Thursday, 3 April 2025

Further Artificial Intelligence Misinformation: on Vadhryaśva

 

Further Artificial Intelligence Misinformation: on Vadhryaśva

Shrikant G. Talageri

 

Today my niece was telling me about what a wonderful app ChatGPT was in providing immediate replies to questions in an intelligent and almost human way, interacting like a real person would do. Here is what google says about this app:

ChatGPT is a generative artificial intelligence chatbot developed by OpenAI and launched in 2022. It is currently based on the GPT-4o large language model (LLM). ChatGPT can generate human-like conversational responses and enables users to refine and steer a conversation towards a desired length, format, style, level of detail, and language.[2] It is credited with accelerating the AI boom, which has led to ongoing rapid investment in and public attention to the field of artificial intelligence (AI).[3] Some observers have raised concern about the potential of ChatGPT and similar programs to displace human intelligence, enable plagiarism, or fuel misinformation”.

I have to admit the app does seem to have many of the human-like characteristics listed above. The question is: on what kinds of issues can we expect this (or any other similar AI app) to give us really objective answers? I told my niece that I have no doubt this (or other similar AI apps) will provide answers on issues on which there is little or no doubt or controversy (e.g. “What is the capital of Venezuela?”, “Who was the tenth President of the USA?”, “What is a brontosaurus?”, etc.). But then, wouldn’t a simple google search also give us such information with equal accuracy (with or without AI support)?

What about more complicated and nuanced issues shrouded in controversy or which are the subject of heated debates? Can ChatGPT or any other similar AI app give reasonably objective answers in such matters? Surely, this (ChatGPT) app will only be able to give answers based on the data specifically fed into it? But my niece said that ChatGPT is supposed to scour all the indormation and data on the internet before giving its intelligent answer. She asked me what question I should put to the app.

 

I suggested that she ask: “What is the Mitanni evidence about the Rigveda?”. The app gave an answer mentioning the similarities (in names, deities, etc.) between the Mitanni data and the Rigveda showing the connection between the two. As this was vague, I asked her to put my name and ask what, according to me, the Mitanni evidence shows about the Rigveda. the app, in its answer, repeated the same answer (in different words) but added my name as having shown these similarities. I kept asking her to put more and more specific questions, but the answers showed little difference. When specifically asked what evidence “Talageri” had given about the Mitanni names, the app repeatedly claimed that I had used the Mitanni names Shuttarna, Artatama, and a few others in my evidence. When my niece (at my suggestion) repeatedly pointed out that I had never given these names as part of the evidence, the app answered “you are absolutely right” and gave different excuses and explanations (almost as a human would do) to explain why it had given the wrong data, and kept apologizing for having made mistakes, and added that it was not able to access the internet data about the names given by me. When my niece pointed out that I had given names ending in “atithi”, etc., the app again accepted its mistake and apologized, but said that I had given “Shuttarna” as one of the names ending in “atithi”. When my niece pointed out that the name “Shuttarnadoes not end in “atithi”, the app again agreed and apologized, and gave a new name, “Artatithi”, that I have never heard of (and which in fact does not exist as a Mitanni name to my knowledge) as a name given by me. The “discussion” was getting more and more senseless and unending, with regularly repeated acceptances of error and apologies from the app. But, when even the data was not being given correctly, obviously there was no sense in expecting any answer or conclusions from the app, so I gave up this line of reasoning.

Then I thought of another word. I asked my niece to ask the meaning of the Rigvedic word/name Vadhryashwa. The answer was “vadhra” meant “strong”, and “ashwa” meant “horse”, so Vadhryashwa meant “strong horse”. My niece (on my prompting) pointed out that Vadhryashwa was not a compound of “vadhra” and “ashwa”, but of “vadhri” and “ashwa”; and that “vadhri” meant “castrated/impotent” and not “strong”. The app kept agreeing that “vadhri” meant “castrated/impotent”, but continued repeating that Vadhryashwa meant “strong horse”. It claimed that the words “vadhra” and “vadhri” are derived from the verb “vadh-” (to kill), and that Vadhryashwa therefore meant “a horse who kills”, and therefore a “strong horse”. This is wrong, since “vadhri” is not derived from the verb “vadh-” (to kill); and I could not locate any word “vadhra” derived from “vadh-”  (to kill) either in any dictionary. Finally, it turned out the app was taking a word “vadhar” meaning “a destructive weapon” as the first part of the compound name! After some more back and forth "chatting" we finally gave up. The app, till the end, translated Vadhryashwa as “strong horse”!

It must be noted that this was not ordinary old google search: ChatGPT is a sophisticated app powered by Artificial Intelligence, which continued, through a long discussion, to translate Vadhryashwa as “strong horse”!

