Friday, 26 April 2019

Looking Differently at Ancient Indian History — From a Scientific Angle


                  Looking Differently at Ancient Indian History
                         — From a Scientific Angle

                                   Jawhar Sircar

               Autumn Annual of Presidency College Alumni Association
                                     20 January 2019

This article is an edited version of a talk delivered at the Ramakrishna Mission Institute of Culture, Gol Park, Kolkata on 25 August, 2017. It is based on the transcript prepared from the recording made by the Institute, later published by it.  

           The   topic which I have chosen to speak today seeks to bridge, to some extent, the ever-increasing gulf between the social sciences and the physical sciences. As academic disciplines improve their coverage and become more organised, more systematic and reach higher levels of understanding of reality in their own different ways, they become more and more exclusive. They begin to speak in languages that arise out of the requirement of their own disciplines without realising that their lexicon is hardly understood by anyone else who is not a part of their limited domain. Therefore, we find that it is extremely difficult to put two specialists from two different disciplines together and expect them to open up a meaningful conversation. Within  the  disciplines, too,  more  and more fragmentation occurs and very narrow domains of specialisation emerge, which makes communication extremely difficult even within the same discipline — as each specialist really knows so little about the others specialisation. This is why it so imperative for at least a few to connect the dots generated by separate findings and to keep trying to forge some degree of meaningful communication among these walled disciplines, to achieve a kind of a better understanding of reality.

Let us Link History and Science
          Let us take a typical social science like history and try to understand it from the angle of some physical science, say,  physics or chemistry. This is difficult to think of as all that most of us  remember of our encounters with history as a subject in school and college is one that is rather discouraging.  We were made to think of history as an exercise in remembering the deeds of kings, emperors, leaders and challengers. It appeared more concerned about dates — of war and peace and of major events and who won or who lost. Traditional approaches to history, therefore, hardly go beyond this and rarely ever explain how scientific and technological breakthroughs and advancements impacted society. Many more would have been attracted to the subject had it narrated how the advent of technology at each stage changed not only our values and world-views but also our very existence. We normally come against an instant mental block when we try to link history with science, as we are trained to treat them as two different worlds — as belonging to two completely separate domains. At the school and college level we are, of course, told about the ‘Copper Age’ or the ‘iron age’ but we are hardly ever told how succeeding technologies or ‘improved metals’ actually changed the very face of civilisations. We come to know only bits and pieces of how science impacted history — like how the invention of the steam engine spurred the industrial revolution in Europe. But how many know, for instance, that improvements in the technology of iron actually resulted in the spread of the Mauryan empire?

        As a result, the style of teaching history to which all of us are exposed in our early years, one that only recounted dates and events, usually ends up in being very uninteresting. For most students it is just  too boring. In fact,  I had  carefully avoided studying history even though I had decided to study a social science for my graduation as I felt that  studying  history  was just too stuffy. It appeared to be  confined only to past incidents and of persons who are dead and gone , and appeared unconcerned with the exciting and problematic present and could not care much about the enigmatic future. Historians did not really strain to change these early impressions as they were busy writing for each other’s consumption — not for us — and seemed to revel in their own world of the past. It was only after I left the university and had taken up a demanding job that I began to read history in my spare time, on my own terms. It was only then that I began to see the links between technology and civilisations — and soon succumbed to the charms of history. My official task was very time consuming but it was either full of intense pressures and tension (as when facing law and order problems, every day) or very mentally-debilitating (when tackling excessively rule-bound locked minds and complicated bureaucratic procedures). It was during these days that found that history and social anthropology to be fascinating distractions or alternatives and they did help me understand social behaviour and political structures that I was immersed in. In fact, I became so seriously engrossed in these subjects that I took to burning midnight oil for several years, after very tiring days in office or in public affairs, and earned my Masters degrees in them, on my own. It is from this belated love for the subjects that I shall try to explain to you — in my own non-historian’s language — some interesting linkages between scientific break-throughs, especially in metallurgy, and the corresponding developments in Indian history. Unless we learn to appreciate how each of the major phases  of our history was influenced by the prevailing state of technology, the two worlds will remain separate and even antagonistic to each other.

Inserting Harappan Civilisation into Indian History
          As there are many phases of Indian history, I will restrict  myself  to the  three  of the early stages  of historical development in India, namely, the Harappan, the Aryan or Vedic, and the Mauryan. It is my first submission that if Indians had not mastered theoretical and practical physics in developing accurate measurement systems, it would not have been possible  for them to create or sustain the Indus Valley or the Harappan civilisation for almost 2500 years. It was only after we understood the purport of the discovery of this civilisation in the late 1950s could we claim the honour of being one of the three oldest civilisations in the world — a distinction that belonged only on Egypt and Mesopotamia till then. There is a fourth civilisation  that is given equal antiquity and that is the Chinese one, even though it came up some seven-eight hundred years later. Until the Harappan civilisation on the Indus Valley entered our text books around 1960, all us firmly believed that Indian civilisation had really begun with the invasion by the Aryans some time in the second millennium before the present era. We shall discuss a little later how text books were changed but what is more important is once the dates of Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa were confirmed, the beginning of India’s history was pushed back by almost two thousand years. The start of the Harappan civilisation is usually taken as 3300 BC and it lasted till about 1300 BC. Incidentally, these dates are not negotiable as these are not determined by any particular government, though certain groups of   ideologues do often try to tamper with history to suit their own world-views. But history has to be tested like all other sciences on the anvil of truth or empiricism.
            As mentioned, students who studied Indian history even in the late 1950s were not taught about the Harappan civilisation. Though Harappa was first ‘sighted’ in the middle of the 19th century early excavations began much later, in 1921. But it was Mohenjo-Daro’s exciting discovery in 1922 that stole the show at that time. The report of the archeological excavation prepared by Rakhal Das Banerji was accepted by the-then Director General, John Marshall rather late and it took quite some time to factor in the findings from the excavations in both Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa before the ‘Indus Valley’ or ‘Harappan’ civilisation was admitted into Indian history.  I am  fond of collecting  old history  books and reading up what I cannot procure — just to get a feel of what was actually admitted as and believed to history in those decades. I checked up the 1958 edition of the Oxford History of India — a very standard text book for school students that was originally written by Vincent Smith and revised by Percival Spear. Strangely, I found no mention of the Indus Valley or Harappan civilisation, even though it was Mortimer Wheeler who had assisted Spear in updating the facts about ‘early Indian history’. This was extremely interesting because Mortimer Wheeler was certainly more aware than anyone else of the ‘new civilisation’ as he had led the major excavation in Harappa in 1946 as the Director General of the Archeological Survey of India (ASI). It is rather odd, therefore, that he made no mention of the great discovery of the Harappan civilisation as late as 1958. In any case, once it was admitted into the history text books of colleges and universities,  the Indus Valley or Harappan civilisation ranked as the first phase of India’s history and was juxtaposed before the Vedic period as the first chapter in history books.
Mehergarh Precedes Harappan Civilisation
            Returning to the significance of Harappan and the other three civilisations that are referred to as the Copper Age or Chalcolithic ones, we see how the use of copper had distinguished them from the rest of humanity in all other parts of the world. Most of the latter  were in different stages of stone-age technology. All the four great ancient civilisations were also known as hydraulic civilisations as they were dependent on rivers — that they had managed to control and utilise this priceless water resource. The point is, why did this advancement had taken place only in these four areas of the world? Why is it that the Indus Valley was so far  ahead  of Europe? We may use their colonial language on them by saying that the natives of Europe were then stuck in a more primitive stage of human growth, i.e., the Neolithic one or in the early Chalcolithic  stages that were characterised by small village and farming communities. They could not even dream of the urban civilisations like Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa and western and northern Europe were still very much in their cave-dwelling and animal-skin existence.
        Be that as it may, in order to understand the Indus Valley civilisation  that began around 3300  B.C.,  we need  to  go  back  by another 3,000 yearsto 6500 B.C. which is around 8,500 years from today. Not too many people have heard of the discovery at Mehergarh and there has not been sufficient public discussions on it and nor have history textbooks rooted it firmly in our minds. But  those  who are in the profession of history and archeology are aware of the archeological site called Mehergarh near the Bolan Pass or modern-day Quetta in Baluchistan, in present-day Pakistan. This is regarded as the cradle of Indian civilisation and it was discovered only in 1974 by a group of archeologists under the leadership of a French coupleJean-Francois and Catherine Jarrige. They worked in two phases and it was only after the second phase that ended in 2000 A.D. could the French exploration team establish that this Mehergarh was indeed the precursor of the great Indus Valley Civilisation. Naturally, books about  Mehergarh  started  coming  up only in the last few years. We  have  to  understand  one  scientific factthat Stone Age civilisations tended to be located in rocky areas because the main source of strength of man lay in the use of stones or lithos. This is why we refer to them as Palaeolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic —all lithic ages that were characterised by more and more skilful use of stones. In other words, they avoided river valleys, though they needed some clean water to survive. They tried to stay clear of areas infested with swamps, forests, and high grass where lived rhinoceros and other wild animals. The same mighty river that we came to worship later was then quite a dreaded zone.
            The Bolan Pass is in a rocky region and quite near to Hinglaj, one of the toughest among the Shakta pilgrimages, and from there, the Indus river is not very far away. It is in this Mehergarh region that a group of humans came out of the earlier phase of depending only on  hunting-gathering that required mainly the adroit use of flints, blades and needles, to which their fingers and their brains had developed to a great extent. This is the area in which we find the old lithic civilisations of India transforming into animal herding civilisations. That means that man could escape from his total dependence upon animals he killed, for food, clothing, bone instruments and so on. The Mehergarh animal-herders did not have to kill animals all the time — they had learnt to domesticate many of them. The animal was no more their enemy or prey but their servant. From that animal-rearing pastoral stage, the inhabitants moved on to agriculture and if we are ever asked which is the first spot in the Indian subcontinent from where agriculture began, we can point unhesitatingly to Mehergarh. This culture not only saw the  first  domestication of animals, but it also witnessed the domestication of other crops, almost a thousand years later. It is this ‘cradle’ that reveals the different stages of growth of our ancestors. 
           But what is more important is that it leads us to the next stage—from an isolated agricultural civilisation to a sprawling and wondrous urban civilisation that the ancient world had hardly seen, except in Egypt and Mesopotamia. Mehergarh displays the whole sequence of how this Neolithic settlement began with animal herding, moved on to the early agriculture — the first in the subcontinent of India and subsequently gave birth to the mature urban civilisation of Mohenjo-Daro, Harappa and other towns. Why did it happen? Why it did not happen in Bengal or in other parts? This is the point we need to understand. It is fascinating to go through the evidence of scientific and technological advancements that were made during the journey of history. It began with the hunter-gatherer; it then moved to the animal herder; then to the agriculturist and finally to the urban civilisation along the Indus Valley.

