The discussion over historical aspects of the sub-continent has been passionate and informative, but misleading on several aspects on both sides.
So your saying you come here with impartial mind. Good let us see what you have to say.
1. Like most geographical entities, the history is intertwined and shared between many cultures, people and political entities across hundreds, indeed thousands of years. Neither side can lay exclusive claim to the history to the exclusion of the other. That is only natural given that throughout history, people have travelled and interacted with adjacent and far-off cultures alike.
Yes. Self evident. In fact all human history is intertwiined at some level.
2. Claiming the Thar desert as some sort of uncrossable boundary is not correct. Intrepid travellers have found ways to cross much more imposing deserts like the Gobi, Takla Makan, Arabia and even the Sahara with large caravans. Thar itself is criss-crossed with many such paths too. Leave aside mere deserts, people have made trails across the Himalayas also, just like those across other great mountian ranges in the world like the Andes and the Rockies. The human desire to travel surmounts such natural barriers.
Here you reveal your true colours. Your just another Indian who refuses to let go off the grand British colony that was dismantled in 1947.
(i) Please tell me where you were told Thar was 'uncrossable'? It hinders west east movement is does not stop it.
(ii) What are you trying to say here? That Indus Basin is not a geographic entity? Iberia, Scandanavia and Maghreb also can be crossed over and there are paths linking them but does that mean they are not sub units?
Geologically, the sub-continent is roughly the area from the Indus to the Irrawaddy, east to west, and bounded by the Himlayas to the north, with its own unique flora and fauna, and also human history.
You got to be kidding. The flora and fauna within South Asia is diverse to say the least. In fact it is more diverse than Europe. The climate of Irrawady, Ganges/Brahmaputra basin is nothing and I mean nothing similar to most of the bone dry deserts of Indus basin. If you think they are simliar you need to revisy your geography again.
When people arrived from the arid terrain to the west of the subcontinent to the first might river, it would be natural to beleive they have reached thier goal, just like Columbus
Oh here we are. Now we finally know where this was going to. Just tell me what was their goal? Find the as yet unknown Bharat Republic?
These 'people' I take were the Greeks, Persians who actually wrote about what is now Pakistan.
However, further exploration would easily lead to the much bigger lands beyond, and we can see that throughout history spread across thousands of years. It is also relevant to note that the lands towards the Far East are a fusion of the cultures of its mighty neighbors, China to the north and India to the west, hence the name Indo-China.
So? Unkown is a unkown. The whole point of history is to look at a point in time and conyxtualize to that time. Not reverse engineer from today's reality.
4. Political entities come and go, but history remains. For example, the State of Israel came into being as a political entity only in 1948, but claims thousands of years of the history of the land and culture as Jewish history, not as Israeli history. Similarly, Pakistan, as a modern day Islamic State, can lay claim to not only the history of the Indus Valley civilization, going back thousands of years, but also the glorious Mughal Empire as part of its cultural heritage, but calling it Pakistani would be naive in the extreme. Similarly, modern day political India can claim the heritage going back thousands of years across great upheavals of human history, including before the arrival of Islam in the subcontinent, but it cannot pretend that it has been enriched and decimated in cycles of invasions and empires. This is what intertwined means, and it is only natural and logical to regard it as parts of the same whole.
The problem is your another bloody Indian who wants to relive the British Raj and stamp everything within that huge area as one land, one history, one people. Once you have neatly bundled everything togather you might jst about make us in Pakistan to agree with this if you then named the 'bundle' South Asia because that 'bundle' would a collective of this vast region.
But and this is the clever bit - You guy's then name that 'bundle' India. That is a friggin No, No and No sir because by doing so our history becomes your friggin history. This is what we are left with.
Bombs goes off - Pakistan
Terrorism - Pakistan
Religious radical - Pakistan
Minority discrimination - Pakistan
Misogny - Pakistan
Ignorence - Pakistan
Al Qaida - Pakistan
Bin Laden - Pakistan
So the term 'Pakistan' becomes a good bin for everything crap to be chucked in. But our land has also given some good things so let ius look at the other side of the coin
Harrapa- Indian
Mohenjo Daro - Indian
IVC - Indian
Gandhra - Indian
Taxila - Indian
Porus - indian
Mehr Garh - Indian
Do you see the problem. We are good enough only to be called Pakistani for all the negatives. Nobody said Bin Laden was found in Indian sub Continent. Nobody says Islamic radicalism is a Indian sub continental problem.
Our intention here is to accept the bad as well as the good. No more mothe*in cherrypicking by you runts. Pakistan terrorism and other side of coin Ancient Pakistan. Don't like it piss off. And we are going to tell the world as well. We need to sort it out at home first.
5. Crucial as history is in giving a sense of roots and foundations to any country, it cannot be a substitute for its present or its future, because these are determined by what is happening now, not what happened hundreds or thousands of years ago. Yes, the ancient lands that constitute both Pakistan and India have a rich and varied history going back thousands, but so does every other modern politcal entity. What each country does with it is the key. Ethiopia may be the birthplace of coffee, but it is the likes of Starbucks that use it best in the present. It is things like this that will determine the future.[/QUOTE]
Gibberish. If India or Ethopia has is not my concern. This is Pakistan history and Pakistan forum. Go wax eloquent about India if you want.
Ps. When were you born? Did you come into existance the day your mum and dad clapped their eyes on each other? You could argue yes because as time would move forward the as yet unknown you had become reality. This is ridicalous reasoning. I could also say Pakistan existed then because in time it would come along.
Reality has time have relationship in history. When you do history you relate it to time. Event and time are linked.