 

So then, I went to the old and time-tested (and, not touted to be powered by AI) google search, and typed: “vadhryashwa meaning in Rigveda”. The answer I got was: “Vadhryaśva (वध्र्यश्व):—[=vadhry-aśva] [from vadhri > vadh] m. ' having castrated horses', Name of a man, [Ṛg-veda; Brāhmaṇa] etc.”.

In short, while ChatGPT continued, through a long discussion, to translate the first part of Vadhryashwa as “strong”, google search immediately translated it as “castrated.

But this is only the first part of the story: it shows that google search, at least in this case, proved superior to ChatGPT.

 

But this story has a second part, which may be known to readers who have read my article on the subject. The question now is: was even google search really right in this matter? It must be noted that while the answers by AI apps (whatever may be claimed for them) are actually based only on the data fed into them, the same is the case with google search as well: it is ultimately based at best on the data fed into it which is based on the writings of the established academic scholars in the field. And when the established academic scholars in the field have unanimously made a wrong interpretation (which not only escaped the notice of all the scholars themselves, but never seems to have been brought to their notice before by anyone else either), then google search will also give the wrong interpretation.

In this particular case, google search (and the consensus among academic scholars, on which its results are based) is half-right: it correctly translates the first part of the compound word as “castrated” rather than as “strong (as wrongly done by ChatGPT). But, it wrongly translates the compound word as a whole as “having castrated horses” rather than as “castrated horse, based on the wrong consensus among academic scholars.

 

Have the academic scholars indeed wrongly translated the word as “having castrated horses” rather than as “castrated horse”: Why did they do so? And what is the evidence that all the academic scholars could unanimously have translated it wrongly?


1. Why the Academic scholars unanimously translated the word as “having castrated horses” rather than as “castrated horse:

There were two reasons for this translation:

Firstly, it was believed that Vadhryaśva was the name of a king, the father of Divodāsa. It would be extremely unlikely that the parents of a king could have named their son by so insulting a name as “castrated horse”. So the scholars automatically decided that the meaning must be “having castrated horses”.

Secondly, the Rigveda has at least four names of persons ending in “-aśva” where the meaning is “having ….. horses”:

 

ṛjrá + áśva:   ṛjrā'śva (having reddish-brown horses).

I. 100.16,17;  116.16;  117.17,18.

VIII. 1.30. 

 

śyāvá + áśva:   śyāvā'śva (having pale brown horses).

V. 52.1;  61.5;  81.5.

VIII. 35.19,20,21;  36.7;  37.7;  38.8.

 

ví + áśva:   vyáśva (having no horses).

I. 112.15.

VIII. 9.10;  23.16,23,24;  24.22,28,29;  26.9,11.

IX. 65.7. 

 

ninditá + áśva:   ninditā'śva (having condemned horses).

VIII. 1.30.

 

So it was automatically assumed that this was another one of those names.

 

2. Why the Academic scholars were wrong in unanimously translating the word as “having castrated horses” rather than as “castrated horse:

Firstly, in Vedic Sanskrit, compounds are of two types relevant here (distinguished by the accent):

The first type is the bahuvrīhi compound (where the two words together signify possession by the person to whom, or the object to which, the compound word refers. The accent is retained in the first word).

All the four above names (ṛjrā'śva, śyāvā'śva, vyáśva, ninditā'śva) are bahuvrīhi compounds, where the accent remains at the joining point of the two words (since the accent is in the last syllable in the first word, and in the first syllable in the second word). Hence the meaning in all the words is “having ….. horses

The second type is the tatpuruṣa compound (where the first word qualifies the second as an adjective. The accent is retained by the second word).

The word vadhryaśvá is a tatpuruṣa compound, where the accent is retained in the second word (shifted to the last syllable for emphasis). Hence the meaning cannot be “having ….. horses”. It simply means “impotent/castrated horse”:

vádhri + áśva:  vadhryaśvá (impotent/castrated horse).

As the scholars realized, it cannot have been the name of a person given by his parents. But to avoid accepting that it meant “impotent/castrated horse”, the scholars (who believed it was the name of Divodāsa’s father) treated it as a bahuvrīhi compound meaning “having castrated horses” instead of a tatpuruṣa compound meaning “impotent/castrated horsein violation of the rules of Vedic grammar.  

 

Secondly, the context makes the whole meaning clear. Vadhryaśvá was not the name of Divodāsa’s father: it was an insulting epithet applied to him because he was not begetting children:

The verse in which the word Vadhryaśvá appears is VI.61.1. It refers to the father of Divodāsa, before he became the father of Divodāsa, worshipping the Sarasvati, in order to beget a child, and being granted the boon of that historically famous son by the River Goddess. Clearly, the epithet refers to his natural childlessness as “impotency”.

