I wish to present here a speech (as is basis) given by Michel
Danino on a subject which is worth reading. About Danino, I prefer to address
him as Indian (born as French) who is associated with India for last three
decades.
He has extensively
researched on Indian Civilization and spoken / written about it at various
platforms. Accidentally, I read his speech on Effects of Colonization (This paper was presented at a seminar on
“Decolonization and its Cultural Problems” organized by N. V. Krishna Warrior
Smaraka Trust at Tripunithura (Kerala) on 9-10 October 1999.) long
back and it made a huge impact on me. It brought my attention to facts which we
Indians have ignored or made to forget (thanks to school / college syllabus).
Besides the above referred article, I read two of the books
written by him i.e. Indian Culture and
India’s Future, and The Lost River.
But before proceeding to read the books, I request, please read
the speech on effects of Colonization.
The source of the below speech is http://micheldanino.bharatvani.org/colonization.html
Effects of Colonization on Indian
Thought by Michel Danino
The theme chosen by this seminar is
a very apt one. Having suffered the burden of two centuries of British
occupation, India has, since Independence, tried to come to terms with the
impact of that exotic presence perhaps diametrically opposed to her own temperament,
culture and genius. If anything, this introspection has only intensified in
recent years, as Western culture (if it deserves this noble name) aggressively
spreads around the globe. But it stands to reason that for an effective
“decolonization” to take place—even in order to find out whether and how far it
is desirable—we should first take a hard look at the effects of this
colonization, what traces it has left on the Indian mind and psyche, and how
deep. That is what I have briefly attempted to do in this paper—briefly,
because it is a subject as vast and complex as Indian life itself, and also
because I am a mere student of India, not a learned scholar like those present
among us today.
Historical Background
But first, an aside. I have only referred to the British occupation, not to the Muslim invasions, though they stretched over a much longer span of time and collided violently with Indian civilization. Yet, strangely, in spite of their ruthlessness, their proud and sustained use of violence to coerce or convert, India’s Muslim rulers never attempted to take possession of the Indian mind : in faithful obedience to Koranic injunctions, they simply tried to stamp it out. That they did not succeed is another story.
The British, too, dreamed of stamping
it out, but not through sheer brute force. As we know, besides their primary
object of plunder, they viewed—or perhaps justified—their presence in India as
a “divinely ordained” civilizing mission. They spoke of Britain as “the most
enlightened and philanthropic nation in the world”[1]
and of “the justifiable pride which the cultivated members of a civilised
community feel in the beneficent exercise of dominion and in the performance by
their nation of the noble task of spreading the highest kind of civilisation.”[2]
Such rhetoric was constantly poured out to the Britons at home so as to give
them a good conscience, while the constant atrocities perpetrated on the Indian
people were discreetly hidden from sight.
To achieve their aim, the British
rulers followed two lines : on the one hand, they encouraged an English and
Christianized education in accordance with the well-known Macaulay doctrine,
which projected Europe as an enlightened, democratic, progressive heaven, and
on the other hand, they pursued a systematic denigration of Indian culture,
scriptures, customs, traditions, crafts, cottage industries, social
institutions, educational system, taking full advantage of the stagnant and
often degenerate character of the Hindu society of the time. There were, of
course, notable exceptions among British individuals, from William Jones to
Sister Nivedita and Annie Besant—but almost none to be found among the ruling
class. Let us recall how, in his famous 1835 Minute, Thomas B. Macaulay
asserted that Indian culture was based on “a literature ... that inculcates the
most serious errors on the most important subjects ... hardly reconcilable with
reason, with morality ... fruitful of monstrous superstitions.” Hindus, he
confidently declared, had nothing to show except a “false history, false
astronomy, false medicine ... in company with a false religion.”[3]
As it happened, Indians were—and
still largely are—innocent people who could simply not suspect the degree of
cunning with which their colonial masters set about their task. In the middle
of the 1857 uprising, the Governor-General Lord Canning wrote to a British
official :
As we must rule 150 millions of
people by a handful (more or less small) of Englishmen, let us do it in the
manner best calculated to leave them divided (as in religion and national
feeling they already are) and to inspire them with the greatest possible awe of
our power and with the least possible suspicion of our motives.[4]
Even a “liberal” governor such as
Elphinstone wrote in 1859, “Divide et impera [‘divide and rule’ in Latin] was
the old Roman motto and it should be ours.”[5]
In this clash of two civilizations,
the European, younger, dynamic, hungry for space and riches, appeared far
better fitted than the Indian, half decrepit, almost completely dormant after
long centuries of internal strife and repeated onslaught. The contrast was so
huge that no one doubted the outcome—the rapid conquest of the Indian mind and
life. That was what Macaulay, again, summarized best when he proudly wrote his
father in 1836 :
Our English schools are flourishing
wonderfully.... It is my belief that if our plans of education are followed up,
there will not be a single idolater among the respectable classes in Bengal
thirty years hence.[6]
But if there is one thing that the
British could not understand about Indians, it is that they live more in the
heart than in the mind. And that heart the rulers could never touch or
influence, especially not with their shallow religion or science. As for the
mind, they did succeed in creating a fairly large “educated” class, anglicized
and partially Christianized, which always looked up to its European model and
ideal, and formed the actual foundation of the Empire in India.
