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In the early twentieth-century, the concepts of Hindutva, Samyavada or Nationalism and national identity, reconstructed amid currents of globalization and neocolonialism. During this period, the calls for an independent India reached its height. While, Mohandas Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru believed modern India's strength depended on incorporating the solidarities of all Indians as they stood on the precipice of the postcolonial age, Veer Vinayak Damodar Savarkar (1883-1966), an ethnocentric nationalist, held that a strong Hindu nation was the only way to guarantee India's security against the Muslim other and the British imperialism. Being the philosopher of Hindutva, Savarkar represented the ethno-nationalistic component to Hindu nationalism and looked to cultural motifs in order to unify the "true" people of India. He, therefore, wrote glorified histories of India and its millennia-old cultural traditions in his essays. This article analyzes and historically contextualizes the timing and the rhetorical style of V. D. Savarkar's infamous extended essay "Essentials of Hindutva".
Savarkar as a diehard Casteist: Evidence from Hindutva archives It appeared in The Indian Express, Delhi titled ‘Truth about Savarkar and caste’ on 23-03-2022. https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/truth-about-savarkar-and-caste-7832134/
Journal of The Royal Asiatic Society, 2007
This volume highlights some of the ways in which questions on origins challenge historical reconstructions. The debate on Indo Aryan, a linguistic phenomenon, revolves around two opposing views. One, that its initial presence within north-west South Asia can be verified only from the second millennium BC onwards, and the other, that it was native to the region. Those who now support the first view do not offer explanations that are based on the Aryan invasion theories of the nineteenth-and the early-twentieth centuries. Rather, they perceive the possibility of small-scale migrations of Indo Aryan speakers into Punjab and Northwest India. In contrast, the indigenists (see Bryant's definition, p. 468) who propose the origins of the 'Indo-Aryans' in South Asia locate the validity of their premise mainly through the archaeological record of the Greater Indus Valley, which provides no traces of large-scale dramatic invasions, or smaller groups of people migrating into this region during the second millennium BC. The theoretical slippage that recurs in historicising a linguistic phenomenon through its speakers stokes a controversial debate at present, which resonates on the appropriation of an academic exercise for conjuring a primordial Hindu nationhood for India (but Bryant, p. 471). Both, the research methods of the indigenists, and the kinds of evidence they promote as scientific and valid, are controversial. As the volume reminds us, it is the historicity of the speakers of Indo Aryan, a subject of more than a century-long research that continues to stage discussions regarding what ought to be a 'true story' of 'origins'.
Why the Aryans Still Matter? History, Historiography and Politics, 2022
This review article ponders over the debate on the river Sarasvati’s association with the Harappan civilization through a critical analysis of G. D. Bakshi’s book The Sarasvati Civilization: A Paradigm Shift in Ancient Indian History (2019, Gurugram: Garuda Prakashan). By identifying the Rigvedic river Sarasvati with the now dry Ghaggar-Hakra, scholars like G. D. Bakshi co-relate the Vedic-Aryan culture with the Harappans and, by doing this, they Aryanize the Harappan civilization. Since the Aryans are accepted as the ancestors of the modern Hindus, by locating the origin of the Aryans within India, right-leaning scholars put forth the exclusive claim of the Hindu community over the Indian nation. Contrary to them, the left-liberal scholars endorse the Aryan migration theory, and it allows them to explain the origin of the Indian civilization due to the contribution of different ethnic, linguistic and cultural groups that have had migrated into India from faraway lands. It is argued in this review paper that the Aryan debate is more about politics than academic endeavour, and its primarily focus is on the following question: Who has a righteous claim over the Indian nation?
What are the prehistoric sources of Brahminic Hinduism and Ancient Indian Civilization? The attempts to answer this question have given rise to the fractious debates of what's called 'The Aryan Controversy,' in which' Western scholars argue that Brahminic Hinduism is a result of the Rig Vedic Indo-Aryan (RVIA) conquest of the Indus Valley civilization (IVC), while Indigenist Indian intellectuals argue that Brahminic Hinduism, like the Sanskrit language and the Rig Veda, is a indigenous creation of the Harappan culture. Following Asko Parpola's 'The Roots of Hinduism,' this review essay argues that both the Rig Vedic-Indo Aryans and the Harappans played a significant role in the establishment of Brahminic Hinduism, and explores the diverse theories that have been devised to account for the world-historical dialectical relationship between the RVIA culture and the Harappan population. Although the IVC certainly predates the RVIA migrations from Central Asia by several millennia, the IVC was already in drastic decline by the second millennia BCE, when the RVIA tribes arrived in the Punjab; and the RVIA invasion of the Indus Valley resulted in a drastic transformation of the Harappan culture, whereby Brahminic Vedic sacrificial ritualism and the Sanskrit language were imposed upon the Harappan population. But the RVIA tribes were a small elite minority among the Harappan population, and within another thousand years, the Harappan population had swamped the RVIA invaders, resulting in the reemergence of the Pre-Rig Vedic Mesopotamian and Harappan elements which make up the greater part of 'village Hinduism.' After many thousand years of conquests of the Indian subcontinent by the RVIAs, the Greeks, the Mongols, the Mughals, and the British Empire, contemporary Hinduism thus testifies to the survival of Harappan (IVC) culture in the 21st Century Republic of India (est. 1947-1950).
Religions, 2023
This paper is about a particular construction of nationalism at the hands of Romesh Chunder Dutt (1848–1909), the well-known exponent of ‘economic nationalism’, in colonial Bengal from 1870 onwards till his death in 1909. In this construction of nationalism, which today scholars would best describe as ‘cultural nationalism’, the categories ‘Hindu’ and ‘national’ converged and became conflated. Through a discussion of Dutt’s ‘literary patriotism’, the paper seeks to answer why it was so in the case of someone like R C Dutt, and what implications we can draw from this regarding our understanding of colonial Indian nationalism and its origins. With reference to Dutt, Sudhir Chandra pointed out that the neat distinction that we draw between ‘economic nationalism’ and ‘cultural nationalism’ is fallacious. The paper reiterates and reinforces this argument by showing how cultural and political nationalisms were enmeshed together in the case of R C Dutt. Furthermore, the glorious past that Dutt reconstructed through his literary patriotism could not but be a Hindu past; he was not a vilifier of Muslims, but somehow he shelved the question of the place of Muslims in his construction of Indian nationhood.
Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society , 2024
Verge: Studies in Global Asias
Matthew Darby, 2024
Epeteris Theologikes Scholes Panepistemiou Athenon, 2022
REHABEND Carceres-Espanha, 2018
Group & Organization Management, 2012
Somaliatoday online, 2022
Ler História, 2020
Advanced Biomedical Research, 2015
Zeitschrift f�r Lebensmitteluntersuchung und -Forschung A, 1998
The Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 2015
New Agenda: South African Journal of Social and Economic Policy, 2016
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law, 1997