Scientific Advancement in Mehergarh
              One can only imagine what a phenomenal pooling of scientific knowledge and technological innovations must have come together to produce a civilisation like the Harappan, that was essentially urban based was huge — its core area spread over more than a thousand kilometres in length, and its width could vary from three to four hundred to seven or eight hundred kilometres. And to be its precursor, Mehergarh had obviously to reach a very high level of scientific advancement. To give an example, we note how surprised  scientists were to discover evidence of advanced dentistry in the form of eleven drilled molar crowns in nine skeletons that were as old as 8,000 years. It proved that the world’s first proto-dentistry was practised here and a Western scientific journal, Nature, actually declared in its April 2006 issue that Mehergarh was indeed the oldest and the first Neolithic evidence of dentistry in the whole world. This is only the tip of the iceberg. We can deduce from archeological evidence how scientific knowledge had been harnessed in a systematic manner in Mehergarh, and how it had been applied in the technology of other applications in this particular civilisation. We have come across furnaces, ceramics, glazed pottery and sophisticated firing techniques that are as old as 4500 B.C. But we also find that by 3500 B.C., that is to say, exactly  a thousand years  later,  the  quality  of products and the intricacy of designs seemed to have suffered. The reasons were mass production of items and the movement away from stone and stone-earth-based ceramics and from terracotta to metals. This marks the beginning of the metal age. Hence we find technologies here included stone and copper drills, up-draft skills (when the draft is pushed upward to capture the heat near the neck of chimney of large pit-kilns) and copper melting crucibles.

        In Mehergarh there is also evidence of manufacturing activity based on metals, such as artefacts, implements, and items of daily use. It is here that we get two recorded evidence of being the first site in the world to use the metallurgical technique of cire perdue—the lost wax process. Much of our bronze and other casting work in India and in many parts of the world is still done by this ‘lost wax’ method. In Bengal and in central India the Dhokra artists use this technique where the moulds for metal pots are first made on a cast made of earth and plaster material. The designs and carvings that are visualised are all made on it at this stage on the dummy mould.  Then wax is put over the worked-out mould, and then a second layer of earth is put over this wax coating. When finally, hot molten metal is poured into the entire cast through a hole on the top, it just melts away the wax and takes on the space that lies between the outer and inner moulds, both of which are broken once the metal cools. The metal pot that emerges naturally has all the carvings and other design impressions that the wax layer had. This whole process of metal work is called cire perdue in French and adopted in English as the ‘lost wax procedure’. It is one of the world’s oldest metallurgical techniques, and it means a lot as it was first found in Mehergarh. This discovery came from a 6,000-year-old wheel-shaped unalloyed copper amulet. The amulet itself will explain to you how science and superstition had gone hand in hand — as is happening even today. In India, we must have learned to live with both science and superstition from this earliest phase of our history.

How Science & Technology Sustained Harappan Civilisation
              A vast city-based civilisation like the Harappan (3300 - 1300 BCE) that arose out of the achievements of Mehergarh (7000-2500 BCE) has often astounded historians, archeologists, anthropologists and even scientists. In its heydays, this civilisation had a population of over five million inhabitants, which is an astounding number in those days.  Harappan civilisation was actually among the rare ones in the world where scientific techniques were devised as early as 3000 BC to produce intricate hand-crafted carnelian products and seal carvings, in addition to a host of other items of daily use and recreation. Their incidentally, the seals used for trade , decorated with carvings of animals and mythical beings, indicate that Harappan cities conducted thriving trade with lands as far away as Mesopotamia. Indus Valley cities improved upon the  technology of metallurgy of Mehergarh and it is clear that they made extensive use of copper, bronze, lead, and tin. These cities are remarkable for their urban planning, baked brick houses, elaborate drainage systems, water supply systems, and clusters of large non-residential buildings — all of which point to the commendable advancements made in so many sciences. The profusion of toys that was found in the cities and the fact that very few weapons of war are evidence that suggests peace and prosperity. Those who wonder how such a superior urban civilisation as in Harappa suddenly appeared in around  3300  B.C.  need  to understand  that  it was  not  sudden at all as its feeder cultures like Mehergarh were already evolving and moving ahead towards this reality for 3,000 years.

         Recent  studies  have  proved  that  in the Harappan civilisation people were not voracious consumers of rice or wheat like most of the people of India. For a civilisation to have one or more towns or cities meant that all those who dwelt away from agriculture would need to be fed by the rural, agricultural communities. So, town-based civilisations would normally come up only after the arrival of iron, because iron-tipped ploughs were capable of generating surplus food that could then feed non-farm, town-centric people. Until the arrival of iron in the first millennium BC, every person had to play a role in agriculture as wooden tipped ploughs barely produced enough to feed only those who lent their hand in farming operations. The  question  now  is:  how did a Copper Age civilisation feed townsmen as copper could not be put on to the tip of the plough? To produce  agricultural surpluses with Copper-Age technology was surely difficult but the very existence of Mohenjodaro, Harappa,  Lothal  and  other Harappan  towns proves that it was possible. This was done by a combination of diet, agronomic practices, skilful use of water, using cattle to move ploughs and by utilising wheel-based and copper-tipped auxiliary agricultural implements. Recent studies prove that the Harappan people consumed dry staples that they had begun to eat at Mehergarh — like barley, oats, jowar, bajra and other crops that grew with minimal doses of water.

            The surmise we arrive at from this is that their interaction with the mighty Indus river was limited to transportation and not linked to agriculture. The Indus river was always feared for its floods. By choosing dry-zone crops, they were not at the mercy of the river and clearly preferred ‘culturally  accepted’ food that was conditioned during the neolithic and early chalcolithic existence, in a less-fertile dry area. They did have some wheat,  but wheat  was not central  to their diet. It was like our soya. Let us not forget that the Harappan civilisation made extensive use of animals and the toy bullock-carts we find these are an exact replica or prototype of our standard Indian one that we have used for so many millennia. It speaks volumes about the management of water, agronomic inputs, copper, brass and stone implements that they made use of in the pre-iron Copper Age to produce reasonable agricultural surpluses to feed those who did not till the land. These were urban-settled classes like craftsmen, traders, dealers, priests, intellectuals, administrators, soldiers and sailors and, of course, the ‘other thinking classes’ that included scientists and technologists.

             The latter were the ones who devised how loads and buildings were to be built and how water was to to flow in and how waste materials were to drain away. Very few of us know that the world’s first home toilet, commonly known as the commode, was found here in Harappa. It was designed to flush out human refuse scientifically by using gradient and gravity and we wonder what happened to such advanced toilet facilities and habits in later periods of Indian history — when the culture of defecation degenerated in India. In fact, the ancient Indus systems of sewerage and drainage that were developed and used in cities throughout the region were far more advanced than any found in contemporary urban sites in Egypt and Mesopotamia — and this could only happen when science and technology had reached new heights in that age. We hardly refer to these marvels of engineering — while Europeans simply cannot stop going into raptures about the Roman system of aqueducts, that were constructed three thousand years later in the fully-blossomed ‘iron age’.  We hardly ever ponder and discuss how major public buildings like town granaries, massive citadels and public baths were to constructed and maintained in an age when implements and techniques had to be improvised from wood, stone, copper and brass — without the benefit of steel. This class made life more easier by factoring in science into the scheme of things and they were surely rewarded by the Harappans — whose civilisation was so dependent on their towns and in trading activities. The planners, scientists and administrators of Harappan civilisation surely managed to devise perfect systems of food procurement, food management, storage and distribution to survive for two thousand years and more. This is evidenced in the grain storage facilities and the plentiful remains of food that have been found in the houses — which indicates that there was no shortage.