Came Independence. If India did
achieve political independence—at a terrible cost and by amputating a few limbs
of her body—she hardly achieved independence in the field of thought. Nor did
she try : the country’s so-called elite, whose mind had been shaped and
hypnotized by their colonial masters, always assumed that anything Western was
so superior that in order to reach all-round fulfilment, India merely had to
follow European thought, science, and political institutions. Swami Vivekananda
was the first to give this call : “O ye modern Hindus, de-hypnotise yourselves
!”[7]
The Symptoms
A hundred years later, at least, we can see how gratuitous those assumptions were. Yet the colonial imprint remains present at many levels. On a very basic one, it is almost amusing to note that Pune is sometimes called “the Oxford of the East,” while Ahmedabad is “the Manchester of India”—and since Coimbatore is often dubbed “the Manchester of South India,” we have at least out-Manchestered England herself ! The Nilgiris are flatteringly compared to Scotland (never mind that Kotagiri, where I live, is called “the second Switzerland”), and I understand that tourist guides refer to your own Alappuzha as “the Venice of the East.” Pondicherry, also to attract tourists, calls itself “India’s Little France” or “the French Riviera of the East.” India’s map seems dotted with European places. And “east” of what, incidentally ? This is something like India’s learned “Oriental” institutes—what “orient” do they refer to ? Thailand or Japan, perhaps ?
Things become more troublesome when
Kalidasa is called “the Shakespeare of India,” when Bankim Chatterji needs to
be compared to Walter Scott or Tagore to Shelley, and Kautilya becomes India’s
very own Machiavelli. We begin to see how our compass is set due west. Would
the British call Shakespeare “England’s Kalidasa,” let alone Manchester “the
Coimbatore of Northwest England” ?
But I think the most alarming signs
of the colonization of the Indian mind are found in the field of education.
Take the English nursery rhymes taught to many of our little children, as if,
before knowing anything about India, they needed to know about Humpty-Dumpty or
the sheep that went to London to see the Queen. When they grow older, some of
them will be learning Western psychology while remaining totally ignorant of
the far deeper psychology offered by Yoga, or they will study medicine or
physics or evolution without having the least idea of what ancient India
achieved—and often anticipated—in those fields. Which teacher, for example,
will tell his or her students that Darwinian evolution was always at the back
of the Indian mind, as the sequence of the Dashavatar shows ? Or that the speed
of light is clearly given, to an amazing degree of precision, in Sayana’s
commentary on the Rig-Veda ?[8]
And can it be a coincidence if a day of Brahma, equal to 4,320,000,000 years,
happens to be the age of the earth ? Many such examples could be supplied in
other fields, from mathematics and astronomy and quantum physics to linguistics
and metallurgy and urbanization.[9]
If teachers were not so ignorant, as a rule, of their own culture, they would
have no difficulty in showing their students that the much vaunted “scientific
temper” is nothing new to India. Even in medicine, we know how Ayurveda and
Siddha systems of medicine have been neglected under the illusion that modern
medicine is the only way to provide “health for all.”
