Beginning to think this is a pointless exercise. Zero proof of any imposition, forceful or otherwise.
Dravidian nationalists, from Periyar onwards, and other impartial scholars without an ulterior Indian agenda, accept the Vedic accounts of conquests over dark skinned southerners as having basis in fact. Do you deny that Vedic texts contain descriptions of such battles?
It is understandable that the new revisionist Indian agenda eschews such interpretations, but the Vedic texts remain unchanged by people's agendas.
Nope, it does not. Mistaken interpretation of one single word is not whole vedic literature. And Southerners? You are now in the territory of willful falsification. No one disputes that those might be descriptions of actual battles but there is no proof that it referred to any non-Aryan tribe. There is no non-Aryan(language) tribal name mentioned anywhere in the Rg veda.
So we have these empirical facts:
- Vedic texts were composed in north India (at least later ones).
- Vedic texts talk about a southward migration of their influence through conquest over dark-skinned people.
- Dravidian culture is known to have an earlier history before Vedic influence was infused.
- South Indians generally have darker skin than northerners.
- Tamil legends corroborate the arrival of wisdom (Agastya) from the north.
Sure, we can come up with creative explanations and jump through hoops to avoid uncomfortable conclusions.
Or we can use logic and stick with the simplest explanation that fits the facts.
And you assumed they are from South India.Their are black colored people all around India and Pakistan.
Read above.
Pay particular attention to the story of Agastya, which is corroborated by both southern and northern legends which talk about a southward migration of a ruling elite, the Velir.
The revisionist claim is that the northern legend talks about a wholly north Indian event, while the southern legend talks about a wholly south Indian event. Unfortunately, both legends match so well that they are considered to refer to the same historical event. So, which one is it? a northern event or a southern event?
Could it be, simplest explanation, that it refers to a north-south transfusion?