Earliest Instruments to Measure
        However, to excel in trade and commodity management one needs measurement and measuring instruments. Archaeologists have found a series of weights in bundles, not just in one place, but in all the Harappan cities. These weights also had a very perfect similarity between each unit which indicates a rare degree of perfection in applied metrology. The first and accurate measurement scale in the whole world has been found in Lothal of the  Harappan  civilisation. This  first  ruler’ with precise demarcation of linear measurement has been found here and it is dated to 2400 B.C. The smallest division, approximately 1.6 mm, was marked on an ivory scale found in Lothal, a prominent Indus Valley city in the modern Indian state of Gujarat. It stands as the smallest division ever recorded on a Bronze Age scale. In his book,  The  Measure  of  All  Things :  The Story of Man and Measurement published in 2007, Ian Whitelaw, notes that this ruler is divided into units corresponding to 1.32 inches or 33.5 millimetres, and these are marked out in decimal subdivisions with amazing accuracy to within 0.005 of an inch. That means that they had a ‘master ruler’ on the basis of which they could calibrate and compare these markings. Ancient bricks found throughout the region were absolutely uniform in size — which, again, proves the progress of science and technology some five thousand years ago — and their dimensions corresponded exactly to these units of measurement. In fact, it is very interesting that these units match the indigenous Indian unit called angulam. This measure is found not only in Harappa and  Mohenjo-Daro  it  continued  throughout the history of India in our ‘native architecture’ all the way up to the Islamic period. The angulam as a measure in Indian architecture ended only when the British systems of measurements were thrust on us.

The Vedic Age & Problem of Material Civilisation
            The next historical stage that we will discuss is usually called the Vedic Age that was dominated by the so-called Aryans who spoke Sanskrit and composed the Rig Veda. It is dated from 1500 B.C. to around 600 B.C. and our problem here is to locate the contribution of science and technology. The literary text, the Rig Veda, is surely a superb literary composition though it hardly follows any clear linear path, but it hardly describes the material side of this civilisation. It was composed by a very literate class, possibly for an enlightened group but to consider it as the definitive text that dominated the life of all Indians during the period of nine hundred years of its purported ‘sway’ is difficult to digest. This would require a lot more of historical and scientific proof than we have at present. It did not, for instance, endear itself to the people of India beyond the Punjab region, where the Rig Vedic Aryans were located then. What this means is that most people living in the subcontinent of India neither understood it or really cared about it — but Indian history is fixated on this narrative. As hinted, we are not even sure how many among the cattle-rearing group of so-called Aryans were really capable of understanding a complex oral text or really interested in esoteric philosophy. Besides, what was its corresponding material civilisation and its state of scientific knowledge?
        In any case, historians have raised the point whether it is appropriate  to call the entire period as Vedic as the Aryans definitely constituted a small minority, and their influence  was  geographically  restricted  to just fifteen to twenty per cent of India’s land mass. So how can we attribute the entire historical stage of the whole of the subcontinent to one text or the way of life or world views of one  superior minority as the civilisation of all of India at that time? There are proofs of the existence of several other contemporary civilisations in India many of which were technologically more advanced. These are issues that standard histories do not like to touch as it destabilises the comfortable existing narrative. But there are people like us who just have to raise these disturbing questions. Besides, were the Aryans really invincible? If we take their own evidence stated in the Puranas, we come across stories of how the Rakshasas and Daityas frequently captured Indraloka (the abode of Indra and the gods), and how they drove away the Aryaputras. The mighty Aryans had then to  seek  the  intervention  of some  superior  forcea super god or great goddess. The Puranas also mention of mythical sages like Shukràchàrya, who were the gurus of the anti-Aryan forces and were masters or technology. Sanskrit texts frequently mention that Rakshasas often had weapons and powers that were definitely superior to the ones that the Aryans possessed. These are just apocryphal references to the constant wars between the indigenous people of India who were hopelessly fragmented into small tribes and the better-organised invaders who had iron to slash their defences and the horse to ride over them. 
        While there is no doubt about the superiority of the Sanskrit language and the philosophy that is embedded in the Rig Veda, there are strong doubts about the contribution of the Aryans to the material civilisation of India. In fact, we note a perceptible movement backwards, — from the highly urban civilisation of the Harappans to the rural-pastoral culture of the Aryans. We find it strange that there is no archeological stage in the  history  of  India  that is branded as ‘Aryanor ‘Vedic’, even though before and after this phase we get other archeological phases like the Harappan, Mauryan, Kushàna or Sunga that are denoted by the ruling class. The Harappans or Mauryas left their indelible stamps on their material civilisations, through their contribution to art, architecture, pottery, crafts, techniques, colours and many other aspects. We do not get any such or corresponding items that are known to be representing the culture of the Vedic people or the Aryans. We have no Aryan style of art, sculpture or architecture. The main problem with historians and ideologues is that they do not want to come to terms with our real history and declare that there is really very little by way of a material civilisation left behind by the Aryans — because it militates against what they have been taught. We hardly ever raise the issue of degradation in terms of material culture and of science and technology during the Vedic period. We are so dazzled by just one bright text of a small minority that we fail to notice how we moved downwards from a superior world of international commerce of the Harappan phase to we reach a phase when cattle and cow-sheds become the centre of life, and the most important source of wealth. In fact, an entire genealogy is based on cattle or gotra, meaning ‘from the same cowshed’.
Pottery During That Period
            However, archaeologists have categorised two types of pottery found in regions  inhabited  by  the  Aryans  as  BRW and PGW, or Black and Red Ware and Printed  Grey Ware, though they do not directly attribute it to the Aryans. The  first, namely the BRW pottery represents the early Iron Age culture of North India, dated roughly between the 12th and the 9th centuries BC, which overlaps with the Vedic period, ie three to four hundred years after the Aryans appeared in Indian history — when we note how a pastoral civilisation was trying to learn some agriculture as well. When we can admire this ‘journey’ from the cow to the plough, we are actually referring to the second agricultural economy when farming started occupying the centre-stage once again, some four millennia after the story of Indian agriculture began in Mehergarh. These are the fascinating ups and downs of history where we witness how its forward and backward  movements take place among people in the same broad geographical area.

             The  second  type of pottery  of this period is known  as  the PGW (Printed Grey Ware) and it began around the same time, in 12th century. But it appeared in full bloom only after the Aryans and their mixed groups had presumably crossed the Yamuna in large numbers, between the 9th and  6th  centuries  B.C.  The  archeological remains of PGW also indicate the domestication of horse, an animal that is hardly seen in the Indus Valley period, and also to the frequent use of iron. In fact, the Aryan victories  which  ultimately  took  place  was not due to a superior language or not even because they surely had a more organised system of thinking and culture. It was largely because of the use of iron and the horse that simply over-powered the indigenous stone-age or copper-age civilisations of India. It was something similar to the hegemony of the white Americans over the Inca, Aztec and other native civilisations that were inferior in terms of warfare and fire-power. The archeological remains associated with this Painted  Grey  Ware  also indicate domestication and we find that Ahichatra in Bareilly district of U.P. is the most important site that is on the Gangetic plains.

         We must remember that the Gangetic plains were thickly forested and full of rivers and swamps till the middle of the first millennium BC. Historians generally believe that it was during the mature stage of the Iron Age that iron and fire were used to slash and burn through these forests and clear the Ganga-Yamuna region. Romila Thapar calls this slash-and-burn philosophy, when the Aryans moved in from the terai that was less inhabited and then moved downwards. They went along the river, killing or capturing people and animals who inhabited the river and swamp areas. Coming to technology, we must admit that no Copper Age civilisation could have captured the Gangetic belt that was heavily forested. So we had to wait for the arrival of iron which started in 1000 B.C. and reached maturity around 600 B.C. Without iron and without the new lands and people of the Ganga basin that were brought under ‘Aryandom’, there would have been no true Indian civilisation. When I was in Delhi I was fond of saying that India does not begin from either the Khyber Pass or the Bolan Pass or even from the Indus and Punjab. India begins after we cross the Nizamuddin bridge over the Yamuna and enter the Gangetic plains. That is where the crucible of Indian thought and philosophy was developed and from where it spread. The Janapadas or kingdoms that came up in the Gangetic plains dominated the landscape with iron swords and iron weapons. They were actually the result of scientific and metallurgical advancements — when Iron Age Aryans on horseback subjugated the primarily Copper Age culture of the indigenous Indians. It were the defeated indigenous Indians who were called dànavas, ràkshasas, pishàcas, dàsas and so on. Genetic sciences have proved that most Indians have predominantly the blood of the defeated people, with just a dash of so-called ‘Aryan’ genes — which is irrespective of which caste we refer to.