Our educational policies
systematically discourage the teaching of Sanskrit, and one wonders again
whether that is in deference to Macaulay, who found that great language (though
he confessed he knew none of it !) to be “barren of useful knowledge.” In the
same vein, the Indian epics, the Veda or the Upanishads stand no chance, and
students will almost never hear about them at school. Even Indian languages are
subtly or not so subtly given a lower status than English, with the result that
many deep scholars or writers who chose to express themselves in their mother-tongues
(I have of course N. V. Krishna Warrior in mind) remain totally unknown beyond
their States, while textbooks are crowded with second-rate thinkers who
happened to write in English.
If you take a look at the teaching
of history, the situation is even worse. Almost all Indian history taught today
in our schools and universities has been written by Western scholars, or by
“native historians who [have] taken over the views of the colonial masters,”[10]
in the words of Prof. Klostermaier of Canada’s University of Manitoba. All of
India’s historical tradition, all ancient records are simply brushed aside as
so much fancy so as to satisfy the Western dictum that “Indians have no sense
of history.” Indian tradition never said anything about mysterious Aryans
invading the subcontinent from the Northwest, but since nineteenth-century
European scholars decided so, our children still today have to learn by rote
this invention now rejected by most archaeologists ; South Indian tradition
said nothing about the Dravidians coming from the North, driven southward by
the naughty Aryans, but again that shall be stuffed into young brains. No
Indian scholar or grammar or tradition ever claimed that Sanskrit and Tamil
languages were great rivals belonging to wholly separate families, but this
shall be taught at school in deference to Western linguists or to our own
“Dravidian” activists. The real facts of the destruction wreaked in India by
Muslim invaders and also by some Christian missionaries must be kept outside
textbooks and curricula, since they contradict the “tolerant” and “liberating”
image that Islam and Christianity have been projecting for themselves.[11]
Even the freedom movement is not spared : as the great historian R. C.
Majumdar[12]
and others have shown, no serious, objective criticism of Mahatma Gandhi or the
Indian National Congress is allowed, and the role of other important leaders is
systematically belittled or erased.
Nothing illustrates the bankruptcy
of our education better than the manner in which, just a year ago, State
education ministers raised an uproar at an attempt to discuss the introduction
of the merest smattering of Indian culture into the syllabus, and at the
singing of the Saraswati Vandana. * The
message they actually conveyed was that no Indian element was tolerable in
education, while they are perfectly satisfied with an education that, at the
start of the century, Sri Aurobindo called “soulless and mercenary,”[13]
and which has now degenerated further into a stultifying, mechanical routine
that kills our children’s natural intelligence and talent. They find nothing
wrong with maiming young brains and hearts, but will be up in arms if we speak
of teaching India’s heritage.
Ananda Coomaraswamy, the famous art
critic, gave the following warning early this century :
It is hard to realize how completely
the continuity of Indian life has been severed. A single generation of English
education suffices to break the threads of tradition and to create a
nondescript and superficial being deprived of all roots—a sort of intellectual
pariah who does not belong to the East or the West, the past or the future. The
greatest danger for India is the loss of her spiritual integrity. Of all Indian
problems the educational is the most difficult and most tragic.[14]
Swami Vivekananda had earlier said
much the same thing in his own forthright style :
The child is taken to school, and
the first thing he learns is that his father is a fool, the second thing that
his grandfather is a lunatic, the third thing that all his teachers are
hypocrites, the fourth, that all the sacred books are lies ! By the time he is
sixteen he is a mass of negation, lifeless and boneless. And the result is that
fifty years of such education has not produced one original man in the three
presidencies.... We have learnt only weakness.[15]
The child becomes a recording
machine stuffed with a jarring assortment of meaningless bits and snippets. The
only product of this denationalizing education has been the creation of a
modern, Westernized “elite” with little or no contact with the deeper sources
of Indian culture, and with nothing of India’s ancient view of the world except
a few platitudes to be flaunted at cocktail parties. Browsing through any
English-language daily or magazine is enough to see how Indian intellectuals
revel in the sonorous clang of hollow clichés which, the world over, have taken
the place of any real thinking. If Western intellectuals come up with some new
“ism,” you are sure to find it echoed all over the Indian press in a matter of
weeks ; it was amusing to see how, some two years ago, the visit to India of a
French philosopher and champion of “deconstructionism” sent the cream of our
intellectuals raving wild for weeks, while they remained crassly ignorant of
far deeper thinkers next door. Or if Western painters or sculptors come up with
some new-fangled cult of ugliness, their Indian counterparts will not lag far
behind. If Western countries plan grand celebrations for the “millennium” (not
a third millennium of darkness, one hopes), we in India follow suit—though we
appear to have forgotten to celebrate the fifty-second century of our Kali era
earlier this year. And let “politically correct” Western nations make a new
religion of “human rights” (with intensive bombing campaigns to enforce them if
necessary), and you will hear a number of Indians clamouring for them
parrotlike. The list is endless, in every field of life, and if India had been
living in her mind alone, one would have to conclude that India has ceased to
exist—or will do so after one or two more generations of this senseless de-Indianizing.
