Thursday 9 February 2023

When Did Christianity Come to India? A Review of the Book "Unmasking the Syriacs" by Jeevan Philip

 

When Did Christianity Come to India?

A Review of the Book "Unmasking the Syriacs" by Jeevan Philip

 Shrikant G. Talageri

 

In view of the fact that Hinduism, in all its aspects, is purely Indian, while Christianity is undoubtedly a foreign religion in India, and the further fact that this automatically strengthens the moral geographical right of Hinduism over Christianity in India (or at least, will be a relevant factor so long as Hinduism continues to exist in India: once it reaches a minority, micro-minority or near-extinct state, it will be as irrelevant to the discussion as any pagan religion whose original territory is today completely under the control of the two proselytizing Abrahamic religions), it has always been a central tenet of missionary tactics, and the greater anti-Hindu agenda, to minimize the antiquity of Hinduism in India and maximize that of Christianity. While the former has been taken to the ridiculous extent of claiming that Swami Vivekananda invented Hinduism in near-modern times, the latter consists of tracing the antecedents of Christianity in India to the period of an immediate "apostle" of "Jesus": i.e. "St. Thomas".

In the matter of the latter (the subject of this article), every single major politician in India has been in the forefront when it comes to tracing the "2000-year-old" history of Christianity in India: we need not go beyond or below the Prime Ministers of India from the first PM Nehru to the present PM Modi:

Nehru: "Few people realize that Christianity came to India as early as the first century after Christ, long before Europe turned to it, and established a firm hold in South India" (NEHRU 1936:273).

Modi: "The Mar Thoma Church is closely linked with the noble ideals of Saint Thomas, the Apostle of Lord Christ [….] The contributions of Saint Thomas  and, following him, the Indian Christian community, are deeply valued" (Modi speaking in a televised address to the Kerala Orthodox Church on 27 June 2020).

"Scholars" (with well-deserved inverted commas) come closely on the list. Indeed the idea of the entry of Christianity into India in the first century CE is one of the most successful lies in ancient Indian history, comparable, in its fundamentally fraudulent nature and in its near-total sway over common perception, with the "Aryan Invasion Theory" which is my own field of specialization.

 

Recently, a book has been published questioning this Christian Lie on new and original grounds, mainly on the basis of the study of the presence of Christian artifacts (mainly crosses) in the archaeological records of India. This book contains a wealth of information on many points, some of which I will point out below, and the book is consequently a valuable addition to the corpus of existing literature on the subject.

The book is: "Unmasking the Syriacs: The Hidden Origin of Indian Christianity, An Archaeo-Linguistic Approach" by Jeevan Philip, Associated Books and Publishers, Kochi 2022.

Before moving on to the positive aspects of the book, it is necessary to first highlight the only major negative point of this book: the complete absence of any reference to the single greatest and most effective research study on this subject, i.e. the book "The Myth of St. Thomas and the Mylapore Shiva Temple" by Ishwar Sharan, Voice of India, New Delhi, 1991. That the present book highlights new facts or a different aspect of the problem (crosses in the history of Christianity and in the archaeology of India) is no explanation, since the bibliography contains a list of nearly 400 books, and that the landmark book by Ishwar Sharan should be considered so irrelevant to the subject, and should be so very conspicuous by its absence from this list, is both inexplicable and inexcusable. Can it be possible that the learned author is totally ignorant about even the very existence of this book?

In any case, this makes it necessary to first examine what we learn from Ishwar Sharan's research, before going on to that of Jeevan Philip. In short, Ishwar Sharan's book has to be read in detail first. The contribution of Jeevan Philip's book is also very significant, though technical in its details, and must also be read in detail. I will only highlight in short the main aspects of the two books; for precise details, the books themselves tell the whole story.

 

I. Ishwar Sharan's Book

The book by Ishwar Sharan also concentrates on the earliest beginnings of the effective presence of Christianity in India, and on the myth of "Saint" Thomas being the person who introduced Christianity in India. This of course becomes particularly necessary, as he makes it very clear, in the face of the much-propagated calumny and falsehood that this mythical "Saint" Thomas was the original apostle of Jesus mentioned in the Bible and that he was killed by the Brahmins of India at Mylapore in Tamilnadu after he had established his "church" at that spot (the spot incidentally of the famous Mylapore Shiva temple!) — a story very prominently used by anti-Hindu and anti-Brahminical elements in Tamilnadu in particular and in India (and elsewhere) in general to malign Hindus as a whole and specifically the Brahmin community. [Ishwar Sharan, for the information of those who may not be aware, is neither a Hindu nor a Brahmin by birth: he is a Canadian, originally a Protestant Christian, who was initiated into the Hindu religion at Prayag in 1977].