Iron Age Impacts Agriculture & Society
          We had briefly touched upon agriculture in the Copper Age earlier but when the metallurgy of the Iron Age introduced iron-tipped ploughs and implements, agriculture went through a quantum leap. Not only was it possible cultivate more areas and tougher soils with lesser effort, it was also possible to free large parts of the population from agriculture. The greater surpluses that iron ploughs produced could now feed the townsman and the craftsman as well as the ruling class which  dominated all others with soldiers with iron swords, spears, bows and arrows, besides horsemen, policemen and bureaucrats. This ushered in the arrival of monarchical domination through kingdoms and janapadas and led to the rapid breakdown of typical tribal democracy that Aryan cultures had practiced for so many centuries.  This is also the period when we get the stories of tensions developing  between  the  two. When we study mythology we see the same tensions between  the free people who lived  in the  hills,  and  the new  ràjàs  who lived in the plains. Daksha-Yagna is a very typical such story where we come across the tension between a free man of the hills represented by Shiva taking on the might of several Gangetic monarchies and combative ràjàs who possessed superior arms. In fact, both Buddha and Mahavira were born in hill republics and preached its greater egalitarian spirit among the hierarchical population of the plains kingdoms.
             That reminds us that iron-tipped ploughs  freed   large   parts   of the population from the boredom of agriculture and led to speculation. In other words, the same agricultural surplus produced in the Iron Age also fed the speculators of thoughts and ideas, called the philosophers. We find that it was in and around the sixth century when the use of iron reached a certain maturity, the world got all its philosophers — Lao Tse, Confucius, Gautam Buddha, Ahura Mazda, Abraham, and Mahàvira. History that we are usually taught in educational institutions does not give adequate emphasis on such linkages and tell us how scientific developments changed the very faith of people at periodic intervals. We just have to look beyond the Ràjàs, Rishis, Munis, Aryans, Danavas and their wars and conquests to go to the root technology that made it all possible.

Technology of Zinc, Brass & Steel
                Before we come to the last phase of our examination of the role of science in shaping history we need to take a little detour in the technology of zinc that developed in settlements in India in the late Vedic period. Brass, as we all know, is an attractive golden coloured alloy of copper and zinc and it is more ductile and strong. It has better resistance to corrosion and is a very useful metal. A team of scientists from the British Museum and the Baroda University unearthed the first use of zinc and the early technique of zinc smelting at the old Zawar in Udaipur, Rajasthan. I must pause for a second here, because I have not mentioned the oldest and richest settlement of copper in India. The rulers of Khetri had drawn their sustenance from this copper for several centuries and it was one such ruler who had helped Swami Vivekananda attend the World Parliament of Religions in Chicago in 1893. Zawar is famous not only for its monopoly of excellent zinc ore, it is  also considered to be the oldest site of industrial  zinc production  of the whole world. During the process, zinc ore was roasted in smaller-sized retorts which prevented the production of typical slag, which made extraction more efficient and economic. These are some examples of the indigenous processes that developed in India at that point of time.
                   Good quality brass alloys require more than 28 percent zinc in them but in most parts of the ancient world we come across brass or other alloys with less than twenty-eight per cent of zinc. In India, however, we come across better quality brass and the one we come across in Takshashilà, dated around third century  B.C contains as high as 34.34 per cent  of zinc — which is far more  superior brass. Recently, two brass bangles belonging to the Kushàna period have been discovered in Uttar Pradesh which revealed thirty-five per cent zinc of exceptional quality. In ancient India production of zinc metal was common, and the process of producing metallic zinc had been described in several ancient Sanskrit works. We also knew the use of zinc oxide in medicines and we come across references to zinc oxide use in those prescribed in the Charaka Samhità. So the mastery of zinc was another factor in our favour but how much of it came to good use in warfare remains questionable.
                In the South, we get solid evidence of the earliest production of high carbon steel in the whole of the Indian sub-continent. These sites were at Kodumanal in Tamil Nadu, at  Golconda  in  Telangana  and  nearby north-eastern Karnataka, and in northern Sri Lanka. This came to be known as Ooty steel of South India and by the 6th century B.C. it exported globally. But the fact that Tamil Sangam poetry mentions that the South had knowledge of exceptional  steel  technology long before the fourth century BC could not prevent it from being defeated by the Mauryas. This is being underlined to also explain that history is not always decided by scientific and technological advances. We come across references in Arabic and Latin literature to the people of South Indian people as the finest steel-makers in the world. This steel was exported to the Romans and the Arabs called it Damascus steel. We need to cross 1000 degree Centigrade temperature while heating  iron and alloys to get steel — which was very difficult with the quality of coal that was available and the design of furnaces. Therefore, bellows were used to raise temperature and the bigger the bellow and smaller the furnace, the higher would be the temperature. In the fifth century, we find the Chinese and local Sri Lankans had mastered the art. Incidentally, Sri Lankans used the monsoon winds and their steel furnaces were driven by very high wind speeds during the monsoon period.

Strength of Mauryas Lay in Iron & Coal
                Now we come to the last part of our discussion where we try to explain why Pataliputra, the modern-day Patna, could dominate India in the 4th century BC and bring almost all of it under the first pan-Indian empire of the Mauryas. DD Kosambi has explained that the eastward thrust of Indian civilisation was successful because it could access the best ores and good quality of coal. In very simplistic terms, it was the Mauryan control  of  two  critical  resources,  iron  ore and coal, that made it possible for it to forge superior steel weapons and implements — with which it dominated the sub continent. As we know, almost  all the best coal reserves  in India are in the Manbhum-Singhbhum-Raniganj areas, and all the steel plants that came up in India initially (except Salem) are in this area— Bokaro, Bhilai Rourkela, Asansol, Kulti, Durgapur. Why? Because we have both coal and iron ore. It is due to the same mastery over coal and iron that helped Pataliputra under the Mauryas to become so strong and invincible. But, as touched upon, a major power required not only the best of resources and scientific achievements — it also needed organisation and leadership. Chandragupta Maurya had the benefit of the intelligence of Chanakya, who could capitalise on the technology of mining and steel-making. It is said that Chanakya actually came from  Kànchipuram in Tamil country, who travelled all the way to Takshashilà in the extreme North West to study and teach and then moved to Pataliputra in the East for his career. His text, the   Arthashàstra, laid down the basis of the first great empire in India. Its twelfth chapter deals extensively with mines and metallurgy. He declares that the Superintendents of metallurgy had to be proficient in geometry, geology, metallurgy and smelting of gems as well. One of the tasks of the Mines department was to locate new mines with ore-bearing earth, rocks and liquids, which proves beyond doubt that not only had Chanakya exceptional knowledge of mining and metallurgy but also that the Mauryan empire was making good use of science and technology. 
               In his new book called  Arthashàstra : The  Science of Wealth, Thomas Trautmann explains how scientific discoveries and technologies were used to strengthen the kingdom. He states that the treasury had its source in the mines. From the treasury, the army came into being, and with the treasury and the army, the world was subjugated. Trautmann further points out that discussions of economic topography in the Arthashàstra connect trade with routes and not market places. A close reading reveals that trade is thought in terms of transporting goods from workshops to the buyers, not inter-city trading. That was centralisation in the style of the erstwhile Soviet state. The Mauryas exploited their advantages and reached a stage when they could control everything. In fact, Asoka’s devastating Kalinga war is attributed to shortage  of  raw  materials  such  as  surface coal and iron. The richest ores were then available in the Kalinga region and Ashoka just had to go there because he had to get his supplies.                      
In Conclusion
         We have gone over a fairly long talk and what irks me the most in history is that it is so firmly rooted in agreed narratives and approved texts. Conventional history focuses on what is proved beyond doubt and is thus acceptable as material for standard textbooks and reference books. They hardly link the text to the context and are tied down to hard records and evidence, thereby often limiting their perspective. Since I am not a teacher of history, just a perennially curious student, i have the liberty of staying away from safe histories. Instead I have always been impressed with D. D. Kosambi’s approach to studying history, which gives as much importance to the context as it does to the text. He has left behind a wealth of information on the material view of history and has also been bold enough to deal with popular beliefs, myths, legends and superstitions. He was one who was not content to just narrate the history of the the eastward surge of the Aryans in terms of dates and events, but explained it in terms of the necessity to access India’s finest natural ore deposits that lay in the east Gangetic plains. The east became the centre of two of the greatest empires of India, the Mauryas and the Guptas, because it had excellent copper, iron and coal. We need to take a look at history from such points of views. I will refer to a  statement made by Dr Kosambi where he remarked that Magadhas  great  source  of  power  was  not only in its resources but also in the formation of a state. He called it “a state that used metals systematically to clear the land and to bring it under the plough. It was also iron that allowed it to dominate the rest of India.”
          I wish to point out that the way we are taught history in schools and colleges needs to be changed to make it more interesting. We need to understand not only what has actually happened which, of course, has to be factually correct, but what were the reasons that made them happen. Because the inquisitive minds of students at that stage would like to know why is it that ‘X’ happened and why ‘Y’ won over ‘Z’, not just the fact that ‘Ywon over ‘Zin such-and-such battle in so-and-so year. Historians have a wealth of knowledge at their disposal and can surely connect the dots. They are capable of the “big, grand, narrative”, the “panoramic view from above” but professional compulsions drive them to swim near the shallow banks of rivers and not be too adventurous in stating what they believe could well have happened but they are unable to lay their hands on hard evidence. We may or may not accept that economics necessarily determines human history, but none can deny that developments in material civilisation, which arises from consciousness of resources and their harnessing through advancements in science and technology do dominate society and its values. We need to see the science that lies hidden behind history.