[On the other hand, a final name of the very opposite meaning “powerful/virile horse” is exactly, and understandably, the actual name of a person in the Rigveda:

vṛ'ṣan + áśva:   vṛṣaṇaśvá (powerful/virile horse).

I. 51.13.

VIII. 20.10]


As if to emphasize and confirm that meaning of the word, the very next hymn in the Rigveda, in VI.62.17, refers to vadhrimatī the "wife of an impotent person", being granted the boon of a child by the Aśvins. The only other references in the whole of the Rigveda, to this vadhrimatī the "wife of an impotent person" being granted the boon of a child by the Aśvins, are in four of the latest hymns of the Rigveda:

I. 116.13;  117.24.

X. 39.7;  65.12.

 

The whole point is: neither the consensus views of earlier scholars (who may have got it wrong), nor the answers given either by google search or by the latest AI apps, are reliable guides in getting answers to questions in areas involving complicated and nuanced issues shrouded in controversy which are the subject of heated debates. Only an intelligent examination of the original sources can give the right answers.    


Why a Faulty “OIT” Case Can Be More Deadly Than a Direct AIT Case

 

Why a Faulty “OIT” Case Can Be More Deadly Than a Direct AIT Case

Shrikant G. Talageri

 

Recently, I have been asked by many people why I am so strongly critical of the writings of Jijith Nadumuri Ravi, the writer of the book “Rivers of the Rigveda”, who, apart from the fact that both of us are on the same “side” of the “AIT-vs.-OIT” divide, regularly refers to my books, asks others to read them, features my books on his website, and regularly refers to me (or, at least, has done so till very recently) in public as his “mentor” and “guru”.

Before going into more detail, let me point out why I consider Jijith’s writings more lethal to the OIT than the writings of out-and-out staunch AIT supporters (including the Hindu Invasionists, and particularly the Racist-Brahminist sections among them, about whom I have already written more than enough) or of those other anti-AIT groups among Hindus who attack me and my OIT case for their own reasons. It is not because, as Jijith seems to assume and has on occasion claimed, I feel apprehensive (or possessively jealous) about others intruding on what he claims I consider to be my own personal and private turf (the field of OIT Rigvedic analysis). It is because, all the Hindu and presumably anti-AIT groups, or all the different multitudes of AIT-supporting writers (who also fall within many distinct categories) represent distinctly different groups who can in no way be identified with my OIT case, and can in no way subvert my OIT case from within, since none of them claim to be, or are believed by others to be, representing a developed form of the OIT case presented by me. Even when any of them, like Nilesh Oak himself, openly expresses his support, approval and acceptance of most of the other aspects of my OIT case (other than, in his case, the aspects of Absolute Chronology), no-one would actively describe his writings as an extension of, or improvement over, or the “next stage” of, my OIT case: everyone would agree that he represents a totally different perspective not to be confused with mine, and his supporters openly criticize me for my views on ancient chronology. So there is no possibility of any confusion between what he writes and what I write, or of the views of one of us being confused (by intelligent people) for those of the other. Everything is open and above-board.

There is nothing personal in what I am writing here in this article, howsoever it may appear to the reader. I have nothing personal against anyone. But yes, I have everything personal in defending the OIT from attacks. The OIT is my life’s work. Whenever I face the totalitarian stonewalling of the OIT in the academic and media world, I always have only one real and genuine comfort in my mind (as I have repeatedly stated in many articles): if not now, then at least a hundred years from now, people will examine (or will have already examined by then) my case as well as the cases of all the different AIT groups and the (opposed to me) anti-AIT groups; and I know for a fact that my OIT case will stand completely vindicated and all the rival cases will stand exposed and rejected. I have dealt with every aspect of the debate raised before me, and answered each aspect in full, and am fully ready to leave the verdict to the future. But for that, the first and primary requisite is that my OIT case (as well as the opposing ones) should naturally be available for comparative examination in future.

But, Jijith’s writings represent an insidious attempt (whether intended to be so or not is irrelevant) to destroy my case from within (a really masterful strategy of internal sabotage) and supplant it completely, so that when the OIT case is compared to the AIT and the other (opposed to my OIT) anti-AIT cases, it will be his distorted and metamorphosed version of the OIT (since it will be assumed that his version represents a fuller and more complete logical development of my case) which will be compared and not mine (since it will stand supplanted by an “improved” and more “complete” version): the OIT will be judged by his faulty reasoning and logic and fictitious data, and the OIT will lose:

1. Jijith, as I wrote above, does not position himself openly as the formulator of a completely rival case. He regularly refers to my books, asks others to read them, features my books on his website, and regularly refers to me (or, at least, has done so till date) as his “mentor” and “guru”, only suggesting that there are minor differences. But his entire analysis is based on extremely faulty methods and logic, and he regularly claims that his analysis is based on the same methods and logic used by me, and even an extension of those, thus adding insult to injury.

