Sunday 28 November 2021

"Hindutvawatch" and Drew Forrest— One More New Goebbels

 

"Hindutvawatch" and Drew Forrest— One More New Goebbels

Shrikant G. Talageri

 

Someone sent me a tweet put up today by some organization (or perhaps just a tweet-handle?) called HindutvaWatch:


 

In this world of what many on the "right" not incorrectly refer to as "liberandu" pseudo-intellectuals, Hindu-bashing is a compulsory or mandatory regular: hate speech against Brahmins, Hindus and Hindutvites is not considered hate-speech at all, on the contrary it represents liberal speech! Since no-one is there to defend Hindus from attack or calumny (I sincerely consider the BJP Pariwar, usually wrongly referred to as the Sangh Pariwar even many times by myself, as one of the most effective among anti-Hindu forces, all the more effective because it has managed to convince Hindus that it is in "Hindutva" clothing, and I never make the mistake of thinking they are there to defend Hindus), these leftists have a field day spewing their hate-filled venom and bile on anything and everything Hindu in a wholly one-sided war. I have increasingly realized that no one can do anything about these poison-pots any more than anyone can do anything about natural phenomena like death and disease, and we must carry on our lives and activities without bothering to "reply" to them or try to counter their brazen lies. But occasionally, especially when my name comes up (but not necessarily every time it is brought up), I feel the itch to respond, senseless though it is. This is one such case.

I read through the above poison-pen article by the writer, and was not in the least surprised to see it bursting with lies.  One of the most hilarious lies, and one which illustrates the totally Goebbelsian and Orwellian nature of "liberandu" discourse is the following: "It is a criminal offence under Indian law for a publication to cause offence to any Hindu" (the italics are in the article)! Which India is the writer (Drew Forrest) talking about? I remember reading Superman comics in my childhood, and the references in them to a Bizarro World where everything was exactly the opposite of what prevails in the actual world: such writers seem to be writing from some kind of Bizarro World which has somehow succeeded in completely hacking and taking over the communications systems, academia and media in the actual world. This kind of brazen propaganda illustrates in a nutshell the totally shameless nature of these writers, and how they bank on the utter ignorance-cum-credulity and/or committed evangelistic zeal of their readers.

[Here is another joke by this comedian: the OIT is "an expression of “Hindutva”, right-wing Hindu chauvinism, which casts Hindus as the children of the soil and non-Hindus — Christians, Buddhists and especially Muslims — as alien interlopers." The writer, needless to say, since these writers do not need to read anything in order to pontificate on any subject, naturally ignores everything I have written on this point, including, to give just one example: "Muslim and Christian fundamentalists may identify wholly with their foreign brethren, and some Muslims may even gloat at the idea that they are the descendants of Islamic heroes who ‘conquered and ruled’ a land teeming with kafirs, the fact remains that they are all Indians, as much as the Hindus" (TALAGERI 1993a:46).].

But I will refer here only to what he says regarding me:

"Nationalist writers such as Shrikant Talageri and Subhash Kak see themselves as unshackling Indian historiography from the British Raj — despite the fact that the pioneers of the “Aryan invasion theory” were Danish and German.

The orthodox view is portrayed as “Marxist” or “Nehruvian”, a slighting reference to India’s first premier, Jawaharlal Nehru, a secular humanist.

Most non-Indian scholars ignore the indigenists as an eccentric fringe.

An exception is Harvard University philologist Michael Witzel, who in two devastating polemics — Autochthonous Aryans and Westward Ho! — attacks what he called the “cottage industry” of the “Voice of India” authors, nationalists who often write together and recycle one another’s ideas.

His main target is Talageri, an Out of India hardliner he accuses of painting a pseudo-scientific veneer on what is essentially a politico-religious tract.

Witzel argues that Talageri’s first book, The Aryan Invasion: a Reappraisal, treated the four Vedas and Puranas, mainly religious texts, as trustworthy historical sources for the extreme antiquity of Aryan roots in India

This, he said, did involve a “paradigm shift” — backwards, to a pre-Enlightenment belief in the authority of scripture, just as early 19th-century European scholars regarded the Bible as history.

“This is not scholarship in the post-Enlightenment sense, but … ultimately a religious undertaking,” Witzel writes.

The hallmark of religious faith — and the nationalism often entwined with it — is that it is highly resistant to rational argument.