Tuesday, 16 April 2019

India’s Many New Years In Baisakh


India’s Many New Years In Baisakh

By Jawhar Sircar
Ananda Bazar Patrika” 15th April 2015, Revised

The best evidence of India’s splendid diversity is so evident in the celebration of so many calendars and ‘new years’. No uniformity could ever be imposed upon different languages and cultures, that slowly came together over several centuries into one great nation.. But, as we shall see, amidst this confusion of dozens of ‘new years’, there are indeed emerging unities
            If we leave aside exceptions like Gujarat, we will see that all others celebrate their new year within a ‘time band’ that starts with Holi and ends in the first days of Baisakh, which means just about three to six weeks. The Gangetic belt and its offshoots in Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh and Jharkhand, usually take Holi as the beginning of their ‘religious year’ and the Saka Samvat, during  Spring equinox as the official new year.  More than a century ago, MM Underhill stated in his knowledgeable book The Hindu Religious Year that “several eras are reckoned among the Hindus, but the great majority follows one of the two”. He spoke about the Saka and Vikram samvats, but their new year dates are very close to each other, and over the next hundred years, it became clear that most states start counting either in March from the first of Chaitra and the Spring equinox, or in mid-April, as ‘Baisakhi’. Thus, even without a  single common date, more than a hundred crore Indians celebrate new year it on either of just two main dates. Isn’t it remarkable?
            The first date, i.e., the Spring Equinox (Chaitra Shukla Pratipada) is the Gudi Paadwa of Maharashtrians, the Ugadi or Yuga-adi of Kannadigas and Telegus, the Cheiti Chand of Sindhis, the Nowroz of Parsis and Kashmiris and Thapna of conservative Marwaris. Though Himachalis observe it as Chaitti and Sikhs as the Nanakshahi New Year, both actually celebrate the ‘Baisakh’ date with more gusto. So, While about half of India, i.e., the north west, north and upper Deccan celebrate new year in March, the rest of India concentrates on ‘Baisakh’, like the Bengalis. It used to depend on the winter Rabi crop being ready which called for the celebrations. Maharashtra and the upper Deccan  start festivities in March as their traditional crop was ripe then, while others wait till Baisakh for their harvest and new year.
Punjab’s Baisakhi congregation at Jalianwala Bagh in Amritsar on unlucky 13th of April in 1919 will never be forgiven or forgotten and it is on the same date exactly 220 years earlier that Guru Gobindji instituted the Khalsa Panth. But Punjab tops all in religious fervour, as millions take an early bath and line up at hundreds of gurudwaras: for prayers, sips of sweet Amrita and parsada as also for devotional music sung by the famous Ragis. The Panj Pyaras, i.e., “five beloved and blessed priests” head the holy processions, but once this is over, the energetic Sikh engages in all types of contests, from wrestling and sword fencing to mock duels. Animated dances like the Bhangra and Gidda are obviously a must but where we are concerned we would much rather watch these bursts of phenomenal energy, on TV.
        Coming to Bengal, Poila Boisakh of the Surya Siddhanta began during the reign of Raja Shashaka of Gour 594 years after the Christian era but popularization, was done by Akbar and his astronomer, Fatehullah Shirazi. The Islamic lunar Hijri calendar was difficult for marking agricultural harvests for Mughal taxation, thereby a new solar-lunar calendar called the Fasli San or Tarikh-i-Ihali was started. Economics remain the hidden factor behind religion and culture and we may choose to recall that during the Middle Ages, our Mangal Kavyas of that period focus around Saudagars or businessmen, not on Brahman-Baidya-Kayastha Bhadraloks. The latter actually arose as the most powerful group in Bengal only in the late Mughal and British periods, when they dwarfed the local Baniks so terribly that trading groups from other states rushed to fill in the vacuum. This pushed Bengali enterprise even further down, so just long queues outside temples and sanctifying hal-khataas on Poila Boisakh can hardly bring back what has appears to have gone forever. Anyway, Bangladesh celebrates this month with more sincerity nowadays, it may be a good idea for western Bengalis to use the auspiciousness of this month mainly for conducting marriages and events.
                 In both parts of Bengal, West Bengal and Bangladesh, New Year celebrations on Poela Baisakh of the first day of Baisakh that is either on the 14th or the 15th of April began in right earnest when Akbar captured this province and started this accounting year for his a
 revenue collection. It has its social and religious significance also and while traders gather at temples from dawn to get divine blessings on their books of accounts, a lot of sweets and festivities flow. A relatively recent celebration called Mangal Shobha Jatra that was started in Bangladesh a few decades ago has turned into the second major public festival after Durga Pujas. People in West Bengal have also started to take out colourful processions with huge masks and other decorative animals or scenes on slow moving trucks and lakhs of enthusiasts follow with music, poetry and gaiety. In Dhaka, Chittagong or Kolkata, joyyful crowds cheer this secular parade that showcases plurality — all along the path.
                In neighbouring Assam, the last day of the year is called Goru Bihu, as the cattle are bathed thoroughly and smeared with a paste of turmeric and other ingredients, probably for medicinal reasons. The new year begins with Rongali or Bohag Bihu and lasts for almost a month, combining the best of three major traditions: the Sino-Burmese, Indo-Aryan and Austro-Asiatic. Innately connected with agriculture and fertility, this Bishu or Bihu is a call to young men and women to be at their resplendent best: as they dance with soft sensuous movements of the limbs, swaying to lilting tunes of Bihu-geets.  Bengal’s other neighbor, Odisha also observes its new year on the first of Baisakh or Vishu as Maha Vishuva Sankranti. It is famous as the Pana Sankranti after the sweet drink made from bel, fruits, yoghurt, paneer and other substances that is offered to all. Even the sacred Tulsi plant is nourished with drops from a pot hung above it, with a small hole in its bottom. Odisha has several other unique Yatras to celebrate the occasion, like Jhamu, Patua, Hingula, Patua and Danda, with each contributing its own rites and colour.
Crossing over now to deep southwest, a thousand miles away, one comes to Kerala where Vishu is celebrated with fireworks and a million lights. ‘Kani’ or the first auspicious sight of the new year is ensured the night before by carefully arranging the traditional Vishukkani: placing money, jewellery, holy texts, lamps, rice, fruits, betel leaves, areca-nuts, bananas, vegetables, lemons, metal mirrors, yellow Konna flowers and so on. Sadhyas or feasts are compulsory as are Kanjis made of rice, coconut milk and spices, along with Vishu Katta rice cakes and sour mango drinks.
In Tamil Nadu, as among Tamil-speaking people in all parts of the world, Puthandu on the 14th of April marks the new year and the same Kani or first sight of auspicious objects is mandatory. As in other parts of India, cleanliness of the body through the ritual bath and donning new clothes are insisted upon, while the home is done anew with colourful Kollam floral designs on the floor. Even in Karnataka where Ugadi comes in March, the Tulus and Kodagus of the south west celebrate Vishu and strictly observe the auspicious Kani rite during the Vishu of mid-April.
 India is too complex to analyse, but with some effort it becomes easier to appreciate at least the broad patterns, as we have just done.   Though about half of India celebrates new year in Baisakh, while the others do it in Chaitra, if counts the overseas celebrations, then ‘Baisakh’ wins as the most popular New Year. Not only do Bangladesh and Nepal observe this date, but Sri Lanka, Myanmar and South East Asia also observe ‘Baisakhi’ with religious passion. 
Laos celebrates the middle of April as Sonkan (derived from Sankranti), where ritual cleanliness, perfumed waters and obeisance to monks and visits to Buddha temples are compulsory.  Thailand also calls it a similar name ‘Sonkran’ with almost the same rituals.  But both countries organise massive “water fights” on this occasion and  people come out on to the streets and spray each other with water in every possible manner including hose pipes and buckets.  Cambodia celebrates as Maha-Sonkran and all the three South East Asian countries pass through their hottest period during April, as it is just before the rainy season.  Thus, water is obviously welcome.
What is more interesting is that the insistence of these countries on paying respect to the elderly and releasing living creatures from bondage, whether it be tortoise or tiny fish or even birds, This is a Buddhist contribution and another one is the dictum to give alms to the needy which is something that Indians could emulate.
We end with a round-up of our two neighbours and Myanmar celebrates ‘Thingyan’ during this period.  The same Theravada Buddhist rites and rituals, like respect to monks and elders, release of caged animals and the compulsory alms giving to the needy are followed.  But after all this piety is over, the evenings are meant for song and dance, as also for getting ready for the next day’s water fights.  Sri Lanka celebrates Aluth-Avurudda more seriously, as the zodiac changes from Pisces to Aries, but Dravidian customs like ‘Kani’ appear in the celebration: as the auspicious time for starting business and other ventures.  Sinhalese also believe in big bangs and crackers like the Malayalees.
As one traverse the entire spectrum, one is amazed to see the tremendous variety, colour and forms of celebration in India and the world: of different yet close “New Year Days”.  They are so unlike the almost mechanical rigidity that surrounds the “Happy New Year” of the West.