The book is a classic and a magnum opus on the subject, and must be read in full to understand the great scholarship and irrefutable logic behind the research resulting in this book. It contains very valuable details on the personal struggles which the scholar had to make in order to present his case, and the stiff opposition and organized calumny and persecution that he faced from the powerful anti-Hindu media and political forces in India during that process. It also contains valuable material on the history of Christian iconoclasm, and innumerable other fascinating and little-known but extremely crucial details on early Christian texts, theology and church history.

 

The two main points that he brings out in the historical context which concerns us here are, firstly, the utter falsehood of the Thomas-in-India myth (and also of the malicious story which, additionally, makes Tiruvalluvar, the 1st century author of the ancient Tamil classic, the Tirukkural, into a "disciple" of this mythical creature), and secondly, and equally importantly but more interestingly to the lay reader (myself included in this context), the great moral crisis that Christians who propagate this myth fall into if the only piece of "evidence" for this story, the apocryphal book, Acts of Thomas, is to be treated as an authority. This Acts of Thomas is a third century text, which claims that Thomas, the apostle of Jesus came to India to preach the gospel and was "martyred" for his pains. All subsequent references to this Thomas arriving in India in the 1st century are originally based on or inspired by the references in this text. But:

1. The text Acts of Thomas presents Jesus in a very bad light: it makes Thomas his twin brother (casting a blight on the concept of the "Only begotten Son of God"), and shows him to be a self-centered and ruthless person who, among other things, sells off his own twin brother into slavery!

2. And the "India" that the text refers to turns out on examination to be Persia (everything east of Mesopotamia was referred to vaguely as "India" in those times, and certainly in this text), and this Thomas turns out to have been "martyred" at the hands of the soldiers of the Persian king (and not by any "Brahmins" of South India).

 

Ishwar Sharan provides all the evidence to show that Christianity arrived in India only in 345 CE, and that immigration was represented by a small group of Christians from Syria under a person named Thomas of Kana: "Thomas of Kana and the seventy-two Syrian families arrived in 345 CE. They were the first Christians to arrive in India" (ISHWAR SHARAN 1991/2010: 96 fn).

[These Syrian Christians were refugees who had escaped to India (like the Zoroastrians of Persia much later) and were granted asylum and full protection and religious freedom by the local rulers and people. The book further gives the details of how (and why) the descendants of these refugees, much later when the Portuguese under Vasco da Gama arrived at Calicut in Kerala in 1498 CE,  identified themselves as Christians and asked the Portuguese to make war on their Hindu king and convert the land into a Christian land. It also records what followed: "The Syrian Christians would soon come to grief for their treachery. The Portuguese regarded them as heretics and schismatics, who were no better in 'true religion' than their Hindu neighbours" (ISHWAR SHARAN 1991/2010: 36)].

 

Even before the arrival of the Portuguese, the Syrian Christians had spread the myth that the Thomas who brought their ancestors to Kerala (in 345 CE) was actually the "apostle", of Jesus, of the same name, and that their ancestors were actually local people converted by him. The first account of this mythical origin is found retailed by Marco Polo in the thirteenth century CE (much later adopted and propagated by the Portuguese after the first Portuguese colonizers entered India: the whole Portuguese conspiracy is detailed in the book with evidence). And the first record of it in any Indian text is in 1892 CE!

The first western account even of the presence of any local Christians at all (though not necessarily "Thomas Christians") in India is in the Cosmas Indicopleustes, a Greek text of around 550 CE, which mentions that there were small communities of Christians in Kerala and Ceylon. The fact that this account (however authentic or otherwise it may be)  does not connect these Christians with Thomas the "apostle", which one would have expected if such a belief were in circulation then, is strong proof that the Christians referred to were the Syrian Christians who are supposed to have come to India in 345 CE, and that the apostolic-origin myth had not yet been concocted or had not yet taken root even at that time.

But this is just a short outline of the evidence and data detailed in Ishwar Sharan's brilliant book, which can be read in detail only in the actual book itself.

 

II. Jeevan Philip's Book

The book being reviewed here is the book by Jeevan Philip: "Unmasking the Syriacs: The Hidden Origin of Indian Christianity, An Archaeo-Linguistic Approach" by Jeevan Philip, Associated Books and Publishers, Kochi 2012.

