Saturday, 27 April 2019

Origins of Hinduism



After having seen the origin of us, Indians, it is time now to move on to the origin of Hinduism. Our forefathers came out of Africa, who moved into Indian subcontinent some 65,000 years back, and spread all over the place. The previous occupants of the country, the Neanderthals just vanished once modern man set his foot in the country! Then came the Zagros Iranians with their domesticated cattle and agriculture around 7000 BC to the western India and mingled with the out of African forefathers. This led to the Harappan civilization, which had its high point in 2600 BC, but declined and disappeared around 1900 BC. They moved to the south and to the east. Last came the Aryans from Kazakh steppes of Eurasia around 1600 – 1100 BC through the same western corridors and mixed with the Harappan population. From the east we had admixture of Chinese and Australian tribes as well. This in short is our ancestry! Amazing, isn’t it?

Now the question is how did Hinduism rise out of all these? Origin of Hinduism is shrouded in mystery to say the least. Aryans when they came in confronted the declining Harappan civilization, who had mother-goddess worship, fertility cult, and a proto-Shiva sitting in yoga pose under a peepal tree with a trident. Harappans, who went to the south carried their beliefs. Even today we see a strong tendency of mother worship in the south, with names of goddesses like Kattamma, Madivalamma and so on. Harappans civilization was urban based, with sheep and buffaloes, a settled life with agriculture as the main stay.

Aryans were nomadic pastoral people, who brought into India horse, wheel and Sanskrit language. They had many gods, mainly the natural elements, like Surya the sun-god, Agni the fire-god, Indra the rain-god, Vayu the wind-god and so on. They sacrificed to their gods, which was very important to them. They sacrificed horses – ashvameda sacrifice, humans – purushameda sacrifice, and gifting away one’s property - sarvameda sacrifice.

As the Aryans moved gradually towards the east, the Gangetic valley, by 1500 BC they composed their first liturgy, the Rigveda. It had basically poems, some 1017 hymns grouped into 10 mandalas (books), which were chanted as mantras while performing the sacrifices. By chanting these, they believed that the particular god for whom they conducted the sacrifice, would come and grant their wishes. Their petitions were for victory in the war over the local indigenous leaders, prosperity, and increase in cattle wealth. To please their deities they offered the sacrifices. It was a magical chanting, which was the exclusive preserve of the priests, enhancing their prestige and power in the community.

Sama Veda, which contained some 1000 songs taken from Rigveda and rendered musical came next; Atharva Veda, the next Veda had 50 recensions, spells used by the priests while performing the sacrifices. Finally Yajur Veda which contained ritualistic passages of adoration and worship of gods in prose, and also a good amount of black magic and tantric rites; this is dated 500 BC.  

Thus from 1500 to 500 BC they had composed the four Vedas and this period is called the Vedic period. Each of these Vedas had their own Brahmanas, Aranyakas and Upanishads. As they conquered more and more territory and moved into the whole of Indian subcontinent, which happened by 200 AD, they also formulated their own code of conduct and reorganized the society for their advantage. The way of life or ‘Dharma’ as they called it, prescribed on the population was Varnashrama Dharma. It contained four varnas, based on the color of the skin and the level of pollution, as they thought. Brahmins, priestly class, who were the priests, kshatryas, the warriors, vaishya consisting of the traders and the farmers and finally the Sudra, the servile class which was to serve all the other three upper classes. Sudras were mainly the local population, whom they had conquered.

The ashrama dharma contained the stages of a man’s life, the first being the student life, devoted to study, the Brahmacharya; next being the married man whose task was to earn and support all the rest, the Grahastha; then the elders who left everything under the care of their sons and moved to the forests along with their wives, to meditate and live an ascetic life, the Vanaprastha and finally the fully renounced Sunnyasa, who maintained himself by begging till he found his mukti or liberation.  

This classification of people and life sounds admirable, excepting that it worked fully for the enrichment and advantage of the upper classes and the oppression and exploitation of the lower classes. From 1500 BC to 100 AD, the Aryans had mingled with the local population, marrying with whomever they thought attractive or rich enough for them to marry. By 100 AD they brought in caste system with its regulations and restrictions on marriage. Genome studies show that the intermixing stopped precisely at this point and the most unjust practice of caste system started. Sub castes and subgroups emerged into which they accommodated people groups according to their influence, power, position, bargaining power and riches.

The result was India, which was thriving so far having a wider influence, especially after Emperor Ashoka, who sent his son and daughter and others to the nearby eastern countries to spread Buddhism. This grew into a Greater India, as the cultural conquest and influence of India spread to Sri Lanka, Burma, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, China and even Japan. With the restrictions introduced, India started to look inward and all the initiatives of the population were curbed and there was no innovation or motivation or upward mobility guaranteed by hard work, which a poor or a hardworking man could look forward to. Each one was fossilized in their own caste and sub caste. Birth determined it all. By weaving religious beliefs into the caste system, they nailed the system deep in the psyche of the population.