(Please Click Here to Read the Article in Bangla on ABP Website)

The curious case of NaMo TV


The curious case of NaMo TV

By Jawhar Sircar
(16th April, 2019, The Telegraph)

Never before in the history of television in India have we come across a television channel that operates as a full-fledged one but claims that it is not a TV channel. It appears on well-known direct-to-home TV platforms like Tata Sky, Airtel and DishTV, but resorts to as much subterfuge as possible to obfuscate its real character — as it has not come in through the normal licensing route. It sprang into life suddenly on March 31 after the Election Commission’s ‘model code of conduct’ had already been promulgated, but quite strangely, the EC did not question it. No one really knows who owns it; how it operates and what its finances are. The acronym in its name stands for Narendra Modi, the prime minister who is also the prime campaigner of his Bharatiya Janata Party. Yet, he does not own up to his ‘paternal status’ — he tweets in its favour instead — and his party conceded, most reluctantly, that it is theirs, after trying every trick in the book to distance itself from the channel that exists only for propagating its political message and telecast the speeches of its mascot.
The broadcasting sector is so well governed — perhaps, excessively so — that NaMo’s claims notwithstanding, this channel is bound to have trampled upon existing regulations. The EC appears to have woken up finally to its responsibilities after 12 days but the transgressions have already been committed. But before we get there, it may be interesting to see how the government and the party deliberately sent everyone else on a wild goose chase to figure out which genre of television this channel came under — by simply being completely non-transparent. While the media and the Opposition tried to locate possible violations of the information and broadcasting ministry’s strict ‘uplinking and downlinking guidelines’ that apply to all normal TV channels that use satellite communication, NaMo TV went on telecasting programmes — in violation of the model code of conduct. The TV channel deliberately does not give any information of its ownership, tax compliance, its partners or foreign technical support, if any. Yet, the hyperactive income tax department and the enforcement directorate that are always on raid mode have not bothered to seek financial and taxation details from it. Besides, television is a super-sensitive domain and the antecedents of each channel are verified by the home ministry in detail. Again, NaMo TV appears to be an exception by thinly disguising its real character. The manner in which government departments and agencies of the government — who would have torn any Opposition leader to shreds had he or she done this — maintain a ‘hands off’ policy is sinister and unashamedly genuflecting.
NaMo’s claim to be a ‘shopping channel’ or a ‘special service’ that DTH platforms operate for profit does not hide its full-blown channel character and that too, as a very sensitive political channel. All it means is that it has avoided the government licensing procedure in some convoluted manner and that its programmes are made in a studio and sent to Tata Sky, Airtel and DishTV through optic fibre. But since it is not selling undergarments or household gadgets, but undiluted political propaganda, it falls squarely under the EC’s present ‘model code’ restrictions on media. After 12 days and external pressure on it to act properly, the Commission is now reasserting its time-tested media content monitoring committee procedure, to check and certify all material before it is telecast. The state chief electoral officers have to do this but there are doubts whether their machinery is capable of viewing and clearing so much material. But there is one more violation, and NaMo’s telecast on multiple DTH platforms runs foul of the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India’s order of 2014 restricting ‘special services’ to just one DTH TV company. The information and broadcasting ministry needs to check the exact wording and act fast.
More important is that Section 126 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, strictly prohibits political speeches for 48 hours preceding the last hour of poll in those constituencies where polling was held in the first phase of elections. This has surely been violated, and T.N. Seshan would have declared these polls as invalid.




Thursday, 11 April 2019

Is the Election Commission Overawed ?


              Is the Election Commission Overawed ?
                               
 By Jawhar Sircar
          ( Ananda Bazar Patrika, 11th April ‘19 —English version)


        Long before Congress, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) or the Trinamool Congress started raising their voices against the Election Commission’s alleged bias, a group of some 150 retired officials of the IAS, IFS, IPS and Central Services had already started waving the ‘yellow card’ at the Commission that is led by three officers of the same tribe. The difference is also that while people may not have forgotten the recent Panchayat elections in West Bengal that were conducted most unfairly by the Trinamool regime or the infamous ‘rigged elections’ under Siddharta Shankar Ray or later under the Left Front, no such history bogs down the the retired officers group who have now pooled their experience together under the name ‘Constitutional Conduct’. This group consists of a past Chief Election Commissioner and former State Chief Electoral Officers as also numerous ex-Returning Officers and Central Observers— all of whom have handled several elections long before the present CEC members arrived. They are, naturally, in a better position to judge their ‘younger colleagues’ in the present Commission especially when they appear to deviate from the principles of fair play — that they are duty-bound to adhere to under Article 324 of the Indian Constitution and the Representation of the People Act of 1951.

              During discussions over the last several months, this group met the-then CEC and explained to the Election Commission that since doubts had been expressed by many about the possibility of tampering with the EVMs or Electronic Voting Machines, alternate measures must be considered seriously. It was, incidentally, this very generation of officials who had introduced the EVM system in India in the closing years of the twentieth century so enthusiastically, and it is now the same group that now feels that these machines may not be as foolproof as was believed earlier. After all, technology and hacking techniques have both improved in the last two decades, while fairness has come down in public life. Thus, a new system called the Voter Verifiable Paper Audit Trail, must be introduced as it proved successful in the 2014 polls, when it was first tried out on experimental basis. Under this system, it is possible to check one’s vote because as soon as a voter punches his or her choice on the EVM, a small printer next to it pops out a paper ballot slip. This would tell the voter that the vote has been correctly recorded and, internationally, the option is either to put this paper into a ballot box placed near the EVM for these to be counted later or to tear up the slip after the voter is satisfied. The Constitutional Conduct group mentioned to the Election Commission that its plan to use just one VVPAT or Paper Trail per Assembly Constituency, which means 7 per parliament seat, was ridiculously low as a sample. It insisted that this percentage of ‘paper trails’ should go up substantially in each parliament constituency, to really represent a reliable sample of the total number of the polling booths, which was as high as 1500 to 2000.

       Now, some political parties are insisting on cent percent counting of ‘paper trails’, though this may not be possible in 2019. But it is only fair to expect that the Election Commission settles for a reasonable number of booths where ‘paper trails’ shall be made compulsory, somewhere between present figure of 7 and the total number of 1500-2000 booths per parliamentary constituency. This is what the retired officers have repeatedly advised the Commission. But the attitude of the present three-member Commission to fight this issue out in the courts appears rather odd, especially in response to a PIL filed by 21 political parties before the Supreme Court. The Commission has declared that counting of even half of these paper-trail votes many take six days, which sounds quite exaggerated. Even when we counted paper ballots under the old system of ballot boxes, the whole process took between 12 and 18 hours. In unionised states like West Bengal, this sometimes stretched to a few hours more, as counting staff reportedly delayed the counting process, in order to extract more ‘tiffin allowance’ and other rewards. Some parties have clearly stated that accurate results are more important than delayed results and the Constitutional Conduct group insists from the collective experience of so many hands-on experienced officers that it just cannot take so long. The real reason why the Commission is acting so difficult is not clear, but let us go into some recent happenings to draw our own conclusions.

         The Prime Minister appears to have overawed the present Commission that did not consider his brazen efforts to project macho ultra-national pride and also to appropriate decades of the nation’s achievements in the space sector by destroying a satellite in space to be crossing the red line during the period covered by the Model Code of Conduct. It refused to stop the ruling party from releasing a bio-pic on the PM that everyone is talking about and it did nothing to prevent the public streaming of a web documentary ‘Modi: A Common Man’s Journey’ on Eros Now — despite protests. This emboldened the ruling establishment to go to the unprecedented length of starting a television channel called NaMo, named after the Prime Minister, and while the concerned official agencies cringe in fear, the constitutionally-protected Election Commission, headed by the former Broadcasting secretary, is resorting to bureaucratic games. The retired officers and many other parties and groups have approached the Commission but it just looks the other way. Never since Sukumar Sen set up the Election Commission in the early 1950s and TN Seshan strengthened it in the early 1990s, have we seen such deliberate inaction from the Commission. 

     But the present Commission does not hesitate to take selective action against those governments that Modi dislikes by transferring its top officials, while the DGP of Tamil Nadu, that is ruled by the PM’s ally, continues to boss around election arrangements — even though he has a proven track record of political bias and criminal charges against him. There appears little point in mentioning that a Governor made clearly political statements without even a line from the Commission, that proved equally ineffective when Adityanath Yogi, CM of Uttar Pradesh, got away by declaring the Indian Army to Modi’s own. The first phase of the polls is about to begin and morning clearly shows the day. If we are to have really fair polls in Independent India’s most critical elections, the present Election Commission must be taken to task either by a ‘hue and cry’ at every act of favouritism, or by the courts — preferably by both.  

Friday, 5 April 2019

How Buddhist Records Helped Recreate The History of India

How Buddhist Records Helped Recreate The History of India


By Jawhar Sircar
(Published in 'The Edition', 8th February, 2019)

       
           I thank the India Bhutan Foundation for having invited me to deliver a talk on a subject that is so close to my heart. For the last two decades I chose a rather unusual combination of subjects for my research, namely, History and Religion, and it feels satisfying to see some positive results emanating out of this combination. This is not the first occasion when I have expressed India’s indebtedness to Buddhist records for reconstructing Indian history in the last two centuries. Those who are familiar with this issue would be aware of the basic problem of deciphering history as an empirical discipline from materials that were never meant to serve as historical records or documents. I refer to Indian texts, more specifically the genre of sacred texts. We must remember that in ancient India which covers the period from 3500 BC to 1200 AD, i.e, more than four-fifth of India’s recorded history, the chronicling of events was primarily the task of what we call the Brahmanical intelligentsia that was also the keeper of religious traditions.