Witzel holds that the linguistic case for the movement of Indo-European nomads into, rather than out of, India is overwhelming: Sanskrit borrowings from pre-Aryan Indian tongues, for example, are not found in the languages of Europe.

But instead of confronting the argument, the “Voice of India” writers — mostly amateur historians with no linguistics background — dismiss linguistic analysis as “a petty conjectural pseudo-science” and “hair-splitting”."

 

I will not honor this shameless and brazen liar and sniveling coward by analyzing every falsehood on his part in great detail and quoting (again in great detail) from my books and articles as I usually do in such cases, since the man is clearly beyond the pale of honest debate.

(Am I using ad hominem and "invectice"? Well I am proud of it if I am, since all critics of Hindus, Hinduism and Hindutva use ad hominem and invective very consistently in their criticisms, and confidently expect the browbeaten Hindus to refrain from following suit in return for fear of criticism in the one-sided "debate" that these "liberals" delight in, with all the one-sided rules loaded in their favor and stacked against Hindus. But I would not be the writer of my recent blog "Karṇa and Yudhiṣṭhira in the Mahabharata" if I allowed myself to fall in with their repeatedly fulfilled expectations from cowering Hindus, so I will indulge in the same kind of discourse that they do).

Just a few snippets from the above, with a short reply (I will not make things easy for these crooks by hastening to quote my books and articles in great detail to make my points, since these points are given in great detail in my books and articles which it is their duty to read before criticizing):

 

1. "Nationalist writers such as Shrikant Talageri and Subhash Kak see themselves as unshackling Indian historiography from the British Raj — despite the fact that the pioneers of the “Aryan invasion theory” were Danish and German."

This liar has clearly not read anything written by me, where I expressly and repeatedly and in detail take on all those Hindus who treat the AIT as the creation of colonial British machinations (or for that matter Danish and German Protestant theology). As I put it about the scholars (British, Danish, German, or whatever): they “were, by and large, reasonably honest; and although they were often wrong, they were naturally wrong and not deliberately so” (TALAGERI 2000:404), and I have even written an entire article on my blog site in criticism of, and titled, "Indology-Bashing", where I express my respect for these Indologists.

In fact, the religion, race or nationality of the Indologists is hardly ever even referred to by me even in passing, or to make some telling point, let alone as a criticism. This Hindu-hating writer, however, in the above article itself, finds it necessary to tell us, in order to make some kind of point best understood only by himself, that David Reich "is Jewish".

 

2. "…the “Voice of India” authors, nationalists who often write together and recycle one another’s ideas."

The fool does not even know the difference between OIT writers and "Voice of India" writers. Voice of India authors (Sita Ram Goel, Ram Swaroop, Koenraad Elst, Harsh Narain, and many others) have written a huge number of scholarly tomes on a very wide variety of subjects, most of them not even touching on the AIT-OIT debate, and on every subject the books have been pioneering works which have broken new ground in every field, and occupy a unique position in Hindu ideological writing.

In the case of my OIT books, where in fact I do not quote other OIT-friendly writers at all but exclusively quote only the western AIT-friendly writers to make all my points — something which I naturally should not expect this ignoramus to know — I face at least as great and bitter, if not much more, opposition from "nationalists" as from western academicians, and there is very little "recycling" of my (very very original and un-"recycled") work by other writers.

In fact, anyone reading Drew's hate article above will see how much blind and unimaginative recycling Drew himself (like other anti-OIT writers) has done of Witzel's writings — often using the same words used by Witzel in his totally outdated and discredited critique of my second (2000) book.

 

3. "Witzel argues that Talageri’s first book, The Aryan Invasion: a Reappraisal, treated the four Vedas and Puranas, mainly religious texts, as trustworthy historical sources for the extreme antiquity of Aryan roots in India.

This, he said, did involve a “paradigm shift” — backwards, to a pre-Enlightenment belief in the authority of scripture, just as early 19th-century European scholars regarded the Bible as history.

“This is not scholarship in the post-Enlightenment sense, but … ultimately a religious undertaking,” Witzel writes.".

