Indian nationhood was, by and by, stitched up by the epic Indian freedom
struggle - or "Indian nationalists", as opposed to "Muslim" or "Hindu"
nationalists, informed with the values of "enlightenment", that had flowed
in via the British colonial rule, and taking off from the (nearly)
integrated state created, for the first time, by the colonial rulers, in
pursuance of their project to loot this vast and enticing land.
In a way, it was a case of the cart before the horse.

Emerging "nationalism" - as an "enlightened" response to colonial loot and
oppression, sharply contrasted from the preceding backward-looking huge
outbursts of rage - driven by racial and religious hatred coming on top of
the legitimate grievances of the colonised oppressed, in 1857, in order to
justify itself, set upon creating a "nation", out of loosely connected
disparate elements.

In fact, even on the morrow of Independence, the "nationhood" was a work in
progress, to be taken forward by the new-born state.
Hence, an emphatic emphasis on a centralised state, at times even going
against the fundamental canon of "democracy", which the new-born state had
sworn by - as a legacy of the freedom struggle.

However, the Indian nationalist mythology had to reimagine the past to
construct a glorious ancient nation in order to fight the colonial canard
of a "civilising mission" - which, regardless of its sinister instrumental
use, was, definitely, not all wrong.

This myth, somehow, managed to coexist with the notion of a "nation in
making" - a phrase, made famous by one of the earliest front-ranking
"nationalist" leaders, by using it in the title of his autobiography.
The anointing of Gandhi - by far the tallest of all the "Indian
nationalist" leaders, as the "Father of the Nation", by none other than his
principal challenger from within the Congress, was also yet another public
acknowledgement of this stark reality, as contrasted from the fabricated
venerated myth.

Now, this old useful myth - grotesquely exaggerated by the "Hindu
nationalists", has come back to bite hard the legatees of its creators.
A cruel irony of history.

Sukla

https://www.telegraphindia.com/opinion/future-of-history-indias-past-is-now-threatened-with-fatal-revisionism/cid/1797495#



Friday, 20 November 2020  E-paper

Future of history
India’s past is now threatened with fatal revisionism

Francis Fukuyama: proved right

G.N. Devy

Published 15.11.20, 12:08 AM

In 1992, a provocative thesis was put forward by the Japanese-American
political scientist, Yoshihiro Francis Fukuyama. The book in which it was
published had an enigmatic title: The End of History and the Last Man. It
argued that having won the struggle for a liberal democratic State, humans
may not want to go further. They may end up just producing banality rather
than ideas to transform civilizations in the future. This was one part of
Fukuyama’s argument. The other part was that atavistic tendencies may
resurface and negate the gains made. The heroic struggles for claiming
equality and freedom may no longer interest the world. The two together may
make the 21st-century world come to the very end of a unidimensional
progression of history. Fukuyama’s grand curiosity about the future of
civilizations led him to speculate whether the progression from barbarism
to liberal democracy leaves humans marooned in banality, instability,
atavism and a modern-primitivism.

In the same year as Fukuyama’s phenomenal work was published in the United
States of America, I was working on a book on literary history in India. My
objective was to examine how India has conceptualized its history over the
last two millennia. The material collected over a decade towards this book
made it amply clear to me that in Indian intellectual traditions —
Sanskrit, Tamil, Pali, Prakrit and modern Indian languages — there had not
been any one way of recollecting the past, which is the appointed business
of history. The diversity of perspectives was so striking that I felt
compelled to title my work, Of Many Heroes. This I had partially drawn from
the 10th-century theorist, Rajasekhara. He considered the Ramayana as a
work with a single hero and the Mahabharata as the work with many heroes, a
distinction that was used by him for classifying histories. Moreover,
determining any single beginning for Indian civilization is too difficult a
task. I had forgotten these intense debates within my mind about the exact
origin. I was reminded of them recently when the Central government’s
ministry of culture announced that a committee had been set up to
reconstruct the history of India over the last twelve thousand years. The
committee was appointed during the last tenure of the National Democratic
Alliance government by the minister, Mahesh Sharma. Its details were
presented in Parliament in response to a question this year. A sharp
reaction to this disclosure came from the Janata Dal (Secular)’s H.D.
Kumaraswamy and the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam’s Kanimozhi Karunanidhi; but
whatever criticism came in response was about the committee being entirely
made up of men and mainly from the north. The basic premise leading to
instituting the committee has, however, not received due attention.