               For various reasons, history was not their focus and though we get large volumes of literature, primarily sacred, from the Vedas, the Upanishads, the Sutras, the Puranas and numerous commentaries thereof, we hardly get any historical narratives. The Puranas do recite genealogies and some parts are substantiated by facts, but they mix up a lot of fiction and religion and cannot, therefore, qualify as historical texts. They have, of course, been treated as source materials of history, but with a lot of caution and very selectively. Where India’s secular side is concerned, India was not known to have produced histories except rare ones like Kalhana’s Rajatangini in the 12th century that chronicles the dynasties of Kashmir and some others. With the arrival of Muslim rulers, the emphasis changed and political records were kept quite rigorously and it is needless to say that during the colonial period, this was obsessive but one needs to be extremely careful about imperial bias and other failings.

              While it is not difficult to produce the history of India from the 12th century onwards, there were considerable problems in delineating a linear history of India from the earliest historical period. India had completely forgotten even the grandeur of Harappan civilisation and its large cities on the Indus and its tributaries and distributaries like Mohenjo Daro, Harappa, Lothal that were built as early as 3500 BC and flourished for almost two millennia. The Vedic period has left behind almost no such direct material civilisation but archeology has been able to retrieve remains of pottery, metals, small towns and other evidence. The next major phase, that is personified by the great Gangetic kingdoms, the Mahajanapadas and the Mauryas have considerable material artefacts and architecture but much of the Buddhist glory was sadly forgotten in the land of its birth. In fact, the first two major discoveries of British archeology, i.e, the Amravati stupa, that Col. Colin Mackenzie had stumbled upon first in 1798, and the Ajanta caves that were discovered accidentally by a team of soldiers in 1819 are two of the grandest evidence of the efflorescence of Buddhist art and culture that had lapsed from human memory. Mackenzie returned to Amravati in 1816 as the Surveyor General of India as he knew that his earlier visit was quite superficial and spent four years in documenting the find and sketching the ruins. He made a presentation on Amravati before the Asiatic Society in Kolkata in 1819 with 85 illustrations, but he made the mistake of mistaking the site to be one of Deccan Jainism rather than of Buddhism. Ever after it was discovered, it took both the British and Indians several decades to understand the uniqueness of the art of Ajanta and hence, it was not incorporated into India’s historical timeline till the end of the 19th century. That journey is another interesting story in itself.

         Both Ajanta’s discovery and Amaravati’s presentation were in the year 1819. This means that even two hundred years ago, 1817, there was no proper linearity in Indian history and there was, for instance, no idea of the glory of the Mauryas, the greatness of Ashoka and the magnificence of the Buddhist phase. Almost all the architectural grandeur of pre-Islamic India is represented by the mighty stupas at Sarnath and Sanchi and the ancient universities of Taxila and Nalanda. In 1817, their existence was not known or visible as they had been lying in ruins from centuries of neglect. They had become highly avoidable ruins that were dreaded because of snakes and ghosts. Buddhism had survived and prospered outside its homeland, but in its cradle and nursery its existence was forgotten. Today, we shall briefly touch upon the fascinating process though which India rediscovered her past in the next hundred years, bit by bit, and how Buddhist memory helped the process.

Let us quickly recapitulate some of the other major Buddhist monuments that were discovered during this exciting phase. The next significant discovery after Amaravati and Ajanta was in 1830, General Ventura uncovered the Manikyala Stupa at Taxila. This very ancient city, was said to be the capital of Parikshit, the grand-son of Arjuna of Mahabharata, and it had been an important Buddhist centre that the Jataka tales describe in great details.  Taxila had seen Darius of Persia and Alexander the Great. Taxila carried valuable evidence of several periods, pre-Mauryan, Indo-Greek and Kushan. This ancient centre of India’s first university had been destroyed by the Huns in the 5th century AD and it lay in ruins for 1400 years. But how did the British find out what Indians had forgotten? One was their boundless curiosity and the other was their scorn for Indian concepts of ‘purity’ and ‘impurity’, as well as for ghosts and evil spirits that prohibited Indians from venturing into ruins. Cobras, and other dangerous creatures that inhabited these ruins did not deter them either.

  More interesting is the fact that British scholars and archaeologists utilised Indian or Chinese texts, mainly Buddhist, to provide them with valuable clues to many historical sites. After all, James Rennell had used the writings of foreigners, i.e, classical European geographers like Pliny and Ptolemy to identify Pataliputra with modern Patna in his 1783 Memoir of a Map of Hindoostan. But, Alexander Cunningham, who later became the first Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of India depended a lot on the testimony of Chinese pilgrims and their travel accounts of the Buddhist sacred places in India. By using the bearings and distances mentioned by travellers like Fa Xian and Xuan Zang, Cunningham succeeded in fixing the locations of many of the famous sites mentioned in ancient Indian texts and thus rediscovering them. These records, of course, had their own limitations which resulted in all kinds of controversies as, for instance, the identification of Kapilavastu. Here, for instance, the field of speculation was very wide because the bearings in the accounts of Chinese pilgrims were not consistent. While Nepal has claimed Tilaurakot as ancient Kapilavastu, we in India have identified it with Piprahwa-Ganwaria in Uttar Pradesh. And while it is true that freely occurring monastic seals of the first-second centuries CE which mention the Kapilavastu Sangha have been found at Piprahwah-Ganwaria, at Tailaurakot too, a terracotta sealing with 'Sa-ka-na-sya' ('of the Sakyas') in the Brahmi script has been reported. So, where exactly was Kapilavastu located is a question that neither archaeology nor literature can still answer to everyone’s satisfaction.

Cunningham unravelled the mighty Dhameka Stupa at Sarnath in 1835, which was cylindrical and quite unlike other hemi-spherical stupas. It marked the spot of the ‘Deer Park’, where Buddha gave his first sermon after attaining his enlightenment. The holiest of Buddhist sacred texts like the Vinaya Sutras and the Dhamma-Chakka-Pavattana Sutta contain the Lord’s message of the four noble truths that were delivered at this very spot. But it was James Prinsep’s remarkable decipherment of the Brahmi script two years later in 1837 that really shook history. The earliest messages of the Buddha and Buddhism were transmitted orally but when they were first recorded the script used to convey the Pali language was ancient or archaic Brahmi that was completely forgotten. For centuries, Indians had come across strange epigraphs or carvings on rocks and metal that none understood. What is more regrettable is that even the Maurya, the first emperors of India and Ashoka the great were almost gone and existed more in fables and legends rather that in written texts.

  The mystery was unraveled by epigraphist and scholar of numismatics, James Prinsep of the Royal Asiatic Society of Bengal in Kolkata.  As editor of the Society’s journal, he received all types of coins and copies of inscriptions from all over India for decipherment, translation and publication. He was intrigued by the strange unknown alphabets on the rock engravings of Allahabad and Delhi that lay in front of him. From the middle of the 1830s, he embarked on a serious mission to make sense of them. With extreme patience and his extraordinary command over other foreign scripts, he managed finally to decipher the words ‘Devanampiya Piyadasi’. This was the term by which Ashoka was addressed in the sacred texts and translated as “Beloved of the Gods of Gracious Mein”. Prinsep managed thereafter to decipher the Brahmi script in which most Ashokan rock edicts were inscribed and he produced the most solid form of historical evidence to establish that emperor Ashoka was truly a historical character. He had been mentioned in the Buddhist chronicles of Sri Lanka by the same epithet, but he could now be fixed with historical accuracy: after a few hiccups. Prinsep assumed first that this Ashoka was a Sri Lankan king who used the same epithet. It was only when George Turnour, who had considerable knowledge of Lankan Buddhism, sent him correct evidence from Pali sacred literature did Prinsep  rectify his error and declare this monarch as Ashoka the great of Indian legends. 

After so many years of speculation, Ashoka Maurya was finally demystified and firmly established on the throne of Buddhism and India. This helped in joining the dots of the missing grandeur of India’s real heritage, for none personifies the plural soul of India more than him. If the Buddhist texts had not been there as a back up there are grave doubts as to how well we would have succeeded in establishing a credible history of ancient India. Cunningham’s subsequent discovery of Sanchi Stupa in 1851 that had been lost in our memory was the most educative of all our stupa sites. The restored stupa brings out the characters from the Jataka Tales that embellish the gateways. In 1854, Cunningham published the Bhilsa Topes which attempted to establish the history of Buddhism based on whatever architecture and archaeology evidence was available. Himanshu Prabha Ray mentions Sanchi with special emphasis in her significant work ‘The Return of the Buddha: Ancient Symbols for a New Nation’.

Cunningham’s doggedness led him to rediscover and re-excavate Bodh Gaya in 1861 that Hamilton Buchanan had reported half a century ago as a place covered by a thick forest.Cunningham’s further discoveries in 1862-63 were as important in the treatment of historical amnesia. He, identified Ramnagar as the ancient ‘Ahich-chatra’; Kosam as the great ‘Kausambi’ and Sahet Mahet as the historic ‘Sravasti’.  British archaeologists could retrieve these jewels from our past mainly on the basis of Buddhist textual evidence.  The indefatigable Cunningham then moved to the Bharhut Stupa and physically uprooted large number of stone carvings from this site, in true imperial style, and transported them to Calcutta’s Indian Museum. They served there as a ‘classroom’ and exhibition of the excellence of Buddhist art and architecture. Succeeding generations of art historians, archaeologists, museologists and connoisseurs derived their education from these eloquent stones in Kolkata. Thus, within just eight decades, Buddhist architecture was suddenly brought back into our memory and served to stoke a strong sense of pride among Indians who were throughly demoralised by the systematic campaign of British rulers to belittle their past. These structures and sculptures of Buddhism compensated somewhat for the apparent lack of outstanding tangible cultural heritage that stared  at us where ancient Indian history was concerned, except the few temples like those of the Pallavas and Cholas, Vijayanagar and Jagannath.