After my three subsequent books in the years 2000, 2008 and 2019 (all of which incidentally represented giant steps upwards based on what I had written in that first book in 1993), it is strange that in the year 2021 this propagandist should be still quoting what Witzel apparently said about my first book, in which I dealt, chapter-by-chapter, with the different kinds of AIT arguments (many of which were indeed based on the Vedas and the Puranas, which necessitated my examining the correctness or otherwise of the historical conclusions that those AIT writers derived from the Vedas and Puranas).

Equally strange that while this man read what Witzel apparently said above, he has not read what Witzel has repeatedly said about the historical value of the data (incidentally, exactly the same data used by me in my analysis in my books) in the Rigveda and its usefulness in analyzing the history of the Vedic period:

Right from the beginning, in Ṛgvedic times, elaborate steps were taken to insure the exact reproduction of the words of the ancient poets. As a result, the Ṛgveda still has the exact same wording in such distant regions as Kashmir, Kerala and Orissa, and even the long-extinct musical accents have been preserved. Vedic transmission is thus superior to that of the Hebrew or Greek Bible, or the Greek, Latin and Chinese classics. We can actually regard present-day Ṛgveda recitation as a tape recording of what was composed and recited some 3000 years ago. In addition, unlike the constantly reformulated Epics and Purāṇas, the Vedic texts contain contemporary materials. They can serve as snapshots of the political and cultural situation of the particular period and area in which they were composed. […] as they are contemporary, and faithfully preserved, these texts are equivalent to inscriptions. […] they are immediate and unchanged evidence, a sort of oral history ― and sometimes autobiography ― of the period, frequently fixed and ‘taped’ immediately after the event by poetic formulation. These aspects of the Vedas have never been sufficiently stressed […]” (WITZEL 1995a:91).            

“[…] the Vedas were composed orally and they always were and still are, to some extent, oral literature. They must be regarded as tape recordings, made during the Vedic period and transmitted orally, and usually without the change of a single word.” (WITZEL 1997b:258).

"At the outset, it must be underlined that the Vedic texts excel among other early texts of other cultures in that they are 'tape recordings' of this archaic period. They were not allowed to be changed: not one word, not a syllable, not even a tonal accent. If this sounds unbelievable, it may be pointed out that they even preserve special cases of main clause and secondary clause intonation, items that have even escaped the sharp ears of early Indian grammarians. These texts are therefore better than any manuscript, and as good―if not better―than any contemporary inscription" (WITZEL 1999a:3).

It must be underlined that just like an ancient inscription, these words have not changed since the composition of these hymns c.1500 BCE, as the RV has been transmitted almost without any change […] The modern oral recitation of the RV is a tape recording of c.1700-1200 BCE.” (WITZEL 2000a:§8).  

The language of the RV is an archaic form of Indo-European. Its 1028 hymns are addressed to the gods and most of them are used in ritual. They were orally composed and strictly preserved by exact repetition through by rote learning, until today. It must be underlined that the Vedic texts are ‘tape recordings’ of this archaic period. Not one word, not a syllable, not even a tonal accent were allowed to be changed. The texts are therefore better than any manuscript, and as good as any well preserved contemporary inscription. We can therefore rely on the Vedic texts as contemporary sources for names of persons, places, rivers (WITZEL 1999c)” (WITZEL 2006:64-65).

 

4. "Witzel holds that the linguistic case for the movement of Indo-European nomads into, rather than out of, India is overwhelming: Sanskrit borrowings from pre-Aryan Indian tongues, for example, are not found in the languages of Europe".

When one fool quotes another, this is the only kind of "logic" one can expect.

What both Witzel and his recycler are saying is that the Romany (Gypsy) language did not move out of India into Europe, but that it moved into India from outside, since "Sanskrit borrowings from pre-Aryan Indian tongues [this is AIT-speak for "non-Indo-European Indian tongues"], for example, are not found in the Romany language". If the Indian origin of the ancestral forms of the languages of Europe is conclusively "disproved" by the absence of Dravidian-Austric words in those languages (even if that migration from India is postulated 5000 years ago from the northwestern areas), then certainly the Indian origin of the Romany language is very definitely and conclusively disproved by the absence of Dravidian-Austric words in the Romany language — a migration postulated by all linguists (including Witzel) just over a 1000 years ago from the interior of India.

Clearly both these fools fervently depend on their readers being even bigger fools (and ignoramuses to boot) than themselves.