2. What the common internet warriors and trolls say, or what the (generally ignorant on such matters) lay public (whether AIT-supporting or OIT-supporting) says, is not important; but warning bells ring (for me) when I see what seasoned and influential supporters of the OIT are saying:

Jataayu, in “Book Review: A journey Into The Rigveda With The Rivers as Signposts” in Swarajyamag, 8 March 2022:

A few years later, I had felt a thrill reading the path breaking book The Rigveda: Historical analysis of Shrikant Talageri (2000), impressed by its original research, insights and refreshing perspectives that had the power to act as the last nail in the coffin of the already crumbling Aryan Invasion Theory (AIT). Through this book, Jijith has taken the research to the next level, building a comprehensive, convincing and compelling narrative”.


Koenraad Elst in an email dated 3 Jan 2023, addressed to Jijith and myself, wrote:

Dear Jijith,

Am in the train from Coimbatore to the south, and reading your Ramayana book. Amazing!

You candidly admit that you are building on Talageri's work and taking it further. Here and there you disagree with him, but in full consciousness of his findings. Here you don't just praise his work, as I regularly do, but treat it as a base camp that allows you to climb even farther. You are the first one to treat his findings as established, no longer in need of proof yet being proven further by its newer applications.

So I trust that in your new book on MBh geography, you will provide even more spectacular information.


No, this is not petty resentment or paranoia: it is my reaction to a full-fledged Trojan Horse attack on my OIT case. My writings have never been based on the principles recommended by people who presume to teach us how to make friends and influence people. It is based solely on the principle of presenting the Truth (and, whenever an error in my data or logic is brought to my notice, I check it out and correct myself accordingly, since it is not my ego or my popularity which has to win out, but the Truth). So, I honestly do not care how anyone chooses to interpret my criticism of Jijith’s writings − he himself, in an email thread, expressed his belief that I think Rigvedic analysis is my personal turf and I resent intrusion on my turf by others, which is why I criticize him! Whoever chooses to believe that is free to do so, though it is not true.

If either Jataayu, or Koenraad, had pointed out, item by item, how, and on which points, Jijith’s writings represented a “furtherance” or “next level” by listing out where his version differs from and improves upon mine and is more correct than mine, and therefore if they had openly proclaimed that they find his version different and better than mine, I would genuinely have had no objections: after all, everyone has the right to their opinions.

The fact is that, without openly expressing their agreement on the very numerous specific issues where his views clash with mine (and thereby escaping having to take on the onus of having to answer for the correctness of his views against mine), his praisers praise his version as being a new and improved version of mine, thereby, without stating it in so many words, giving the go-ahead for his version to supplant mine. It is like a silent coup; or, intellectually, in the same category as Bibek Debroy’s endorsement of both Tony Joseph’s book as well as Jijith’s book, on the respective blurbs of the two books, when the two books actually represent diametrically opposite conclusions.

The main battle, of course, is between the OIT and the AIT. Other viewpoints (see Appendix) are not important, and, even if they have millions of adherents and fans, they will never stand serious scrutiny. So the AIT cannot win the battle against the OIT in the long run, unless my OIT case is completely supplanted and replaced by this pseudo-OIT (AIOIT) case put forward by Jijith and already praised by intelligent OIT supporters as an improved version. Hence, whatever interpretation may be put on my opposition to Jijith’s writings, I find his writings to be more lethal to the OIT than the writings of the (AIT or anti-AIT) others.

I already listed the major flaws in my review of Jijith’s book. If I go through the full book in detail, I can come up with a long list of fabricated stories, whimsical and arbitrary identifications, wrong interpretations, fictitious (geographical and other) entities, events and migrations, etc. But I think my earlier review of the book is sufficient in itself:

https://talageri.blogspot.com/2022/03/a-review-of-rivers-of-rgveda-by-jijith.html

Also the following article which puts things in perspective:

 https://talageri.blogspot.com/2022/03/rigvedic-vis-vis-epic-puranic-geography.html

Further, recently, a tweet by Jijith, and the map he put up along with it, exposed him as a full-fledged supporter of the Dravidian Invasion/Immigration Theory (DIT), and, more basically, showed what results when fabrication and fiction are substituted for facts and data, leading to greater and greater distortions:




Here not only does he support the Dravidian Invasion/ Immigration Theory (DIT) out of a mistaken belief that it somehow helps in disproving the AIT, but, in the process, he goes even further than full-fledged AIT supporters like Witzel and Hock (who now at least agree that Brahui in the NW of India was a migrant from the Dravidian south) by making Brahui a remnant and piece of evidence of the Dravidian Immigrants from NW Iran passing through Baluchistan and Gujarat on their way towards South India. Further, he thereby also indirectly deprives the Dravidian language speakers of the South of the credit for having developed the oldest Iron Technology in the world!

