QuickSilver
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by the way AM, I apologize as I seemed to have deviated a lot from the topic. I just went with the flow of the debate.
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About a Brahmin yes, that is what I mean. I have not come accross any major religious conversion into brahmin culture as had happened with islam.
malays are converted muslims. but there is not such 'mass conversion' to be a brahmin. and in medieval ages, any brahmin marrying into another caste is no longer a brahmin. to be a brahmin, it is necessary that your father is a brahmin.
When the answers to the questions "do not prove that Pakistan had the majority of the IVC sites", how does it support the view point that pakistan was the center of IVC?
The Indus valley civilasation was so called because most of the initial sites that were found were around indus but many are being found away from there as well which itself contends the usage of the name 'indus Valley civilisation' (and eventually 'pakistani culture')
The IVC is a shared back ground IMO.
Brahmins as a rule still practice the 'gayatri mantra' as prescribed in the rigvedic texts, (gayatri is another name for goddess saraswati which is also linked to IVC) and this mantra is supposed to be the mother of all mantras which might show the significance of saraswati as a river. when I talk about brahmins following rigvedic texts , am not saying IVC is exclusive to India but its not exclusive to pakistan. Its more plausible explanation to say it was 'shared' background.
You are right on one count: the lineage of a lot of communities can be traced back to Rigvedic times.
You are also right in that there were no "mass conversions". There was no solicitation/evangelism into hinduism.
However, the Caste system was hardly as iron-clad as you are making it out to be.
There were several waves of migrations into India, and it can be clearly seen that each migrant community was assigned a place in the order of society.
Also, there was movement between castes, when people of lower castes rose up to become gurus or great warriors. (The legend of Valmiki is one example, a robber who became a saint)
The answers to the questions support the views that Pakistan was the centre of the IVC because the first sites to be discovered were in Pakistan. It was clear to the British that the sites were located along the Indus river or in the Indus Valley of Pakistan, and not in India.
The odd thing is the way all these Indian sites are popping up now.
Not the initial sites. ALL the sites the British discovered were located in Pakistan, except perhaps Lothal (i'll need to check). The British coined it, simply because of the location of the IVC sites.
You haven't a clue on the history of the IVC clearly. Rig Vedic texts have nothing to do with the IVC. And Saraswati is most likely not the name of an actual river.
Will you give up on this migration theory? There is ABSOLUTELY ZERO evidence for it. If there is, present it.
The theory that the IVC are a lineage of the people of modern day Pakistan is completely logical. Disprove this, since this is the most likely occurence.
Is there some rule which states that no IVC sites can be found to the east of the Pakistan border?
If not, then you have no basis to discount the IVC sites found within India.
There's Dholavira, Rakhigarhi, Banavali, and numerous smaller ones.
Saraswati refers to the Ghaggar-Hakra river, whose dry riverbed can be traced by satellite images.
The distribution of a large number of IVC sites can be clearly seen along the banks of this river.
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The answers to the questions support the views that Pakistan was the centre of the IVC because the first sites to be discovered were in Pakistan.
The odd thing is the way all these Indian sites are popping up now.
Not the initial sites. ALL the sites the British discovered were located in Pakistan, except perhaps Lothal (i'll need to check). The British coined it, simply because of the location of the IVC sites.
You haven't a clue on the history of the IVC clearly. Rig Vedic texts have nothing to do with the IVC. And Saraswati is most likely not the name of an actual river.
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The Saraswati is all a load of hocus pocus, I've come to the conclusion. Look at the evidence, if the Saraswati described in the Rig Veda were a river, it would be a big river to rival that of the Indus. The Greeks don't even record it on their maps, whilst they do record the Ganges, Indus, and numerous other smaller rivers. Why then, 3000 years ago, did the Greeks not draw the so called Saraswati on their maps? Care to answer this question first?
I don't deny some sites were found even by the British in India. These were a very small minority though. The majority was located in Pakistan. That's why it's IVC.
All of a sudden out of nowhere!
The Saraswati is all a load of hocus pocus, I've come to the conclusion. Look at the evidence, if the Saraswati described in the Rig Veda were a river, it would be a big river to rival that of the Indus. The Greeks don't even record it on their maps, whilst they do record the Ganges, Indus, and numerous other smaller rivers. Why then, 3000 years ago, did the Greeks not draw the so called Saraswati on their maps? Care to answer this question first?
because IVC is more than 3000 years old, because there is evidence Saraswati changed its course and even dried up and because it very much possible the greeks cannot see a dried river.
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Evidence that saraswathi dried up exists. and it could have dried up before they came. the rig veda was written in this time.. but it takes a lot of time to compose the whole text of rig veda and also, the tradition is more of passing the knowledge through oral recitation than writing it down. so when u say rig veda was written around this time, it is very good way to say that rig veda was composed -or atleast began to be composed - much before that time!!Do you know when the Greeks were making maps of the region? Around 2, 500 years ago, more or less when the Rig Veda was written.
They could not even spot a drop of water flowing along the so called Saraswati course.
The IVC has nothing to do with the Rig Veda for the last time. If the Saraswati was a river really, why did the Greeks not see it?
Also, the reason you see some tracks from satellites are numerous. There might not have been activity, and probably wasn't, for say 30,000 years along the Saraswati so called illusionary course, let alone 3,000 years or whenever.
The original inhabitants of the IVC no longer exist in today's Pakistan.
Of course not - they would be thousands of years old!
Their genes do though, in the absence of any proof showing mass migration or extinction, hence the descent of Pakistanis from the IVC people claim.
On the Saraswati river issue, assuming it existed when the IVC was flourishing, it still seems to have fewer sites along its edge, and the theory of IVC people migrating East is also questionable - why would people from the same civilization migrate a further distance East, through a desert, rather than relocating or being absorbed by the large settlements far closer along the Indus in the West?
About a Brahmin yes, that is what I mean. I have not come accross any major religious conversion into brahmin culture as had happened with islam.
malays are converted muslims. but there is not such 'mass conversion' to be a brahmin. and in medieval ages, any brahmin marrying into another caste is no longer a brahmin. to be a brahmin, it is necessary that your father is a brahmin.