Burger Boy
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Actually the Vedic chronology is from east to west. The oldest books of the Rig Veda are set in the Ganga-Yamuna-Saraswati region (A great book about the Great Book).
The father of Pakistan, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, although the grandson of a Gujarati Hindu, was very clear that his civilization was different from and in conflict with the civilization of his ancestors (Two-Nation Theory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia). How can you claim a claim a civilization after you have converted to a conflicting civilization.
And Pakistan was created as a Bengali majority nation, so it is not linked to the Indus Valley per se.
Not to mention the fact that for most of the last 2500 years, the Indus Valley has been ruled from capitals located in the modern-day India like Patna, Thanesar, Delhi and Agra.
Map of Vedic India (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vedic_period):
I am not saying that Pakistanis cannot be proud of King Porus of the Yaduvanshi clan (i.e. Krishna's clan), or of Taxila. In fact, I would welcome it if Pakistanis go back to the culture of the Vedas, Sanskrit and Buddhism. But the attempt to divorce that history from that of the rest of India is very artificial.
I'm not sure what you mean by conflicting civilization. I'm not saying there haven't been conflicts involving Islam in the history of the Subcontinent, but eventually the many Muslim leaders settled and embraced parts of the the local culture of the people who live in the land that they ruled. To say that the civilization (not the countries) are perpetually conflicting is a Hindu Nationalist/ Hindutva idea.
We often say "history of India, " but the truth is that the vast majority of the history of "India" in human history, there has been no "India" as a separate political entity. For most of history, "India" has been made up of many different states, which had been at times "conflicting with", to use your term, with each other. This was occurring even before Islam was introduced to the region.
Also, for the vast majority of history, the region that is now Pakistan, was made up of a political entity completely separated from what is now India, such as the Indus Valley Civilization and the Durrani Empire, or it has been incorporated to whatever political entity lied to the west during that time, such as the Achaemenid empire, Alexander's Empire, the Sassanid Empire, the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates, the Ghaznavids, and the Timurids.
There were only 3 periods where "India" has existed as a single unified state including all or most of the subcontinent:
The Mauryan Empire
The Mughal Empire
The British Empire
and as far as Pakistan is concerned, we might as well include the Ghurids as that included all of Pakistan and most of what is now northern India.
Two out of three of those listed above were times when India was ruled by "foreigners"
Today....everything that is within Pakistan's terroritorial domain is part of its history, as is the case with any other country.
For example Stonehenge is often said to be part of "ancient England" or "ancient Britain" even though the words "England" and "Britain" did not exist when it was built.