See the above map: IE languages originated in the NW of India, and Dravidian languages in far-off SW Iran. The whole of India proper was linguistically colonized by these two families of languages! And all this when the DIT is actually even more untenable than the AIT:

https://talageri.blogspot.com/2024/12/the-dravidian-invasionmigration-theory.html

 

My criticism of what I have described in the second of my above two articles as the AIOIT (Aryan-Invasion+Out-of-India Theory) is not something new arising from a reaction to Jijith’s book. Before this, I have criticized in detail a similar stand by Narahari Achar:

https://talageri.blogspot.com/2020/07/a-reply-to-prof-narahari-achars.html 

Even before that, in my very first book, “The Aryan Invasion Theory and Indian Nationalism” (1993), I had similarly criticized in detail a similar AIOIT theory (though obviously I had not coined this term then) by P.L.Bhargava: TALAGERI 1993: 302-307, etc.

And even earlier, when I was still in the process of writing my first book, Sita Ram Goel had sent me a copy of K.D.Sethna’s “Karpāsa”. in my correspondence with him, I had criticized Sethna’s similar AIOIT theory. While I do not have my own correspondence of that time, I have preserved Sita Ram Goel’s inland letters of the time. In his inland letter dated 19 August 1991, he writes (underlining as in his original letter):

Coming  to your comments after reading Karpasa, I agree with you wholeheartedly that locating the Aryans in the Punjab, even though autochthonously, and then spreading them east and south, is only a footnote in the invasion theory. You have got to the bottom of it. I published this book because it at least places the Rigveda prior to the Harappan culture, and makes the Aryans autochthonous. You go on from there. [....] I agree with you that a Rgvedic-centred view of Hinduism is narrow and leaves loopholes through which the invasion theories pour in.

So I certainly do not want my OIT case to be supplanted by an AIOIT case (described by responsible people as an “advancement” and “next level” of my OIT case), which is based almost entirely on large-scale fabrication of fictitious personalities, tribes and events, on whimsical and arbitrary identifications of rivers, and fictitious migration stories (based on misinterpreted Puranic-Epic references) and utter chronological confusion.

 

Sadly, one fictitious creation and fabrication in this AIOIT case seems to lead to another, and yet another, in a continuous chain. Thus, the need to locate the Ikṣvākus in the northwest (Sarasvati region) leads to the creation of three new fictitious Sarayu rivers in the area: two of them as alternative names for the Sarasvati and the Dṛṣadvatī, and one as the real Rigvedic name for the present-day Haro. So (since the Haro is already correctly identified with the Rigvedic Ārjīkīyā), a new identification for the Rigvedic Ārjīkīyā is required: so it is now identified with the present day Sil river. But, cannot the Sil river actually be the Rigvedic Sīlamāvatī? To avoid that, the Rigvedic Sīlamāvatī is now identified (for no logical reason) with the present day Zanskar river in Ladakh!

Then, to locate the Ikṣvākus in Kurukṣetra, the “capital” of the mythical Manu Vaivasvata and his mythical daughter Iḷā is located in Kurukṣetra (on the basis of the place names Mānuṣa and Iḷāspada in that region). This location then automatically stands proved as the capital of his “son” Ikṣvāku, and even proves that the original Ayodhya was in Kurukṣetra! Further, even the exact archaeological culture which represented the alleged earliest Ikṣvākus in Kurukṣetra is proved to be the “pre-Harappan Hakra-Ware culture”!

Then, to somehow bring the Ikṣvākus into Sudās’ battles in the Rigveda (and also to account for the Vasiṣthas being the family priests of the Ikṣvākus in the Epics and Puranas when the Rigveda gives nothing to indicate this), a new battle is concocted, “the battle of Asiknī”, in which the protagonists of the dāśarājña battle become the enemies, to account for the Vasiṣṭhasswitching over” in the Rigvedic period and area itself from Sudās to his “enemies” the Ikṣvākus. In this melee, “the battle of Asiknī” becomes earlier to the dāśarājña battle in one description, but, in another description, takes place later at the time of “Kalmāṣapāda Saudasa”, (according to some Epic-Puranic genealogy) the “son of Sudās”. In the process, a long list of Epic-Puranic figures of the Solar dynasty enter the story in different ways.

