Myth of Aryan Invasions of India in Brief
Myth of Aryan Invasions of India in Brief
The often perceived and frequently quoted racial division in India between the fairer Aryan
North and the darker Dravidian South is pernicious and dangerous. The British gave currency to
this view of racial divide in India. It was part of their “divide and rule” strategy. The Northern
people in India got especially sucked into this interpretation of history because it made the
“Aryan” northerners appear racially closer to the white races of Europe. This viewpoint is also
popular in Sri Lanka. The Singhalese believe that they are the descendants of Aryans from the
North of India.
This short article summarizes recent scholarship on the Aryan invasion theory. New studies
reject the view that Aryans entered India from the outside. They also reject the notion that the
Dravidian people were the conquered races, or that the Dravidians were pushed down south by
the invading Aryans. For a longer treat of the subject, see the works cited at the end.
Sri Aurobindo (1872-1950), a scholar of Latin and Greek as well as of Sanskrit, debunked this
theory of the North-South racial divide in India. He disagreed with the theory that the languages
of North and South India are unrelated. Sri Aurobindo’s study of the Tamil led him to discover
that the original connection between the Sanskrit and Tamil languages was “far closer and more
extensive than is usually supposed.” These languages are “two divergent families derived from
one lost primitive tongue.” And, “My first study of Tamil words had brought me to what seemed
a clue to the very origins and structure of the ancient Sanskrit tongue.” –See The Secret of the
Veda, V 10, the Centenary Edition, p 36, 46. Sri Aurobindo also noted that a large part of the
vocabulary of the South Indian languages (Tamil, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam) is common with
Sanskrit.
Hindus collectively have no memory of an Aryan invasion of India that supposedly took place
around 1,500 B.C. Hindu epics do not mention any such invasion. Surely, the extensive Hindu
literature would describe the Aryan invasions if such had indeed taken place. Swami
Vivekananda remarked: “As for the truth of these (Aryan invasion) theories, there is not one
word in our scriptures, not one, to prove that the Aryan ever came from anywhere outside of
India, and in ancient India was included Afghanistan. There it ends.” (Collected Works, Vol. 3).
Some people misread Ramayana as describing an invasion of the South by a Northern prince.
The Indian epic Ramayana narrates Rama’s invasion of the Island of Lanka to rescue his wife
Sita. Sita had been forcibly abducted by Ravana, the king of Lanka. Nowhere does Ramayana
characterize Ravana as belonging to an alien or an inferior race. Ravana was a Brahmin and a
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scholar of the 4 Vedas-- a Chaturvedi. Ravana belonged to the same racial stock as the victorious
Rama.
People who give credence to an Aryan invasion of India cite archeological evidence as proof.
Among the thousands of clay seals that have been found in the region of Harappa and
Mohenjo-Daro (the sites of the Indus Valley Civilization, supposedly the home originally of the
Dravidian people), no seals depict the horse or the wheel. In contrast, Aryans were known to
have the horse and the chariot. From this evidence it is concluded that the Aryans conquered the
people of the Indus valley through the use of the chariot and the horse. K. D. Sethna in his book
cited below disputes this evidence. Some seals depicting the wheel have indeed been discovered
at the Harappan archeological sites. This evidence however is contested by others.
The recent discovery of the dried-up Saraswati River further negates the Aryan invasion theory.
Satellite photography from outer space shows the existence of a dried-up river bed in Northern
India. The archeological evidence indicates that the river dried up completely about 1900 B.C.,
much before 1,500 B.C., the date ascribed to Aryan invasions. Saraswati is mentioned numerous
times in the Vedic scriptures of the Aryans, indicating that these people lived in India during very
ancient times. (For a more definitive argument here, see: Michel Danino cited in the Reading List
below.)
DNA research is not uniform in its results. Different studies conclude differently. It is generally
accepted that human beings arose in East Africa about 200,000 years ago. From there, they
entered India about 90,000 years ago taking the southern route through Yemen and Baluchistan
to reach the Indus region. In India they multiplied and spread to other parts of Asia and Europe.
The research is reported in Stephen Oppenheimer’s, The Real Eve: Modern Man’s Journey out of
Africa, (2004).
If Africa is the cradle of mankind, India is its nursery. Dr. Subhash Kak summarizes this line of
research as follows:
The new findings turn on its head the previous view of the origin of Indians. The
earlier view, popular in Indian history books, was that the Indian population came
in two waves from the northwest around four or five thousand years ago,
displacing the earlier aboriginals, descendents of regional archaic groups. . .
The new view is that subsequent to the rise of modern mankind in Africa, it found
a second home in India, which is the point of migration for the populations of
Europe, North Africa, China and Japan. The migrants in India slowly adapted to
the wide climatic conditions in the sub-continent (from the tropical to the extreme
cold of the Himalayan region) leading to the rise of the Caucasoid and the
Mongoloid races. . .
