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EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
I
don’t normally give much mindspace
to ancient Indian history. However,
my interest was piqued when Manag-
ing Editor Kai Friese informed me
about a new scientific discovery on the In-
dus Valley Civilisation (IVC), specially in
relation to Vedic culture. This, obviously,
had some relevance, considering the cur-
rent dispensation in the country. There is
an effort to project the IVC as Vedic and
backdate the accepted chronology of the
Vedas—India’s most ancient texts.
However, now, thanks to advances in
genetics, the IVC has started revealing
some of its secrets. DNA samples extract-
ed from Citizen I4411, a male who lived
in the Indus valley city of Rakhigarhi,
in modern-day Haryana, approximately
4,500 years ago, has geneticists in a tizzy.
The most startling aspect is the
complete absence of the genetic marker
R1a1 in I4411’s DNA. This is significant,
because R1a1, often loosely and some-
what misleadingly called the ‘A ryan gene’,
is widely dispersed in the modern popu-
lation of India. The indications are that
the people of IVC are a closer match with
South Indian tribes. The ‘A ryan gene’ has
been traced to people who migrated to
India from the Steppes of Europe, and
earlier studies have established that they
are found more among the upper castes
of North India.
Our origins are a deeply emotive
subject because political movements
have sprung out of identity politics—the
Dravidian parties in Tamil Nadu in the
1960s and, more recently, the uproar over
the National Register of Citizens in As-
sam that aims to identify ‘outsiders’.
One of the biggest, longest-lasting
mysteries on the subcontinent is the
origin of the people of the Indus valley, an
early Bronze Age civilisation that flour-
ished in northwest India between 3500
and 1800 BCE.
In his 2014 bestseller Sapiens, scholar
and historian Yuval Noah Harari devotes
several pages to the Sumerian and Meso-
potamian civilisations of the Middle East,
but makes only a passing reference to the
contemporary IVC which, in fact, covered
an area twice their size. That’s because
while the cuneiform script of Sumer and
Mesopotamia has been decoded, we are
Our February 11, 2002 cover
yet to find the Rosetta Stone that could
unlock the language of the people of the
IVC. So while ancient Sumeria speaks to
us and tells us stories about the daily lives
of its people and their fairly humdrum
existence, IVC remains deafeningly mute.
Until its writing is deciphered, we will
never know how its inhabitants passed
their time, who they worshipped, how they
developed their fascinating urban culture
of flush toilets, water supply and sewage
systems and baked brick homes which
parts of India are still deprived of four
millennia later. We don’t even know, for
instance, what they called themselves or
their magnificent walled cities —Mohenjo-
daro and Harappa are modern names.
Our cover story this week, The Explo-
sive Truth, by Kai Friese, who has been
tracking this subject for over a year and
is passionate about it, explores these new
revelations that emphasise the fact that
there were once several distinct popula-
tions in the subcontinent, some of whom
clearly reached these shores earlier than
the others. It fits in with one of the theo-
ries that geneticist David Reich had listed
on where the people of the IVC came
from—that they were Ancestral South In-
dians, a pre-existing mix of South Asian
hunter gatherers and Iranian farmers.
These are conclusions that further re-
search needs to build upon.
While the newest findings could
upturn some of our most recently held
theories about the Indus people, they in
fact reinforce earlier wisdom that India
was essentially a melting pot of cul-
tures rather than a single civilisational
conti nuum. At the very least, it will only
serve to underline one of our greatest
strengths—unity in diversity.
(Aroon Purie)
SE P T E M BE R 10, 2 018 INDIA TODAY
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