The priestly class or the Brahmins were all powerful as they controlled the access to gods and prosperity; they kept the kings or warriors in good stead because they wanted security; the kings themselves needed the Brahmins to legitimize their rule; the farmers and traders were tolerated, but the Sudras and the outcastes were oppressed and humiliated and exploited. Outside the caste system existed the primitive tribal communities, who were not even included in the caste system, but were outcastes. They are the Scheduled caste and Scheduled tribes incorporated into our constitution at independence. Gandhi called them Harijans, as if the change in name would alter their condition; now they call themselves Dalits and are still fighting for their rights and economic liberation.

Women were suppressed and put down. Harappan culture gave women importance as they had practiced mother worship. Moreover they practiced matriarchal system, where property passed through the women in the family. Aryans being pastoral were patriarchal and had male gods and gave importance to males. To suppress the independent indigenous women folks, and to keep them subjugated, they brought in child marriage, lowered social status for widows and even introduced sati, where young widows, married to older men, were burnt on the funeral pyre of the dead husbands, which was supposed to bring vimochana (liberation) to the whole family.

They organised settlements into villages, ‘gramma,’ after clearing the forests, where representatives of all the four castes were settled; the Sudras and outcastes were demilitarized, their weapons removed and given no right to carry weapons; they could not buy any piece of land or own land in their names. They were not to learn and recite Vedas, but were kept in ignorance. They were made dependent on the upper castes for their livelihood and survival. Birth in a particular caste became a death warrant. No possibility of improving their fate; it was all written.

All these were happening when in the far distant Israel, Jesus died for the sins of the world and rose on the third day, proving God’s plans worked not through oppression and exploitation, but through love and sacrifice. Jesus Christ liberated human beings from the hold of sin and oppression. By the first century, 100 AD, when India was closing, the New Testament had been written and the disciples of Christ were on their move spreading the teachings of Christ all over the Roman Empire, and dying as martyrs.

Yes, Thomas, the disciple is said to have come to India and thus brought in Christianity to India, but it will take a full 1600 years before missionaries would come to India and spread Christianity in a meaningful way. I am referring to the Tranquebar Mission, which was established in Tharangambadi in today’s Tamil Nadu, by two German missionaries, Ziezenbalg and Plutschau in 1706 in the Danish East India Company premises. 200 years of British rule brought in modernity to India, and the much needed social liberation to the lower castes, outcastes and women in India. Still India is steeped in ignorance, superstition and poverty, especially in the BEMARU states (Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, and former Uttar Pradesh), which the politicians exploit to come to power.

Well, that is the history of Hinduism’s origin and development. We cannot pinpoint a time or date when the name Hinduism was given to this amalgamated religion. May be the Greek visitors like Magasthenes, who visited India in 303 BC, and Chinese pilgrims like Fahien, who came in 399 AD, referred to Hinduism as the religion practiced by the inhabitants of Hindustan. But one thing is certain, the religion that Aryans brought in and established was Brahminical Hinduism, which ran for a long time above the surface of the common or popular Hinduism practiced by the people, whom they conquered and oppressed. The Brahmins had to accommodate the gods of the local population and Shiva and Shakti (Kali or Parvati) came to be the major deity of Hinduism. No one worships Agni or Indra or Varuna today. It was a gradual process of accommodation and assimilation that went on for 3500 years to produce the mammoth Hinduism of today.

Does it sound a depressing tale to recount? Yes, it does, especially for those who do not fall in the upper two or three castes of Brahminical Hinduism. May be it is so unjust, because it is a code of life prepared by human beings, for their own selfish reasons and to preserve their own position in the society and to exercise power and control. In contrast is the Law commanded by God to Moses, is humane, with concern and care for the poor, the suffering and the downtrodden. One is a man-made religion; the other is God-given religion. May be there lies the difference.

Saturday, 20 April 2019

World Religions - Hinduism: Our Origins



This blog is coming after a long gap due to various reasons. Well, now that I have started I thought I would deal with the world religions. Would you be interested? Having known Christianity and Christ, it is good to find about the tenets, faith, believes and practices of the other major religions of the world, if only to know what they mean and practice and may be also to compare with Christ and His teachings.

Why not start with Hinduism, a religion at our own doorsteps, practiced by the majority in India? As a religion practiced by 83% of people in India, we are so much steeped in its traditions and practices that sometimes it becomes our way of life too, especially in the cultural context. For one thing almost all our friends in school, college and the place of work, be it government office or corporate office or professions like medicine or engineering are invariably Hindus. You name it, wherever it is and whatever it is, we have mostly Hindus as our colleagues and clients. So all the more important that we know what makes them tick! Don’t you think so?

Before delving into Hinduism would you like to know a bit about Indians and how they came about? What be their origins? Where they always Hindus or was there something else to it? When did it all start?