This book is also a brilliant book. As I am not myself an expert on the subject, I cannot verify the correctness of the facts given in the book; but have no particular reason to believe they are incorrect, or that the book represents anything but a detailed analysis from a new angle. Where the book differs from that of Ishwar Sharan (as for example regarding the date of arrival in India of the group led by "Thomas of Kana"), I honestly think I am incompetent to judge, and I think a review of this book could more competently have been undertaken by Ishwar Sharan himself!

To be frank, among the mass of data on different types of crosses, and different Christian groups, I ended up a bit confused, since I failed to understand what exactly is the difference (in Kerala) between Malankari Nazranies, Syriac Christians, Nestorians=Persian Christians, etc. (though I understood the difference between these groups and Manichaeans), and exactly which of these communities are supposed to have come to India in exactly which period, as also the exact date and identity of "Thomas of Kana". Hence, I leave more detailed analyses to more perspicacious readers and scholars.

 

But, one thing that is clear, and which is the main point of departure of this book, seems to be that instead of 345 CE as the date when Syrian Christians, led by a "Thomas of Kana", are believed to have arrived in India (see Ishwar Sharan above), Philip brings the date down to the post-9th century CE period, and points out repeatedly, after giving copious details of the historical and archaeological material available, that there is a total "absence of any material evidence of Syriac Christianity or any form of Christianity before the 9/10th century period" (PHILIP 2022:xxx), and "absence of any historical or archaeological material from South India concerning Syriac or Persian Christianity before the 9th century" (PHILIP 2022:333). And again, "The evolution of crosses especially crosses belonging to Syriac churches, and their archaeological remnants from the region, show that the Malankara Church and South India had no connection with the Syriac churches before the 9th century" (PHILIP 2022:334).

The whole material evidence for Christianity in India, and the St, Thomas story, rests on the Mount Cross, discovered in Mylapore (in Tamilnadu, on the east coast of India) by the Portuguese in 1547 CE., followed by a few more discovered in the Malankara area in Kerala. But, as Philip shows at great length, these earliest crosses in India are not earlier than the 9th century CE.

After the discovery of the Mount Cross in Mylapore in 1547, such crosses became common in Kerala: Philip quotes the historian K.T.Joseph, from his book "Malabar Christians and their ancient documents" as reaching the "conclusion that there was not a single Pahlavi-inscribed arched cross seen in Malabar in or about 1547, the year of the discovery of the mount cross, and that the numerous crosses mentioned by Gouvea as existing in Malabar in 1599 were all imitations of [the] miraculous mount cross. These were not more than 53 years old when Gouvea heard in 1599 that they had been set up by Saint Thomas himself or the first Christians of the first century" (PHILIP 2022:11-12). None of the "detailed descriptions, narratives, and myths discussed by various Portuguese writers about Christians in South India" contain a single word about such crosses in Kerala till 1599 CE, which proves that it was not "the cross of Christians in this part of the world" (PHILIP 2022:10).

And about the story of "Maliyankara, a place where St. Thomas is said to have landed on the western coast of Kerala. This story has no historical background older than the sixteenth century when the Malankara Nazranies coined their 'Ramban pattu' a contradictory ballad" (PHILIP 2022:xxxi), and this place on the coast, formed from the "continuous transgressional and regressional activities through centuries [….] had not possibly been formed at the advent of Christianity" (PHILIP 2022:xxxii).

About the myth about a "tomb" of the apostle Thomas in Mylapore, the meeting that took place in 1502 CE between Vasco da Gama and a delegation of the Christians from Kerala contains the first reference by Christians from Kerala to any tomb of St. Thomas. After this, many Portuguese documents suddenly started referring to this tomb. However, while the documents claimed there was such a tomb in Mylapore, this Mylapore is referred to as being in Ceylon (Sri Lanka), showing that all the references are based on hearsay and rumor (PHILIP 2022:8-9). "These narrators from the sixteenth or seventeenth century are often carried away by the stories or myths of the local people" (PHILIP 2022:10).

 

The crosses from Mylapore and Malankara are "a continuation of the parallel developments that took place during the 6th-10th centuries in Persia, Central Asia, China, etc." (PHILIP 2022:2). The knowledge of these crosses among the Christians of Kerala is missing in the entire literature of the Syriac Christians (or Malankara Nazranies) of Kerala before 1562 CE (PHILIP 2022:3), and "there was no history of such a cross in the memory of the Malankara Nazranies" (PHILIP 2022:4).

