were progenitors of the IVC were settled in the same regions long before Harappan times. The technological advances led them to the urbanization and establish trade networks with the known world. Even after the decline of the IVC, due to the climatic changes, although people abandoned urban centers, they spread out nearby opting for to live in small settlements or towns, but they didn’t desert their habitat.
Cultural evolution of the human beings has been
almost a simultaneous process in various parts of the earth. We cannot
attribute it to any particular advanced human race of human being or region.
Michael Maystadt (Illinois State University), on
basis of proofs gathered from Europe, states in his thesis titled ‘A Critique
of the Out of Africa Model’, “Around 40,000 years ago, there was a cultural
explosion in which jewelry, art, and elaborate burials suddenly became
commonplace all across Europe. These attributes indicate that for the first
time in history, anatomically modern humans started to behave and think like
modern humans.”
Proofs found in other continents too support this
conclusion. The evolution of cultures that includes even the languages has been
a parallel phenomenon across the globe as an outcome of innate need of the
human race! Since we cannot attribute such “cultural explosion” result of any
particular intruding advanced tribe, how can we believe that the some so-called
advanced group of PIE languages could cause acculturation of all other tribes
those had already settled in the respective regions with their own advanced
cultures?
What was the status of languages in those times? Neom Chomskey, a proponent of the
discontinuity theory, says the ability to speak or language faculty is as old
as 100,000 years. From primordial gestures and sounds to the present complex
state, the language has evolved through the passage of the time.
Let us keep in mind here that there is a close
relationship between developments of the language with growing complexities of
the life. Early languages must have been too simple, limited to some words
supported by the gestures. Certain sounds are so common in the human world that
there is no need for tracing their origin to any certain place and population
of common ancestry.
As per the linguists and psychologists, the language
is an innate need of human race, it is adequate to consider that the language
evolutions, their exterminations and re-evolutions or blend of own languages
with other languages of neighboring people with social mutations has been the
constant process in human societies of the globe. We find similar words having
hypothetically similar roots in different languages and conclusions of the
scholars that one language influenced the other have marred our linguistic
history. We find several similar words in most of the languages but the
meanings attached to them are opposite or entirely different.
“Language consciousness is probably identical with
every human meta-consciousness and may therefore play a significant role in the
control processes effected in the human subject by consciousness,” states Jerzy
Banczerowski, a noted linguist. (‘Linguistics Across Historical and
Geographical Boundaries’ ,Volume 1, edited by Dieter Kastovsky, A. J.
Szwedek, page no. 19).
Development of languages is largely independent
process. Development of the words and their order put syntactically to express
larger meaning mostly depends on the cultural ethos and the complexity of
transactions of the people of the certain regions. The words gain
larger-yet-restricted meanings in the course of their evolution. Of course,
here we are not ruling out the borrowings and exchanges of words.
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