We all know that in the ancient world the powers that were knew about India. Geographically people who lived beyond the Sind River in the subcontinent were called Indians. Bible talks about the King of Persia, Ahasuerus, who reigned over 127 provinces from India to Ethiopia.[1] Modern commentators associate him with King Xerxes I of Achaemenid Empire, who reigned from 486 BC to 465 BC. The world famous Macedonian Alexander the Great came up to Indian shores in 326 BC, after conquering the Achaemenid Empire of Persia, in his desire to conquer the world. After conquering much of Indus valley in North West of India, he had to return as his troops mutinied.  

But, what are the origins of Indians? Where did they come from - within India, or from outside the subcontinent? Recently I came across a fascinating book which traces the origins of early Indians.[2] The author bases his conclusions among other things on archaeological evidences and the modern DNA testing of genomes of populations and even DNA extracts from the long dead and buried remains of fossil human beings. Interesting, isn’t it?

The ancestors of Indians came from Africa! Amazed? Yes, it is proved now that the modern humans from Africa crossed over to the Levant (modern day Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and Israel), crossing the Red Sea into the Arabian peninsula during the glacial period and colonizing that area, some 80,000 years back. From there one group went westward to populate the now European continent, while some of them left eastward to greener pastures and came to India, and then on wards to populate East India and further more to Australia.

All human beings have been proved to be thus the descendants of a single population of Out of Africa migrants, who moved into Asia around 70,000 years ago and then spread around the world. How good to know that we are all interconnected, genetically, culturally and historically, especially in these days of caste and racism.[3] Was it Eden the Garden of biblical fame from where this first migration took place? I wonder! How do you reckon?

In India these people, the modern humans, entered around 65,000 years back and spread over the complete subcontinent after conquering the Neanderthal people, our genetic cousins, in the subcontinent. They seemed to have entered by land in the northwest and some through the sea from north to south. The closest direct descendants of these migrants, one can see today in the Little Andaman Island and Onge and in the tribes living there.  

All of us Indians, even today carry 35 to 50% of the genome from these First Indians! Can you believe that! Who would have thought that we carry our African forefathers’ genes even today in our population! Shall we take a genome test to determine our descent? What do you say to that suggestion? Wouldn’t it be terribly interesting!

The next wave of migrants to India came from West Asia. Agriculture is said to have developed in the Fertile Crescent area (Upper Egypt, Levant and today’s Iraq; basically area from Nile river to Euphrates and Tigris rivers) around 9700-5000 BC. Plants like wheat and barley, and animals like goats were domesticated during this time. This led to a population explosion and further migrations. They took their plants and animals and migrated!

A group of these agriculturists, from the Zagros area of present Iran, migrated to India via the north western corridors around 7000 BC and they mixed with the First Indians who were already there. Excavations in Mehrgarh now in Baluchistan in Pakistan show that the mixed population was there from 7000 BC to 2600 BC. And they were the ones who sowed the seeds of Indus Valley civilization of yore, which lies now in Pakistan, and Harappan Civilization spread over present day India in Gujarat, Haryana areas, both being contemporary of Sumerian civilization. Harappans had significant Iranian agriculturist ancestry and thrived between 2600 BC and 1900 BC. Do you know that we, modern Indians, carry this West Eurasian (West Asians including people of Fertile Crescent and Iran) genes in our genomes? Mind blowing, isn’t it? And very interesting, don’t you think so?

Yes, we are all the product of mix of the First Indians, who arrived from Africa, and then the Iranian. There is more to follow. Harappan civilization declined in due course around 1900 BC, mainly due to repeated droughts in the area. They moved over to the other parts of the subcontinent, especially to the south and the east. That is how the south Indians have this mixed blood of Harappans, which contained the blood of the Iranian agriculturist migrants.

There is one more important migration to occur, the third and the last great migration into India, this time from the Eurasian Steppe, the land between Black Sea and Caspian sea, the steppe pastoralists. These are the Aryans, who came from Kazakh Steppe, around 2000 to 1000 BC. One group of them went to Europe. The other group via present day Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan came to India from the northwest and mixed with the Harappans. These are the people who brought with them the horse, wheel and the Sanskrit language, which will later give rise to the Aryan culture, the Brahminical Hinduism. When these Harappans migrated to the south they gave some of this Aryan blood to the south Indians also. Around the same time there was influx from the southeast Asia around 2000 SC to eastern India. 

So the Indians are the mix of First Indians (from Africa) and Zagros agriculturists of Eurasia, and the Steppe pastoralists from Eurasia as well, and from the east Southeast Asians, all of course, to a varying extent.

Wow, what an incredible journey! Hope you enjoyed it. In the next blog we will examine Hinduism and learn more about it.    


[1] Book of Esther, Chapter 1, verse 1
[2] Joseph, Tony, Early Indians: The Story of our Ancestors and where we came from, Juggernaut Books, 2018
[3] Charles Darwin, of Evolution fame, in 1871 itself had indicated that modern humans originated in Africa.