In Sri Aurobindo’s words :
... Ancient India’s culture,
attacked by European modernism, overpowered in the material field, betrayed by
the indifference of her children, may perish for ever along with the soul of
the nation that holds it in its keeping.[16]
Maladies of the Mind
The root of the problem is of course that we have ceased to think by ourselves. We are spoon-fed and often force-fed almost every one of our thoughts, or what masquerades as thought. Independent reflection is discouraged at every step, especially at school.
Yet it is not my point that English
education in India has been an unmitigated evil. It was a necessary, probably
an unavoidable evil. India had to be shaken from her lethargy, to open up to
the world and face its challenges, and that was the fastest way to compel her
to do so. There is also no doubt that this opening to dynamic currents of
thought from the West contributed in no small measure to the quest for
independence, as has often been pointed out. Sometimes indeed, one poison is
needed to cure another. But to continue taking poison after the cure is over is
inexcusable. India’s failure to boldly formulate and implement a truly Indian
education after Independence ranks as her most tragic, most ruinous error. The
blame for it must be laid at the door of the country’s first education
ministers, and even more so its first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, himself
an undiscriminating product of English education who was always prompt to pour
scorn on India’s culture and traditions and to make a cult of modernity.
But subjection to Western influence
does more than simply impoverish the Indian mind or wean it away from Indian
culture. It also introduces serious distortions into its thinking processes.
With their clear and bold thought, Western thinkers since the eighteenth
century no doubt did much to pull Europe out of the dark ages brought about by
Christianity. But they had to take shortcuts in the process : they needed sharp
intellectual weapons and had no time to develop the qualities of pluralism,
universality, integrality native to the Indian mind and nurtured over thousands
of years. Their thought was essentially divisive and exclusive : God was on one
side and the creation on another, an abyss separated matter from spirit, one
was either a believer or an atheist, either a Christian or a Pagan, either
ancient or modern, determinist or indeterminist, empiricist or rationalist,
rightist or leftist. Whether one was an adept of idealism, realism, positivism,
existentialism or any of the thousand isms the Western intellect cannot live
without, Truth was parcelled out into small, hardened, watertight bits, each no
wider than one line of thought or one philosophical system, each neatly
labelled and set in contrast or opposition with the other.
The result of this Western obsession
with divisiveness has been disastrous in India’s context. Her inhabitants had
never called themselves “Aryans” or “Dravidians” in the racial sense, yet they
became thus segregated ; they had never known they were “Hindus,” yet they had
to be happy with this new designation ; they had never called their view of the
world a “religion” (a word with no equivalent in Sanskrit), but it had to
become one, promptly labelled “Hinduism.” Nor was one label sufficient : India
always recognized and respected the infinite multiplicity of approaches to the
Truth (what is commonly, but incorrectly, called “tolerance”), but under the
Western spotlight those approaches became so many “sects” almost rivalling each
other (perhaps like Catholics and Protestants !). Hinduism was thus cut up into
convenient bits—Vedism, Brahmanism, Vaishnavism, Shaivism, Shaktism, Tantrism,
etc.—of which Indians themselves had been largely unaware, or at any rate not
in this rigid, cut-and-dried fashion. As for Buddhism, Jainism and Sikhism,
which had been regarded in India as simply new paths, they were arbitrarily
stuck with a label of “separate religions.” Similarly, thousands of fluid
communities were duly catalogued and crystallized by the British rulers as so
many permanent and rigid castes.*
Unfortunately, this itemizing and
labelling of their heritage became a undisputed truth in the subconscious mind
of Indians : they passively accepted being dissected and defined by their
colonial masters, and they learned to look at themselves through Western eyes.