Even more important, these crosses, of the period 9th century CE onwards, are not even Christian crosses in the true sense of the term: they are crosses belonging to another religion (though an offshoot of Christianity) called Manichaeism, founded by a Persian named Mani in the 3rd century CE. In one sense, Manichaeism is partly derived from Christianity, and it gives special importance to Jesus, but which Christian will agree that a religion, whose central beliefs are as follows was a sect of Christianity?:

1. Mani preached a dualistic religion, which taught of a dualism between a good spiritual world of Light and a bad material world of Darkness, where the Light trapped in the material world slowly returned back to the Spiritual world over long cosmological processes and different stages in human history.

2. As part of this process, Mani also preached the principle of Reincarnation, anathema to Christianity, and taught that the soul of the righteous person returns to the Light, but that the soul of a person who indulges in carnal acts like sex, procreation, eating meat, drinking wine, etc. is condemned to rebirth in the material world.

3. Further, in spite of giving a place to Jesus, Manichaeism holds that Mani was the fourth and final prophet after Zoroaster, Gautam Buddha and Jesus.

Manichaeism spread out from Iran, and flourished in parts of Iran, Central Asia and China from the 7th century till the 14th century, after which it faded out. After much discussion and data, Philip quotes the latest research which gives an "interesting situation where the Manichaean church becomes a strong contendor for the ownership of the Pahlavi crosses of South India" (PHILIP 2022:335).

In short: the "Pahlavi crosses of south India are not at all evidence of the existence of an early Christianity in the region of Old-Thamizhakam as claimed by church historians" (PHILIP 2022:337), and Philip concludes that all these facts disprove the "stories of Syriac Christianity along with the claims of Indian Christians with respect to the martyrdom of Apostle Thomas at Mylapore" (PHILIP 2022:336).

 

The true sequence of the events leading to Christianity in Kerala begins with the presence of a "Manichaean settlement area" of emigrants from Persia around the 9th century CE, in Mylapore on the east coast of India, who were later converted to Nestorian (Persian) Christianity: later "these recent converts from Manichaeans migrated to the western coast. whereby then another Judeo-Dravidian group (the pre-Porto-orthodox group) of Jesus believers who were the result of an Afro-Eurasian trade network. also subjugated to Nestorianism" (PHILIP 2022:336).

Thomas of Kana was the leader of these converted Nestorians who migrated from Mylapore to the west coast of Kerala: "the group from Mylapore, under the leadership of Thomas Cana, was primarily responsible for this Pahlavi cross and its copies in Malankara". Later, "under the supervision of Nestorian prelates, the story of Thomas Cana was also absorbed under the Nestorian brand. Gradually this imagery penetrated the subconscious mind of Malankara Nazranies as designed by prelates of Persian Christianity, whose hagiographies were associated with the St. Thomas legend in Fars and North India. the Thomas Cana legend gradually dissolved into the Saint Thomas legend of Persian Christianity, ultimately evolving as the patron saint of Malankari Nazranies" (PHILIP 2022:337).         

 

Comparing the Syriac claims with the factual history of other migrant communities in India like the Jews and Zoroastrians, Philip points out: "A peripheral test with the ethnic migrations of Jews, Persians (Zoroastrians), and so-claimed Knanites is powerful enough to reveal the integrity of the stories of Syriac Christianity. The Jews and Persians in India, despite all the oddities, kept their language and culture intact. At the same time, the Knanites are without any reflections of their language, culture and traditions from West Asia. Furthermore, cross-testing with European Roma samples reveals the position of Knanite claims by providing us with a unique preservation of language, culture and traditions by Romas despite intensive mixing with locals" (PHILIP 2022:xxii).

He firmly dismisses the "stories of Syriac Christianity, along with myths of Malankara Nazranies (proselytization by St. Thomas, Nambuthiri conversions, 71/2 church stories, etc.)" as "unscientific and contradictory" and "historical manipulations" (PHILIP 2022:xxii), and calls them "mythical stories/legends of respective existing believers" (PHILIP 2022:xxiii), and as "bedtime stories of Syriac Christianity" (PHILIP 2022:xxiv), while detailing the total lack of recorded evidence of any of these things amongst the substantial body of contemporary records of all these areas, whether in the records of the Christian communities themselves or the Roman and other foreign travelers, or in the Sangam literature of the South.

This book, a worthy supplement to the book by Ishwar Sharan, gives details about the history and archaeology of Christian artifacts like crosses which will best be understood by scholars in the field. But the sum of the whole case is that it is time the "St. Thomas" myth, and the claims of an early presence of  Christianity in India, are given a decent burial or cremation once and for all.

