Your book argues that today’s tribals should
be seen as the foundational population of India. Can you explain that
further for our readers?
The ancestry of
the First Indians, that is those who arrived in India around 65,000
years ago, accounts for 50 to 65% of the ancestry of all Indian
population groups, no matter where in the caste hierarchy they stand,
what language they speak, or which region they inhabit. Many tribal
populations, in a relative sense, carry this ancestry to a higher level
than other Indians, and to that extent, they can be seen as the
foundational population of India. But the more important point is this:
The tribals share their ancestry with the rest of the Indian population
and so they are closely and intimately related to “us.” Therefore, there
is zero basis to continue to see them as different from the rest of the
Indians in any way. To those who ask, “where did the First Indians go,”
or “where are they today,” the answer is: look in the mirror!
Given
that the idea of there once being a pure, original type of Indian is
being increasingly used to fuel a political narrative, what is it that
you want readers to take away from your book?
That
the Indian population was shaped by four, large prehistoric migrations.
The first involved the Out of Africa (OoA) migrants who reached India
about 65,000 years ago and whom my book calls First Indians. The second
involved agriculturists from the Zagros region of Iran who arrived in
northwestern India between 7000 and 3000 BCE, mixed with the First
Indians and helped speed up the agricultural experiments that were
already beginning in the subcontinent. The result was that farming
spread like wildfire across the northwestern region, especially of
barley and wheat, thus laying the foundation for the Harappan
Civilisation that lasted in its mature phase from 2600 BCE to 1900 BCE.
The third major migration was from southeast Asia around 2000 BCE, when
farming-related population expansions originally starting from the
Chinese heartland overran southeast Asia and then reached India,
bringing the Austroasiatic family of languages, such as Mundari and
Khasi which are today spoken in the eastern and central parts of the
country. The last, or the fourth, major migration happened between 2000
and 1000 BCE and this brought Central Asian pastoralists, who spoke
Indo-European languages and called themselves “Aryans” to India. There
was large-scale mixing between these different population groups between
around 2000 and 100 CE. Around 100 BCE there seems to have been a
change in the reigning political ideology and, as a result, mixing
between different population groups stopped, and this is probably linked
to the beginning of the caste system. So the central message of the
book is that we are all descendants of migrants who mixed and mingled
with each other for millennia, before the caste system fell into place.
We are all kin. That is the message for readers to take away.
Can you tell us more about how technology has helped the process of uncovering such “origins”?
What has really changed the nature of the
discoveries is ancient DNA, or aDNA. Earlier, population genetics
studies could discover affinities between population groups, but they
could not conclusively settle the issue of the direction of movement of
people. They could make intelligent deductions that most scientists
would agree with, but they could not settle the issue. But when you have
access to aDNA from the same location at different time periods, or
when you have access to aDNA from different adjacent sites from the same
period, you can see on the ground who moved when and where. This has
radically changed our understanding of population movements, culture
change, and prehistory in general. When we put this new aDNA findings
together with the latest findings of archaeology, linguistics,
epigraphy, and philology, we get a robust understanding of prehistory—as
I said, not just in India, but across the world. The prehistory of
Europe, East Asia, and the Americas are also being rewritten as we
speak.
What are some of the difficulties in tracing this story in a place like India?
Some
parts of our prehistory are part of current political conversation, and
that makes it very difficult for scientists to do their work with the
kind of openness and frankness that is otherwise common in scientific
disciplines. This applies mostly to the topic of “Aryan” migration.
There is an extraordinary level of sensitivity that is attached to this
topic that is unique and surprising. As I had written elsewhere, “You
could stand in the middle of a crowded market in Hyderabad, Bengaluru,
Chennai, or Kochi and say that the common ancestor of the languages
Kannada, Telugu, Tamil, and Malayalam was brought to India by migrants
from west Asia some 8,000 years ago, and no one is likely to care or
protest. You could stand in the middle of Jharkhand and say that
Austroasiatic languages such as Mundari, Santali, and Ho came to India
from southeast Asia around 4000 years ago, and no one is likely to raise
a finger against you. You can stand anywhere in India and say that the
earliest Indians were Out of Africa migrants who reached south Asia some
65,000 years ago and no one would really mind.
But
if you were to say that an early version of Sanskrit was brought to
India from central Asia by pastoralists who called themselves ‘Aryans,’
expect the skies to open and pour condemnation down on you.
The
reason for this special touchiness, I think, is the assumption that the
‘Aryan,’ or Vedic or Sanskrit culture is synonymous with Indian culture
and to suggest that it may have come from elsewhere is to suggest that
Indian culture is foreign! But this is a ridiculous assumption on
various counts. First of all, Indian culture is not synonymous with, or
identical to, ‘Aryan’ or ‘Sanskrit’ or ‘Vedic’ culture. ‘Aryan’ culture
was an important stream that contributed to creating the unique Indian
civilisation as we know it today, but by no means was it the only one.
There are other streams that have contributed equally to making Indian
civilisation what it is, such as the Harappan Civilisation that preceded
the ‘Aryans.’ Second, to say that Indo-European languages reached India
at a particular historical juncture is not the same as suggesting that
the ‘Vedas’ or ‘Sanskrit’ or the ‘Aryan’ culture was imported
flat-packed and then reassembled here. ‘Aryan’ culture was most likely
the result of interaction, adoption and adaptation among those who
brought Indo-European languages to India and those who were already
well-settled inhabitants of the region.”
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