For Billy..

-- Ernie Pillai

http://world.time.com/2013/08/27/what-dna-testing-reveals-about-indias-caste-system/print/

What DNA Testing Reveals About India’s Caste System


Dr. Kumarasamy Thangaraj
Kumarasamy Thangaraj takes a blood sample from an Andaman islander, as part of 
his research into the genetics of India's castes

Kumarasamy Thangaraj traveled 840 miles (1,350 km) off of the eastern coast of 
India by plane, then ship, then six hours by car, then ship again to collect 
blood samples from an isolated tribe of hunter-gatherers on the Andaman 
Islands. Their blood, he explained through an interpreter, would help him 
understand a pivotal moment in India’s genetic history. The tribesmen had never 
heard of a gene before or an academic study for that matter, and the whole 
pitch struck them as an interesting diversion from their usual routine of 
spearfishing.

“They mostly laughed,” Thangaraj says, before they offered up their arms in 
exchange for food. A few needle pricks later, they returned to their boats to 
fling short wooden spears into the water with uncanny aim, while Thangaraj made 
the long journey home to Hyderabad. He deposited the latest samples into a 
blood bank, alongside another 32,000 samples from his countrymen.

(MORE: The DNA Dilemma: A Test That Could Change Your Life)

The collective bloodlines at the Centre for Cellular & Molecular Biology, 
India’s leading genetic-research institute, pose a unique riddle for 
researchers. On the one hand, geneticists can trace nearly all bloodlines back 
to two ancestral groups, one hailing from Africa, the other from Eurasia. These 
groups mingled, married and swapped genes. A mixture of their genetic material 
can be found in nearly every person on the subcontinent today.

But at some mysterious point in history, these braided bloodlines began to 
fray. The population divided along linguistic, religious and tribal lines, to 
the point where it separated into 4,635 distinct genetic groups. Europe and 
Asia look positively homogeneous in comparison, says Thangaraj. He and his 
collaborators at Harvard Medical School wanted to know when exactly the Indian 
melting pot stopped melting.

(PHOTOS: The Future of Life — Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Discovery 
of DNA)

Their finding, recently published in the American Journal of Human Genetics, 
made waves when it was revealed that genetic mixing ended 1,900 years ago, 
around the same time the caste system was being codified in religious texts. 
The Manusmriti, which forbade intermarriage between castes, was written in the 
same period, give or take a century.

Thangaraj says the study shows only a correlation between the early caste 
system and the divergence of bloodlines, and whether one caused the other is a 
debate better left to historians. Nonetheless, it puts a stake in the ground, 
marking the moment when the belief that one should marry within one’s own group 
developed into an active practice.

(MORE: Capitalism Over Caste: The Success of India’s ‘Untouchable’ CEOs)

He also doesn’t want the early signs of a caste system to overshadow another 
finding of his study — how completely the population mixed 2,000 years ago. He 
points to the Paliyar tribe in the foothills of southern India. Their villages 
are inaccessible by car, and outsiders cannot visit them without a government 
permit. “They’re still in the forest,” says Thangaraj, “but still they have 
some affinities with other groups. At some point in time, everybody was mixed.”

It’s a point that he stresses to anyone who wants to turn bloodlines into 
battle lines. On Aug. 15, on India’s independence day, a mob from the Rajput 
community in Bihar attacked men, women and children in the Dalit community. 
They beat them with rods, killing one and injuring 54. “Look, we were all 
brothers and sisters 2,000 years back,” Thangaraj says of this sort of 
violence, “why are you fighting now?” Although he did observe one notable 
outlier from the extended family: the spear-wielding fishermen of the Andaman 
Islands have no trace of the genetic mix that pervades the mainland. Proof that 
the only the thing that really could have stopped India’s ancestral populations 
from mixing was an 840-mile schlep to a remote tropical island.

MORE: Off the Coast of India, in the Andaman Islands, Another Language Dies


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