The premise that leads to the formation of such a committee is at the heart
of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh’s view of India as a nation, which holds
the sanatan Vedic tradition of knowledge as non-negotiable. Every tradition
of knowledge has some profound wisdom and tenable theories. But everything
in a given knowledge tradition cannot be said to have eternal validity.
Concepts and theories forming a knowledge tradition need to be modified,
supplemented, and even discarded by future generations in the light of
fresh evidence and new discoveries. But the advocates of sanatan knowledge
do not like questions being asked of ancient Indian texts in the light of
modern knowledge. They do not accept the fact that during medieval times,
many significant saint-poets and thinkers had already gone past the Vedic
texts and started modifying the ‘sacred knowledge’ by locating it within
the human sphere, which the English language describes as ‘secular’. Such
questioning is dismissed by equating it with ‘colonialism and Western’ and,
therefore, a defilement of the ancient wisdom.

Since the Vedas were composed in an early variety of the Sanskrit language,
this perspective tends to propose an ancestry for the Sanskrit language,
which is difficult to sustain in the light of the known linguistic
evidence. The source of the misconception is in one esoteric strand of
19th-century European Linguistics. Initially, Sir William Jones had put
forward a hypothesis, going by the known similarities between some of the
ancient languages, about their origin in a ‘proto’ Indo-European language.
In Jones’s hypothesis, ‘Indo-Aryan’ was used as the name for a language
precisely because he wanted to mark it out as distinct from the later day
‘classical’ Sanskrit. In an esoteric strand of 19th-century European
Linguistics, the term, arya, was interpreted as the name-tag for a people,
which it never was. That term, arya — ‘gentleman’ or a ‘respected man’ —
used in Sanskrit was picked up as the slender thread by some Indian
scholars inclined towards the Hindu-nation idea. Upon this coincidence was
built the idea that Sanskrit-speaking ancient Indian people traversed the
north and went up to Europe in some prehistoric times.

None of the studies based on the scientific study of ancient migrations,
archaeology, ancient metallurgy, literary texts, comparative mythology and
folklore provides grounds to validate this theory. However, in order to
establish the prehistoric and widespread presence of the Sanskrit language,
particularly during the third millennium before the Christian era, it
becomes necessary to sort out the unresolved mysteries surrounding the
Indus Valley civilization. Its advanced phase is dated with a fair degree
of precision as belonging to the period 2600 BC to 1900 BC. And the date of
the composition of the Vedas is widely accepted among serious scholars to
be between 1400 BC and 900 BC. These dates established through elaborate
research and a careful examination of evidence are not acceptable to
Hindutva nationalists. There is a mythological genealogy, a long chain of
names of mythical kings, given in the Mahabharata which the nationalist
view of the past accepts as factual ‘history’. This leads them to hold that
the imagined ‘history’ of the last 10 or more millennia is the factual
history of India. Given the ideological moorings of the present government
and how keen it is to translate its ideas of what India is as a nation, it
would not be far off the mark to expect that the committee on Indian
history has a predetermined mission at hand.

For several millennia, Indians have learnt to live with the idea that there
is no single point of origin for the vast diversity of peoples in this
subcontinent. We can conceptualize the history of the Indian peoples
properly only if we accept the idea of many origins. Let us hope that the
government committee on history and culture is not designed to merely
endorse what the RSS projects as an incontrovertible historical truth. But
if this turns out to be the case, the future of the history of India may,
alas, prove Fukuyama’s atavism thesis right.

The author is a literary scholar and cultural activist [email protected]

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