The Indian mind had become too feeble to take the trouble of assimilating the
few positive elements of Western thought and rejecting the many negative ones :
it swallowed but could not digest. Even some of the early attempts to lay new
foundations—the Brahmo Samaj and many other “reformist” movements in
particular—were, despite their usefulness as a ferment, conceived
apologetically in response to Europe’s standards and judgement. If, for
instance, they were told that Hindus were “polytheistic idolaters,” rather than
show the fallacy of such a label, they would bend over backward to build their
new creeds on monotheism of a Judeo-Christian type. Just recently we had a
revealing echo of such an attitude when our own President, on a recent visit to
your State, felt obliged to speculate that Adi Shankaracharya’s Monism must
have been influenced by Islam’s monotheism. This is intellectual bankruptcy at
its highest pitch.
As Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn once put
it,
The mistake of the West is that it
measures other civilizations by the degree to which they approximate to Western
civilization. If they do not approximate it, they are hopeless, dumb,
reactionary.[17]
Educated Indians virtually admitted
they were “hopeless, dumb, reactionary,” and could only stop being so by
receiving salvation from Europe : they pinned their hopes on its democracy and
secularism, ignoring all warnings that those European concepts would wreak
havoc once mechanically transposed to India. Worse, they rivalled with one
another in denigrating their heritage. If even today a Western journalist or
professor utters the words of “caste” or “sati” or “Hindu fundamentalism” (and
I would like to ask him what the “fundamentals” of Hinduism are), you will hear
a number of Indian intellectuals beating their chests in unison—even as they
keep their eyes tightly shut to the most fatal aberrations of Western society.
Some ninety years ago already, Sri Aurobindo observed :
They will not allow things or ideas
contrary to European notions to be anything but superstitious, barbarous,
harmful and benighted, they will not suffer what is praised and practised in
Europe to be anything but rational and enlightened...[18]
As a result, many “modern” Indians
(I have had myself occasion to hear some of them), and even a number of Swamis,
especially those with Western following, will proudly assert that they are “not
Hindus.” (That fashion was probably started last century by Keshab Chandra
Sen.) What they usually mean by that is that they are “tolerant” of everything
and anything (especially of Western anythings), and therefore far too
broad-minded to be Hindus. They forget that Hinduism in its true form, Sanatana
dharma, is as wide as the universe and can include any path—provided that path
is, like itself, and unlike Semitic religions, respectful of other paths,
because it knows it is only one small parcel of the whole Truth beyond all
paths.
Ram Swarup, a profound Indian
thinker who passed away recently, was not afraid of swimming against this
self-deprecating tide nurtured by our intelligentsia and media :
A permanent stigma seems to have
stuck to the terms Hindu and Hinduism. These have now become terms of abuse in
the mouth of the very elite which the Hindu millions have raised to the
pinnacle of power and prestige with their blood, sweat and tears.[19]
Such is the painful but logical
outcome of two centuries of colonization of the Indian mind.
Looking Ahead
The deeper meaning of this transitory dark phase has been expressed thus by Sri Aurobindo:
The spirit and ideals of India had
come to be confined in a mould which, however beautiful, was too narrow and
slender to bear the mighty burden of our future. When that happens, the mould
has to be broken and even the ideal lost for a while, in order to be recovered
free of constraint and limitation.[20]
There is no doubt that India’s old
mould is being broken. The question is what is going to take its place. There
are increasing and hopeful signs of an aspiration to a reawakening and a
liberation from this intellectual and cultural degeneration. But for this
aspiration to be fulfilled, I am convinced that we shall have to go deeper than
the intellect, and tap anew the inexhaustible source of strength that has
sustained India over ages. Take care of India’s soul and the rest will take
care of itself, as Swami Vivekananda said.[21]
Only then will we recover our native suppleness and independence of mind, and
learn to question West and India alike, past and present alike. Only then will
we regain our discernment, viveka, our only possible beacon in the growing
gloom.