When the theory of the Aryan invasions into India is replaced by an “Out of India”
viewpoint, one can readily explain regularities in languages that are spread
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widely. Linguists see connections between India and languages that extend to
distant lands. Dr. Kak’s full article was originally published at: Sulekha.com.
An invasion of India from the outside around 1,500 B. C. did not occur. Recent scholarship does
not deny that the people in India had relations with other Indo-European people in Western Asia
and Europe. There was a belt stretching from India to the Mediterranean inhabited by a people
who spoke related languages, known as the Indo-European languages. Sanskrit is the oldest
known language in this family and may appropriately be called as the Mother of Indo-European
languages. English is an Indo-European language.
Those who seek to foster the unity of India must emphasize a correct view of history based on
recent scholarship rather than parrot old discarded theories.
India was divided into various kingdoms and principalities throughout much of its history.
Culturally, however, it was a single unit. In the great cultural and religious history of India,
important contributions have come forth from every region in the nation. The vast
Ganga-Jamuna plain in the North of India is the ancient heartland of Hinduism. This is the seat
of Ayodhya, Mathura and Vrindavan (UP), Kurukshetra (Haryana), and Indraprasatha (Delhi).
The Great Mahabharata war was fought in the northern plains.
The 8th to the 13th century revival in Hinduism originated in the South. Shankaracharya from
Kerala laid the foundation of modern day Hinduism. Shankara trekked all over India and
established centers of teaching and learning in various parts of the country. Shankara wrote
extensive commentaries on Brahma Sutras, Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita, which are
standard texts for Hindus. Ramanuja fromTamilnad and Madhava from Karnataka initiated the
Bhakti movement, which spread to both North and South. Modern Hinduism owes much to
Ramanuja and Madhava. Chaitanya Mahaprabhu from Bengal, Mirabai from Rajasthan,
Tulsidas from U.P, Guru Nanak from Punjab, Jnaneshwar from Maharashtra, Jaideva (author of
Gita Govinda) from Orissa, have all contributed to Hindu religion.
The four Hindu holy places and pilgrimage sites (Tirathas and Dhams) at Badri Nath,
Rameshwaram, Puri, and Dwarka are located in four corners of India: north, south, east and west.
Every pious Hindu aspires to visit the four Dhams in one’s lifetime.
Some people equate Sanskrit with Hindi language and the Devanagri script. According to
Swami Dayananda Saraswati, founder of Arsha Vidya Gurukulum in Pennsylvania and a scholar,
Sanskrit language originally did not have its own script. It was written in a variety of local
scripts. The writing of Sanskrit in the Devanagri script is a later development.
An Aryan invasion of India from the outside around 1,500 B. C. did not occur. People of North
and South India have lived together in peace as two branches of one family since antiquity.
People who talk of an Aryan conquest of India parrot the 19th century British viewpoint which is
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now challenged.
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READING:
This short article only introduces the much debated topic of Aryan Invasions of India. For a more
comprehensive treatment, visit one or more of the following:
1. K. D. Sethna’s The Problem of Aryan Origins, New Delhi: Aditya Prakashan, 1980 and
1992.
2. Michel Danino and Sujata Nahar, The Invasion That Never Was, Mira Aditi, 1996.
3. Michel Danino, The Lost River: On The Trail of the Sarasvati, Penguin, 2010.
4. David Frawley’s article at:
https://meditate4free.co.uk/the-myth-of-the-aryan-invasion-of-india-by-david-frawley/
5. Dr. David Frawley (Vamadeva Shastri): "Aryan invasion of India: the biggest lie
propagated by Leftist Historians," at;
https://www.hinduismtoday.com/blogs-news/hindu-press-international/aryan
-invasion-of-india--the-biggest-lie-propagated-by-leftist-historians/14500.h
tml. or Google his name.
6. Rajiv Malhotra and A. Neelakandan, Breaking India, New Delhi: Amaryllis, 2011, Chs 3
and 6. People who advocate AIT seeks to break India, rather than unify it.
7. Stephen Oppenheimer, The Real Eve: Modern Man’s Journey out of Africa, 2004. Man
originated in Africa; India (Indus region) became a second home and dispersal of
population East and West.
8. Shrikant Talageri provides the most definitive argument for the “Out of India” theory.
Indo-European languages (like English and German) have their basis in Sanskrit. These
languages spread westward from India. Google his videos and essays.
9. Koenraad Elst, a Belgian Indologist, has summarized the debate in the following video.
See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MSas-xeCaWg. It is an excellent summary.
Also see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CUgoCNtldcQ