 

5. "…instead of confronting the argument, the “Voice of India” writers — mostly amateur historians with no linguistics background — dismiss linguistic analysis as “a petty conjectural pseudo-science” and “hair-splitting”."

I (and Koenraad Elst) are the Voice of India writers who have written most prominently on the AIT-OIT issue. And we have dealt with the linguistic issues in ruthless detail: I have both blogs and youtube video-talks devoted exclusively to the linguistic evidence which totally disproves the AIT and proves the OIT, and in many of my blogs I have strongly (and with detailed data and explanations) countered those kinds of Hindu writers who "dismiss linguistic analysis as “a petty conjectural pseudo-science” and “hair-splitting”.".

But when you know that you are writing blatant lies, it is necessary to fall back on that old time-tested device of the shyster: the strawman argument.

 

6. "The hallmark of religious faith — and the nationalism often entwined with it — is that it is highly resistant to rational argument".

This would be the cue for a polemical Hindu to allege that Witzel and Forrest, and other anti-OIT warriors of their ilk, are motivated by religious faith in Christianity or "Protestantism" (as some warriors from the Hindu side have narrowed it down to) — and the Colonial Imperialism often entwined with it — but this has never been an argument from my side (except in respect of actual Christian missionaries; and I know these two are not Christian missionaries, though definitely anti-Hindu bigots).

I would rather say: "The hallmark of fossilized academics — and the hate politics often entwined with it — is that it is highly resistant to rational argument". Certainly, no AIT supporter has ever shown the guts to even pretend to try to debate the AIT-OIT issue on rational grounds with me.

The irrefutable Mitanni evidence presented by me (in the context of the clear division of the Rigveda into two distinct chronological periods which I have classified as the Old Rigveda and the New Rigveda, see my two blogs "The Chronological Gulf Between the Old Rigveda and the New Rigveda" and "The Recorded History of the Indo-European Migrations - Part 2 of 4 - The Chronology and Geography of the Rigveda") proves that the Mitanni people, who dominated a major part of West Asia from the sixteenth century BCE had migrated from India during the period of composition of the New Rigveda, and that the geography of the earlier Old Rigveda was to the east of the Haryana Sarasvati river in a period going back as far as at least 3000 BCE. This conclusive evidence, and any debate on it, has been very successfully stonewalled by the cowardly AIT proponents.

Fraudulent and cowardly shysters like Drew Forrest are content to spout their hate propaganda through captive media rather than indulge in honest rational debate.

 


BIBILIOGRAPHY:

TALAGERI 1993a: The Aryan Invasion Theory and Indian Nationalism. Talageri, Shrikant G. Voice of India, New Delhi, 1993.

TALAGERI 1993b: The Aryan Invasion Theory – A Reappraisal. Talageri, Shrikant G. Aditya Prakashan, New Delhi, 1993 (Being 1993a minus 3 chapters, and with a different Foreword).

TALAGERI 2000: The Rigveda: A Historical Analysis. Talageri, Shrikant G. Aditya Prakashan (New Delhi), 2000.

TALAGERI 2019: Genetics and the Aryan Debate―"Early Indians", Tony Joseph's Latest Assault. Talageri, Shrikant G.  Voice of India, New Delhi, 2019.

WITZEL 1995a: Early Indian History: Linguistic and Textual Parameters. Witzel. Michael.  pp. 85-125 in “The Indo-Aryans of Ancient South Asia”, ed. by George Erdosy. Walter de Gruyter. Berlin, 1995.

WITZEL 1997b: The Development of the Vedic Canon and Its Schools: The Social and Political Milieu. Witzel, Michael. in “Inside the Texts, Beyond the Texts”, ed. by M.Witzel, Cambridge 1997 (being the proceedings of the International Vedic Workshop, Harvard univ., June 1989).

WITZEL 1999a: Early Sources for South Asian Substrate Languages. Witzel, Michael. in MOTHER TONGUE, Special Issue, 1999.

WITZEL 2000a: The Languages of Harappa. Witzel, Michael. Feb. 17, 2000.

WITZEL 2006: Central Asian Roots and Acculturation in South Asia: Linguistic and Archaelogical Evidence from Western Central Asia, the Hindukush and Northwestern South Asia for Early Indo-Aryan Language and Religion. in “Indus Civilization: Text and Context”, edited by Toshiki Osada, Manohar Publications, New Delhi, 2006.