Since the Ikṣvākus cannot be brought directly into Rigvedic battles (since there is no mention of them anywhere in the Rigvedic descriptions of these battles), a fictitious second group of protagonist Bharatas is concocted (the “Saṁvaraṇa Bharatas”) as the allies of the Ikṣvākus, and therefore the enemies of the “Tṛtsu Bharatas” represented by Sudās. This brings another long list of Epic-Puranic figures into the story in different ways.

The main thrust is of course the long list of Epic-Puranic Ikṣvāku kings brought into the story, highlighting stray and innocuous references to these kings in connection with some river or the other, all of this interpreted as evidence of the west-to-east migration of the Ikṣvākus from Kurukṣetra to the Avadh region actually associated with them.

And, to fit into the Ikṣvāku agenda, Trasadasyu and his father Purukutsa (who are kings in the period of the New Rigveda) are made older or earlier than Sudās, a king from the earliest period of the Old Rigveda. This completely smashes the internal chronology of the books of the Rigveda, which is a fundamental factor in the analysis of Rigvedic history. 


And then, the crowning glory is that this is an AIOIT case which supports a Dravidian Invasion/ Immigration Theory (DIT)!

 

Obviously there are many opportunities for further research in the matter of the Indian (PIE) Homeland in the context of the Rigveda. But not in the senseless way done in the book “Rivers of the Rigveda” by trying to force-fit odd pieces of Epic-Puranic data into Rigvedic modes in pursuit of pre-decided agendas. In the field of Linguistics alone, there can be much further research. For example, as I have researched into the new words which appear only in or from the New Rigveda, there could be research into old words already fading away in the Vedic texts, which have counterparts in other branches of ancient IE (like Hittite, Tocharian, Mycenean Greek, etc.). Or into foreign words (other than the two Babylonian words bekanāṭa and manā in the Rigveda) connecting Vedic with other ancient cultures. There could also be a more honest, rather than dishonest AIT-agenda-based, investigation into possible Dravidian, Austric, Burushaski, Sino-Tibetan, etc. words in the Rigveda. Or, in the opposite direction, into Vedic words found in other ancient languages outside India pertaining to the Vedic-Harappan period. Or there could be more detailed studies (again not as part of a dishonest AIT-agenda) of the development of new words in later Vedic texts, perhaps influenced by other non-IE languages. Also, there can be honest and rational investigation of genuine astronomical references, if any, in the ancient texts. And. yes, there may actually be many more (and more genuine) real clues in the Epic-Puranic texts to further fill in details of Vedic, Indian, Indo-Iranian and Indo-European history. The key word is genuine.

 

APPENDIX: The Anti-AIT critics of my OIT Case.

In the attacks on my OIT case, three of the groups from (presumably) the anti-AIT “side” are most prominent.

The first group consists of those who reject Linguistics, PIE, the IE language family, etc. I have replied to them in my following articles (though let me clarify that Michel Danino, referred to in the second article, is not really a “critic” but a highly respected scholar):

https://talageri.blogspot.com/2017/11/are-german-and-french-closer-to.html 

https://talageri.blogspot.com/2020/08/examination-of-indo-europeancloudland.html 

 

In the second group, there are the Hindu counterparts of Abrahamic fundamentalist people like Zakir Naik and Billy Graham, who attack me for not treating the Vedas as an eternal “revealed” text which cannot possibly contain such a mundane and transient subject as human history. Recently, in an article, I referred to the tweet of one such person (not criticizing me as such, but expressing such fundamentalist views):

This original tweeter https://x.com/adithya  had tweeted as follows:

https://x.com/adithya/status/1898635930283704352

"Appa, how old are the Vedas?" "They are older than you can ever imagine. They have veen existing since time immemorial" "Oh! Did they exist even before dinosaurs?" "Yes!" "Did they exist before the big bang also?" "Yes, Vedas existed even before the creation of this universe and even before the Pralaya or the dissolution of the earlier universe! Vedas are the breath of the eternal Brahman and were discovered (not invented) from the cosmos by the Rishis through their special ears. Hence the Rishis are called Mantra Drashta (discoverers of Veda Mantras) and not Mantra Karta (inventor or composer). The only thing that is ALWAYS there and has stood the test of time are Vedas. Can you imagine that the Rudram you are learning now was chanted in the exact same way by our ancestors thousands and thousands of years ago?" "WOW! THIS IS AMAZING Appa!"