Permit me to quote Sri Aurobindo
once more :
We must begin by accepting nothing
on trust from any source whatsoever, by questioning everything and forming our
own conclusions. We need not fear that we shall by that process cease to be
Indians or fall into the danger of abandoning Hinduism. India can never cease
to be India or Hinduism to be Hinduism, if we really think for ourselves. It is
only if we allow Europe to think for us that India is in danger of becoming an
ill-executed and foolish copy of Europe.[22]
To recover her true genius in a new
body is the task now facing India. She needs it not only for herself but for
the world, as the West is fast being sucked into its own emptiness, except for
a few lucid thinkers desperately searching for a deeper meaning to our human
madness. “Europe is destructive, suicidal,”[23]
said André Malraux to Nehru in 1936, whom he would meet several times until the
1960s, trying in vain to persuade him of the relevance of India’s spirituality
in today’s world. Malraux also reflected :
... To the West, whether
Christian or atheist, the fundamental obvious fact is death, whatever meaning
it gives to it, whereas India’s fundamental obvious fact is the infinity of
life in the infinity of time : “Who could kill immortality ?”[24]
This deeper view of the universe,
and of ourselves as an integral part of it, this bridge between matter and
spirit is what the world needs today. And that is not philosophy, it is a
practical question : India alone could show, as she did in her ancient history
from the Indus Valley civilization to the Maurya times and after, how material
and spiritual developments can be harmonized—and indeed need each other if
society is to last. Because the West ultimately believes only in death, it is
destroying man as well as the earth ; because India ultimately sought only the
secret of life, it could restore the divinity of the earth and of all
creatures, man included. Last century already, the French historian Michelet
marvelled :
Whereas, in our Occident, the most dry
and sterile minds brag in front of Nature, the Indian genius, the most rich and
fecund of all, knows neither small nor big and has generously embraced
universal fraternity, even the identity of all souls! [25]
This Indian genius has now begun to
percolate back to the West, where it inspires new approaches, deeper thoughts,
though not yet the transforming shakti. Perhaps the tide of colonialism will be
reversed, after all. And without bloodshed.
Perhaps Rabindranath Tagore’s hope
of April 1941, three months before his death, will be fulfilled :
The spirit of violence which perhaps
lay dormant in the psychology of the West, has at last roused itself and
desecrates the Spirit of Man....
I had at one time believed that the
springs of civilization would issue out of the heart of Europe. But today when
I am about to quit the world that faith has gone bankrupt altogether....
Today I live in the hope that the
Saviour is coming—that he will be born in our midst in this poverty-shamed
hovel which is India. I shall wait to hear the divine message of civilization
which he will bring with him.... Perhaps that dawn will come from this horizon,
from the East where the sun rises.[26]
References
* In the words of Tavleen Singh (by no means a “Hindutva” journalist): “A country which has education ministers who jeer at a hymn which says of learning (as Saraswati) that she is the goddess before whom even Brahma, Vishnu and Mahesh bow probably deserves to be illiterate.” (India Today, November 9, 1998)
* Dr. Meenakshi Jain, a respected sociologist, wrote: “It
is not generally known that the India of rigid social stratification and
hierarchical ranking was largely a British creation.... [The British] destroyed
the flexibility that was so vital for the proper functioning of the system. The
census operations raised caste consciousness to a feverish pitch, incited caste
animosities and led to an all-round hardening of the system.... Britishers of
all pursuits, missionaries, administrators and orientalists, were quick to
grasp the pivotal role [of the Brahmins] in the Indian social arrangement [, in
which] Brahmins were the principal integrating force. This made them the
natural target of those seeking to fragment, indeed atomise, Indian society.
This was as true of the British conquerors as it was of Muslim rulers in the
preceding centuries.... Clearly it is time to sit up and see reality as it is
before we complete the task the British began — the atomisation of Indian
society and the annihilation of Indian civilisation.” (Indian Express, 18 &
26 September 1990)
Sri Aurobindo’s India’s
Rebirth (3rd ed., 2000; also in Hindi, Malayalam, Telugu, Oriya,
Tamil and Gujarati translations) is co-published and distributed by:
Mira Aditi
62 ‘Sriranga’, 2nd Main, 1st Cross
T. K. Layout, Saraswatipuram
Mysore - 570 009, India
miraditi@vsnl.com
62 ‘Sriranga’, 2nd Main, 1st Cross
T. K. Layout, Saraswatipuram
Mysore - 570 009, India
miraditi@vsnl.com
[1] Rev.