 

Appendix added 10/2/2023: Persian Christianity in the Sassanian period:        

This is something I thought of mentioning while writing this article, and then forgot to do so. It is about the Persian Christianity referred to in the above article.

Persia was a Zoroastrian land, then under the rule of the Sassanian dynasty, when it was completely conquered and Islamized by the Rashidun Caliphate in 633-645 CE. But few are aware that there were powerful attempts to convert it into a Christian land a hundred years earlier. during the rule of an earlier Sassanian king Khusrau-I. (531-579 CE).

Rome had earlier been conquered for Christianity by the peculiarly Christian strategy (a kind of gender-reversed love-jihad) of getting a Christian girl married to a non-Christian ruler and then bringing up the royal heir secretly to be a Christian, who would then, after he became king, enforce Christianity in the land: in the case of Rome, this satanic son was the Roman Emperor Constantine (280-337 CE). The same trick was sought to be reenacted in Persia, during the reign of  an earlier Sassanian king Khusrau-I. (531-579 CE), whose wife and son's paramour were both fervent Christians. the plot failed (see Sohrab Mod's film "Nausherwan-e-Adil" for a filmy and romanticized version of this history), or else the Muslims would have been conquering and converting a Christian Persia.

Some would say the same tactic seems to have been tried in modern India as well. But it has indeed been effectively used in India also, not necessarily in converting rulers. A spate of articles in newspapers in 2015, when certain evangelical organisations had launched a massive public propaganda drive featuring film stars, claimed that the Christian wife, Kalpana Kartik, of the famous star Dev Anand (who I had thought till then was a staunch Hindu) had practically managed to convert her husband in his last years. One such article:

https://mumbaimirror.indiatimes.com/others/sunday-read/starry-succour/articleshow/47313454.cms

 

 

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

NEHRU 1936: An Autobiography. Jawaharlal Nehru. Oxford University Press, New Delhi, 1936.

ISHWAR-SHARAN 1991/2010: The Myth of St. Thomas and the Mylapore Shiva Temple. Ishwar Sharan, Voice of India, New Delhi, 1991/2010.

PHILIP 2022: Unmasking the Syriacs: The Hidden Origin of Indian Christianity, An Archaeo-Linguistic Approach. Jeevan Philip, Associated Books and Publishers, Kochi 2022.

 

8 comments:

  1. It is interesting to know that manicheism was the source of christianity like cult in india. It will be interesting to see if there are any 10th 11th century texts in kerala which are based on gnostic writings. On other note I have this question about linguistics and mythology. On a very cursory observation it seems that linguistic elements get preserved far more than mythological elements. Do you agree with this statement. For example greek mythology and names of gods are so different...compared to probably linguistic elements and commonality between ancient greek and sanskrit.

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    1. I don't know if this is always the case, since we see similar mythological concepts with different names in different cultures.

      At the same time, Rigvedic Mitra (Sun God, and God of friendships, alliances and contracts) became Zoroastrian Mithra, and later also the Mithra of the Graeco-Roman Mithra cult. In Christianity, the compromise date which the Christians finally arrived at (December 25) to celebrate the birth of Christ was based on the day of the Great Festival of this Mithra. In Islam, the Persian form of the word, Mehr, was borrowed by the Semitic languages (including Hebrew) to mean the bridal gift or purchase price representing the marriage contract, and this became a part of Islam. In Buddhism, and wherever it spread in East Asia, Maitreya (derived from Mitra) became the name of the future and last incarnation of the Buddha (like Kalki in Hindu mythology). In India, the word continues to mean friend in all languages. One word spread out to all the religions and acquired different connotations.

      Delete
  2. Kindly move to WordPress, even Google itself does not prefer blogspot in its search algorithms. Not to mention the blog will be more pleasant to read on WordPress. Blogspot's default style feels very out of place today, and I suspect many potential readers may be driven away solely by that impression. So I request you to move to WordPress, if possible with a custom domain.

    (If someone technically adept is at your side, you can even move to GH pages for greater degree of ownership.)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I am sorry I am genuinely techno-illiterate in such matters, and do not have anyone "technically adept" at my side, and so do not want to do something new and make a mess of things.

      But all my articles after a certain date are uploaded on academia.edu. You can even download the pdfs from there.

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  3. Shrikantmaam, I don't mean to digress, but I read the Mumbai Mirror article you referenced - the way the author fawned over Christianity was not surprising. I can just imagine what the same author would have written if the subject of the article was the Shaiva Siddhanta Church (a traditional Shaiva organisation that I respect and trust); the article would have been one long anti-Hindu rant.

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