But, shortly after that, I have received two comments on my articles from such people. The first comment (which was deleted after someone else counter-commented against his comment) was a particularly abusive comment by someone named “Jeshthadeva” to my article “Pointless Discussions on the Nature of the Mitanni Data”:

It is quite easy to falsify your fake data of "new words" (many of which are demonstrated to be descended from the so-called PIE) in the so-called New Rigveda. For example, if I take a random chemistry book and a random physics book, there will be some vocabulary present in the physics book which would be absent in the chemistry book and vice versa, even if the physics book and the chemistry book are written and published in the same year. Similarly, there are massive amount of vocabulary in the so-called Old Rigveda that is absent in the so-called New Rigveda and vice versa. So, you cannot say that the so-called New Rigveda is later in time than the so-called Old Rigveda. You will even find the same thing if you do your modernist analysis with any two books of the Rigveda.
See how easy it was for me to falsify your work of more than one decade. That is what happens when a nastika like you tries to attack the apaurusheya nature of the Veda (which includes the Samhita, Brahmanan, Aranyaka and Upanishad). Now, mend your ways or else, good luck in your journey to hell.

The second comment, in Hindi by a “Ravi Kumar Verma”, was less abusive, but equally stupid:

ऋग्वेद आदि 4 वेद इतिहास के ग्रंथ नहीं हैं...लेखक की यह सबसे बड़ी मौलिक गलती है”.

I think this second group does not even require to be answered by me. The kind of points they raise are not ones on which I can debate them. They must debate issues of this kind with Abrahamic fundamentalists, who hold views of this kind on matters of religions and religious texts, like Zakir Naik and Billy Graham, and countless of their followers and imitators.

 

The third group, needless to say, is the Nilesh Oak school of historical chronology which dates ancient Indian historical events back to fantastic dates. I have written a lot about them. Just one article will do:

https://talageri.blogspot.com/2021/03/dating-ancient-indian-history.html

 

Usually, I would prefer to allow the countless fans of these latter two Hindu schools of thought to be contented and happy with their ideas and views, and only react when I am personally attacked or criticized in terms relevant enough to make me want to reply. They cannot be taken seriously, and are self-evidently wrong.

Jijith Nadumuri Ravi is a great authority on the Epics (Ramayana and Mahabharata) and has a huge database of the data in the two Epics. If he had chosen to write detailed analyses and descriptions of the data in the two Epics, it would have been a really immense contribution to ancient Indian studies.

Unfortunately, he prefers instead to pursue an agenda: an AIOIT agenda. And in pursuit of that agenda, he chooses to pick out stray references from the Epics (finalized in their present form in the Mauryan and post-Mauryan eras) and misinterprets them to produce fictitious personalities, tribes, wars, rivers and events, all of whom and which he transports to the Rigvedic (and even pre-Rigvedic) period and into the geographical area of the Rigveda.

His AIOIT is now a done deed. He will not, and perhaps cannot, retract the massive misinformation that he has put out; and certainly not with all kinds of people egging him on. If he meets with success in acquiring a huge following, I definitely have no objections. See the massive success of AIT writers worldwide. Or the massive popularity and success of Nilesh Oak’s chronological arguments among lay Hindus. Like them, Jijith also deserves to have his own massive fan following of like-minded people.

I only object to his AIOIT being confused with my OIT, and to the possibility of my OIT being disastrously supplanted in the AIT-vs.-OIT debate by his AIOIT (or even being judged on the basis of his AIOIT, and the methods employed by him in expounding that AIOIT). And I have no compunction in being frank about it.


Wednesday, 2 April 2025

The BJP Logic on Waqf

 

The BJP Logic on Waqf

Shrikant G. Talageri

 

After a hue and cry raised among Hindu people in the social media after Anand Ranganathan brought out the lethal nature of the Waqf provisions in the Indian legal system in his seminal book “Hindus in Hindu Rashtra”, the BJP government, was forced to look, or pretend to look, at a very crucial issue which they had deliberately ignored during their ten years of unchallenged one-party rule.

They therefore set out to pull the wool over the eyes of their followers (or rather, over those among their followers who, in their hearts, want to see Hindus getting equal rights and justice in India at least as much as they want to see their BJP idols ruling the roost and getting richer and more powerful by the day), a science and an art at which they are past masters. They brought in a Waqf (Amendment Bill) 1924 in Parliament in August 2024, and hope that the hue and cry that any such Bill will definitely evoke among the Muslim mobs will certify, in the eyes of these Hindu-minded among the bhakts, that the BJP is trying to do something for Hindus – even if (as half expected, and hoped for, by the BJP “thinkers”) this same Muslim reaction will serve as a pretext to ultimately shelve even this half-hearted Bill as impossible to enforce (after it has successfully achieved its objective of fooling its own Hindu fans).