John Wilson, India Three Thousand Years Ago, quoted by Devendra Swarup in “Genesis
of the Aryan Race Theory and Its Application to Indian History,” The
Aryan Problem, eds. S. B. Deo and S. Kamath (Pune : Bharatiya Itihasa
Sankalana Samiti, 1993), p. 33-35.
[2] Sidgwick, quoted by Sri Aurobindo in Bande Mataram of 19 June 1907 : see India’s Rebirth (Mysore : Mira Aditi, 2000), p. 24.
[3] In British Paramountcy and Indian Renaissance, vol. 10 in The History and Culture of the Indian People (Bombay : Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, 1991), p. 83-84.
[4] Quoted by P. Hardy in The Muslims of British India, p. 72.
[5] In British Paramountcy and Indian Renaissance, p. 321.
[6] Quoted by N. S. Rajaram in The Politics of History (New Delhi : Voice of India, 1995) p. 105.
[7] Swami Vivekananda, Lectures from Colombo to Almora (Calcutta : Advaita Ashram, 1992), p. 105.
[8] See for example P. V. Vartak, Scientific Knowledge in the Vedas (Delhi : Nag Publisher, 1995) ; Subhash Kak, “Sayana’s Astronomy” (Indian Journal of History of Science, vol. 33, 1998, p. 31-36).
[9]See for example A Concise History of Science in India, eds. D. M. Bose, S. N. Sen & B. V. Subbarayappa (New Delhi : Indian National Science Academy, 1989) ; History of Technology in India, ed. A. K. Bag (New Delhi : Indian National Science Academy, 1997) ; History of Science and Technology in Ancient India, by Debiprased Chattopadhyaya (Calcutta : Firma KLM, 3 vols., 1986, 1991, 1996) ; Computing Science in Ancient India, eds. T. R. N. Rao & Subhash Kak (Louisiana : Center for Advanced Computer Studies, 1998).
[10] Klaus Klostermaier, “Questioning the Aryan Invasion Theory and Revising Ancient Indian History,” in Iskcon Communications Journal 1999.
[11] See for example Arun Shourie, Eminent Historians (New Delhi : ASA, 1998) and Missionaries in India (New Delhi : ASA, 1994) ; Sita Ram Goel, History of Hindu-Christian Encounters (New Delhi : Voice of India, 1997) andHindu Temples—What Happened to Them (New Delhi : Voice of India, 2 vols., 1998, 1993).
[12] See R. C. Majumdar, History of the Freedom Movement in India (Calcutta : Firmal KLM, 3 volumes, 1988), in particular Appendix to vol. 1 and Preface to vol. 3. See also N. S. Rajaram, Gandhi, Khilafat and the National Movement (Bangalore : Sahitya Sindhu Prakashana, 1999).
[13] Sri Aurobindo, “The National Value of Art,” in Karmayogin, 20 November 1909, in India’s Rebirth, p. 65.
[14] Ananda Coomaraswamy, The Dance of Shiva (New Delhi : Munshiram Manoharlal, 1997), p. 170.
[15] Swami Vivekananda on India and her Problems (Calcutta : Advaita Ashram, 1985), p. 38-39.
[16] Sri Aurobindo, India’s Rebirth, p. 139 (emphasis mine).
[[17] Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, interviewed in Time of 24 July 1989.
[18] Sri Aurobindo, India’s Rebirth, p. 90.
[19 Ram Swarup, quoted in Hinduism Today, October 1998, p. 16.
[20] Sri Aurobindo, India’s Rebirth, p. 61.
[21] Adapted from Swami Vivekananda, in Ram Swarup, “His Vision and Mission,” The Observer, 28 August 1993.
[22] Sri Aurobindo, India’s Rebirth, p. 88.