Before concluding, we need also to appreciate that though Buddhism disappeared from large parts of India by the middle of the first millennium,  the Buddhist Pala dynasty of Bengal established their kingdom as late as the 8th century and ruled till the 11thcentury. It created the ‘Pala School of Sculptural Art’ and constructed massive architectural structures at Vikramshila Odantapuri and elsewhere. In fact, the Buddhist Vihara of Somapura in Paharpur, Bangladesh, that the Palas erected is considered to be the largest such structure in the Indian sub-continent and is now a “World Heritage Site”. What is interesting is that once Buddhism was rediscovered, however, several Indians of all religions came forward to celebrate its glory. In fact, Buddhism was proudly declared as an inseparable part of India and the Hindu cultural sphere, forgetting the centuries of persecution that Brahmanism had unleashed upon that religion — that managed to wipe off its grandeur and memory so effectively that they had to be rediscovered with tremendous effort.

The revival of Buddhism in the 20th century was also due to great social reformers like Jyotiba Phule and Babasaheb Ambedkar. Even Rabindranath Tagore’s creative genius drew inspiration from Buddha’s teachings on social equality and to him Buddha was the greatest human being. The poet laureate chose to prostrate himself before the image of the Buddha at Bodh Gaya which is the only time in his life that he ever did so. Tagore made a profound observation on the 8th May, 1935, the Buddha Purnima Day: “Materials of different shades of Indian thought and culture are confined in Buddhist literature and due to the lack of intimacy with them, the entire history of India remains unfulfilled. Being convinced of it, cannot a few youths of our country dedicate themselves for the restoration of the Buddhist heritage and make it a mission in life?” Since then, a lot of research into the greatness of Indian Buddhism has been undertaken and the departments of Archelology, Numismatics, Ancient Indian History, Pali, Buddhist Studies and the like of many universities and both the central and state governments have re-discovered a lot. But we are yet to come up and declare in broad terms the debt that the discipline of Ancient Indian history and India as a nation owes to Buddhism in enriching our legacy with magnificent architecture, especially when Hinduism has so little of it between the third century BCE and the twelfth century in the Current Era. One cannot imagine India without Ashoka and had it not been for Buddhist records, he would have remained lost for ever.

Modi’s surgical strikes bear resemblance to a game of Kabaddi--watch out for the next ‘raid’ by the PM


Modi’s surgical strikes bear resemblance to a game of Kabaddi--watch out for the next ‘raid’ by the PM
(National Herald, 5 Apr 2019)

Narendra Modi’s record in office being quite pathetic and people having neither forgotten nor forgiven him for the economic mess that he created with his ‘demonetisation’ that caused havoc in the economy and destroyed livelihoods, it is hardly surprising that he has fallen back on faux nationalism as the cornerstone of his poll campaign.
Modi has been pining from ‘day one’ for a hallowed pedestal in India’s history and the single puerile act of Demonetisation ensured that he gets a slot, next to the reckless Muhammad Bin Tughlaq. His hastily implemented GST that he announced at midnight in Parliament in cheap imitation of Pandit Nehru’s Tryst with Destiny speech harassed an entire nation for months and years. This half-baked GST and the mindless Demonetisation caused growth to nosedive to such abysmally low levels that he had to let loose his ever-obliging coterie of economists and crafty mandarins to invent new and extremely doubtful new rules of growth measurement.
Job creation has hit the lowest level ever in 45 years and the spate of crude fudging and inventive apologia have failed to cover up the disaster. He is, therefore, pining to display his questionable machismo to deviate public attention from this messed-up reality and we have not even mentioned his failures to deal with agriculture, education, scientific research and many other spheres. In this crisis, the tragic attack at a convoy of para-military forces at Pulwama on the 14th of February that killed close to 50 CRPF jawans was a ‘gift’ to him from Jaish, as former RA&W chief AS Dulat has said, and the Indian Kashmiri suicide bomber was unbelievably ‘made-to-order’ for Modi.
As it shook the shocked nation, Modi resorted to his theatrical call to war — “we shall avenge!” and calculated hysterical outbursts like #EndPakistan and #IndiaWantsRevenge rent the air. No discussion took place on who was responsible for this terrible security lapse and hysteria was just synchronised on the media, fed obviously by a Machiavellian establishment. It almost coaxed the great leader to strike back, which he did on the 26th of February at Balakot in Pakistan — a 1.5 days’ war that is in keeping up with India’a great indigenous sport called Kabaddi.
Everything was over in a flash as the genuflecting media announced that an important target within Pakistan had been hit by the Indian Air Force and that 250 or even 300 Pakistanis had been killed. The government smirked in silence and the Air Force refused to give any number, even on repeated questioning.
It was clear that Modi’s regime had outsourced the whipping up of frenzy to a new breed of ever-obliging media. It accused everyone else of not being patriotic enough and branding these who raised common sense questions as anti-nationals. This was most surely the first private public partnership (PPP) of propaganda. The idea was to stun a disturbed nation with calculated overdoses of Goebbelsian fake news and freshly-brewed series of blood-curling hatred.
A game of Kabaddi
A word about Kabaddi — as the hit and run, zip-zap-boom ‘war’ at Balakot is best described. This sole-surviving indigenous game of India and Pakistan, Kabaddi, incidentally, outlasted the domineering colonial sports like football, cricket, hockey, tennis and the lot. Indians and Pakistanis love this very exciting game for the surge of blood that it pumps up and drops, both rather dramatically.
Under the rules, a lone attacker sneaks into ‘enemy territory’ with some aggressive choo-choo sounds and his mission is to simply touch any one of the players on that side — which then knocks the ‘hit’ person off from the game. The defending side is equally alert and its objective is to entice the attacker deeper into their territory and then grab the raider and pin him down.
It is all over in a flicker, with a lot of sound and fury on both sides, just as the Balakot skirmish was, where an Indian Air Force officer landed in Pakistan and was pinned down. Both sides enjoy that feverish excitement but, unlike Kabaddi, no one could really make out who won at Balakot — as both sides screamed that victory was theirs.
We need to understand that the extreme fundamentalists and the army who monopolise Pakistani politics and dominate society are indeed most benefitted by Modi’s regime. Its pronounced anti-Muslim acts and its calculated ambivalence to the recurring lynching of Muslims heats up a larger section of the Pakistani people, that then supports both terrorism and an anti-democratic polity.
The Pakistani Military-Mullah establishment just love every excess that the India regime indulge in and its uncontrollable paroxysms of anti-Kashmiri detestation, as these provoke reciprocal hatred for India, which strengthens the Pakistani establishment.
The poison that Zia-ul-Haq injected into the body of Pakistan in the 1970s was deeply regretted by secular and democracy-loving Indians until the present Indian government arrived, to match villainy with villainy.
Bitterness, hatred and war help only demented megalomaniacs on both sides and jumping the gun after Pulwama is exactly what the international conspirators desired. Modi appeared just too glad to oblige. It helped him foment dangerous ultra-nationalism on which he feeds, and gave him an opportunity to indulge in demagoguery, the only thing he has mastered.
The war option, however, ran out of steam obviously because it was much too dangerous for the world to permit two nuclear nations to slug it out. Modi soon realised that he would not be permitted to escalate his ‘war’ beyond a 1.5 day Kabaddi match as China would just not permit its ally, Pakistan, to be hit, beyond this token gesture. Russia was certainly not willing to have either America or China gaining from a war in its backyard. Even Trump must have displayed rare bouts of sense and must have conveyed that he would surely intervene, most forcefully.
Let us remember that Indira Gandhi had to convince every important world leader over several months to obtain their ‘no objection’ before she sent the Indian army into East Pakistan in 1971. Even so, the US Seventh Fleet came perilously close to intervention but she won the game of nerves.
Modi’s constant anti-minority terror techniques and his crackdown on Kashmiri Muslims have worried every important foreign leader, his embarrassing bear-hugs notwithstanding. All, except Israel’s Netanyahu — who, anyway, has blood on his hands and is charged for taking bribes. War was soon realised as a non-option and even imagined machismo that followed in lieu has its own limitations.
We need to remember that, under the circumstances, one more option always exists and this is communal riot — that invariably polarise voters.
It must not be allowed to happen suddenly, as it did in Gujarat in 2002 or in Muzaffarnagar in 2013. Well over a thousand people were killed in 2002 but till now no big leader could be fixed for inciting pogroms or for abetting the killers. This frightening option of communal riots is never closed in India and we need to remain on alert.

The Bulldozer Is the Latest Symbol of Toxic Masculinity to Create Havoc in the Populace

  The Bulldozer Is the Latest Symbol of Toxic Masculinity to Create Havoc in the Populace                                               ...