While this old and familiar game is being played out for the umpteenth time, some people are still raising objections. Anand Ranganathan, the original genius who brought out this Waqf issue into the open (I admit even I myself had no idea at all, before I read his book, about what the Waqf laws really entail), is still actively expressing his opinions on all these “developments” in his tweets, articles, talks and TV appearances. And a few other people (most prominently, an advocate Vishnu Shankar Jain who is making waves in the social media) are bringing out the uselessness of the proposed Waqf (Amendment Bill) 1924 for the benefit of those Hindus who may still care about these issues crucially affecting the future of the nation.

The BJP propaganda machine has jumped into the fray to defend the proposed Bill and to try to answer critics. One such attempt is the following article in Swarajyamag.com:

https://swarajyamag.com/legal/adv-vishnu-shankar-jains-criticism-of-waqf-amendment-is-overzealous-and-impractical-heres-why 

This article describes Jain’s criticism (see the title itself) as “overzealous” and “impractical”, and an attempt “to undermine the reformist and progressive approach that the Government has taken with the Bill”.

The article assures us that the Bill fully deals with all the shortcomings in the Waqf laws:

The Bill strives to bring extensive reforms by abolishing the power of the waqf board to identify any land to be waqf, requires for waqfs to be created by practicing Muslims only via a registered waqf deed, omits the provision for non-Muslims to mark their donations as waqf, gets rid of the provision classifying evacuee properties to be waqfs, provides for CAG audits of waqfs, etc.

These provisions, once implemented, will free up an extensive number of properties that are presently encumbered as a result of being classified as waqf.

It is this premise to the amendment that Adv. Vishnu Shankar Jain has missed out in his vision for waqf governance in India. Beyond this foundational divergence of views, his propositions also lack substantive legal or logical backing.

 

But in their zeal to justify anything and everything done by the BJP government, there are many fundamental points that the writer of this article and the BJP propagandists have “missed out”.

I will not deal with the specific provisions of this Waqf (Amendment Bill) 1924, or the criticisms of these provisions by Advocate Jain, because, as I wrote above, all this quibbling and chattering debate “misses out” on the most fundamental issue; equal rights for Hindus and non-Hindus in the Indian legal system.

There is no, or little, point in debating whether the specific provisions of any particular Act or Amendment Bill are right or wrong. The only principle which matters is: if specific provisions are right, let them apply equally and indiscriminately to followers of all religions; if specific provisions are wrong, let them equally and indiscriminately be discarded in respect of the followers of all religions.   

[In principle, this really should apply to all legal provisions which do not directly pertain to private personal freedom to follow one’s purely religious beliefs and practices: if it is right to allow males to marry four wives, let this “right” be given to all males, Hindu, Muslim, Christian or anything else. If it is wrong, let no-one be given this “right”, whether Hindu, Muslim, Christian or anything else.

However, in the case of this and other such issues (i.e. banning polygamy, etc.), it is not a Hindu Issue (i.e. it is not an issue of Injustice Towards Hindus, or failure to give equal rights to Hindus). It is a Muslim Women’s Issue. It is in fact a Secular Issue which has nothing to do with Hindus as such, but which should be advocated by every Secular person. So it has no place in any discussion on Hindus not being given equal rights with followers of other religions. And the same goes for most other issues pertaining to what is called a Uniform Civil Code (UCC): UCC is not a Hindu Issue, it is a Muslim Women’s Issue or a Secular Issue.

But issues pertaining to Articles 25-30 of the Constitution, which discriminate very harshly against Hindus and deny them basic fundamental rights given only to non-Hindus, are very definitely Hindu issues which Hindus should fight for. And all the gross iniquities arising from these draconian, discriminative provisions; and the kind of sadistic anti-Hindu mindset that they have created in the legal, political, administrative and intellectual spheres of life in India, are definitely Hindu Issues. The Waqf laws fall within this discriminatory category. [For details on these issues, I can only, again and again, advocate Anand Ranganathan’s brilliant book, and his tweets, articles, talks and TV discussions].

 

As Ranganathan very correctly keeps pointing out, there can only be two possible solutions to this Waqf problem:

1. Either abolish the Waqf Board, and all laws pertaining to Waqf properties.

2. Or create an identical board and set of laws for Hindus:

https://x.com/ARanganathan72

The Sanatan Act, an exact clause for clause replica of the Waqf Act, is a must if this country is to be saved. If

@narendramodi

cannot abrogate acts that discriminate against Hindus, in the spirit of equality and fairness he must promulgate similar acts for Hindus.

10:37 PM. Mar 20 2025

 

All these deceptive propaganda articles (such as the above one in Swarajyamag.com) which try to pull the wool over Hindu eyes, just in order to defend the acts and activities of a crooked and mercenary political party, do not even merit discussion or debate, let alone serious consideration. The only important thing is Equal Rights For Hindus with Non-Hindus, and An End To Anti-Hindu Discrimination in India.