[23] In Malraux & India (New Delhi : Embassy of France in India, 1996), p. 46
[24] André Malraux, Antimémoires, (Paris : Gallimard, 1967), p. 339.
[25] Michelet, La Bible de l’Humanité in Œuvres (Paris : Larousse, 1930), vol. 5, p. 119.
[26] Tagore, Crisis in Civilization (Calcutta : Visva-Bharati, 1988), p. 22-23
[2] Sidgwick, quoted by Sri Aurobindo in Bande Mataram of 19 June 1907 : see India’s Rebirth (Mysore : Mira Aditi, 2000), p. 24.
[3] In British Paramountcy and Indian Renaissance, vol. 10 in The History and Culture of the Indian People (Bombay : Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, 1991), p. 83-84.
[4] Quoted by P. Hardy in The Muslims of British India, p. 72.
[5] In British Paramountcy and Indian Renaissance, p. 321.
[6] Quoted by N. S. Rajaram in The Politics of History (New Delhi : Voice of India, 1995) p. 105.
[7] Swami Vivekananda, Lectures from Colombo to Almora (Calcutta : Advaita Ashram, 1992), p. 105.
[8] See for example P. V. Vartak, Scientific Knowledge in the Vedas (Delhi : Nag Publisher, 1995) ; Subhash Kak, “Sayana’s Astronomy” (Indian Journal of History of Science, vol. 33, 1998, p. 31-36).
[9]See for example A Concise History of Science in India, eds. D. M. Bose, S. N. Sen & B. V. Subbarayappa (New Delhi : Indian National Science Academy, 1989) ; History of Technology in India, ed. A. K. Bag (New Delhi : Indian National Science Academy, 1997) ; History of Science and Technology in Ancient India, by Debiprased Chattopadhyaya (Calcutta : Firma KLM, 3 vols., 1986, 1991, 1996) ; Computing Science in Ancient India, eds. T. R. N. Rao & Subhash Kak (Louisiana : Center for Advanced Computer Studies, 1998).
[10] Klaus Klostermaier, “Questioning the Aryan Invasion Theory and Revising Ancient Indian History,” in Iskcon Communications Journal 1999.
[11] See for example Arun Shourie, Eminent Historians (New Delhi : ASA, 1998) and Missionaries in India (New Delhi : ASA, 1994) ; Sita Ram Goel, History of Hindu-Christian Encounters (New Delhi : Voice of India, 1997) andHindu Temples—What Happened to Them (New Delhi : Voice of India, 2 vols., 1998, 1993).
[12] See R. C. Majumdar, History of the Freedom Movement in India (Calcutta : Firmal KLM, 3 volumes, 1988), in particular Appendix to vol. 1 and Preface to vol. 3. See also N. S. Rajaram, Gandhi, Khilafat and the National Movement (Bangalore : Sahitya Sindhu Prakashana, 1999).
[13] Sri Aurobindo, “The National Value of Art,” in Karmayogin, 20 November 1909, in India’s Rebirth, p. 65.
[14] Ananda Coomaraswamy, The Dance of Shiva (New Delhi : Munshiram Manoharlal, 1997), p. 170.
[15] Swami Vivekananda on India and her Problems (Calcutta : Advaita Ashram, 1985), p. 38-39.
[16] Sri Aurobindo, India’s Rebirth, p. 139 (emphasis mine).
[[17] Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, interviewed in Time of 24 July 1989.
[18] Sri Aurobindo, India’s Rebirth, p. 90.
[19 Ram Swarup, quoted in Hinduism Today, October 1998, p. 16.
[20] Sri Aurobindo, India’s Rebirth, p. 61.
[21] Adapted from Swami Vivekananda, in Ram Swarup, “His Vision and Mission,” The Observer, 28 August 1993.
[22] Sri Aurobindo, India’s Rebirth, p. 88.
[23] In Malraux & India (New Delhi : Embassy of France in India, 1996), p. 46
[24] André Malraux, Antimémoires, (Paris : Gallimard, 1967), p. 339.
[25] Michelet, La Bible de l’Humanité in Œuvres (Paris : Larousse, 1930), vol. 5, p. 119.
[26] Tagore, Crisis in Civilization (Calcutta : Visva-Bharati, 1988), p. 22-23
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