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                DECLINE OF INDOLOGY IN THE WEST 
              Indology, which is the study of Indian history and culture from 
                a Western perspective, is rapidly declining in the West under 
                the impact of science and changed global conditions. Just as Max 
                Müller represented Indology at its height, Michael 
                Witzel symbolizes its current decadent state. Â  
              N.S. Rajaram    
                17 Sept. 2009 
                Â  
                ABSTRACT Â  
              Â Indology may be defined as the study of Indian culture 
                and history from a Western, particularly European perspective. 
                The earliest Westerner to show an interest in India was the Greek 
                historian Herodotus, followed by his successors like Megasthenes, 
                Arrian, Strabo and others. This was followed by missionaries, 
                traders and diplomats, often one and the same. With the beginning 
                of European colonialism, Indology underwent a qualitative change, 
                with what was primarily of trade and missionary interest to becoming 
                a political and administrative tool. Some of the early Indologists 
                like William Jones, H.T. Colebrook and others were employed by 
                the East India Company, and later the British Government. Even 
                academics like F. Max Müller were dependent on 
                colonial governments and the support of missionaries. From the 
                second half of the 19th century to the end of the Second World 
                War, German nationalism played a major role in the shaping of 
                Indological 
                scholarship. Â  
              Â Much of the literature in Indology carries this politico-social 
                baggage including colonial attitudes and stereotypes. The end 
                of the Second World War saw also the end of European colonialism, 
                beginning with India. Indology however was slow to change, and 
                with minor modifications like seemingly dissociating itself from 
                its racial legacy, the same theories and conclusions continued 
                to be presented by Western Indologists. Towards the close of the 
                twentieth century, first science and then globalization dealt 
                serious blows to the discipline and its offshoots like Indo European 
                Studies. This is reflected in the closure of established Indology 
                programs in the West and the rise of new programs within and without 
                academic centers driven mainly by science and primary literature. 
                Â  
              Â The article will trace the origins, evolution and the 
                devolution of Indology and the main contribution of the field 
                and some of its key personalities. Â  
                Â  
                Background: Historiography  
              Â One of the striking features of the first decade of the 
                present century (and millennium) is the precipitous decline of 
                Indology and the associated field of Indo-European Studies. Within 
                the last three years, the Sanskrit Department at Cambridge University 
                and the Berlin Institute of Indology, two of the oldest and most 
                prestigious Indology centers in the West, have shut down. The 
                reason cited is lack of interest. At Cambridge, not a single student 
                had enrolled for its Sanskrit or Hindi course. Â  
              Â Other universities in Europe and America are facing similar 
                problems. The Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium, long 
                a leader in Oriental Studies, is drastically cutting down on its 
                programs. Even the Sanskrit Department at Harvard, one of the 
                oldest and most prestigious in America, shut down its summer program 
                of teaching Sanskrit to foreign students. It may be a harbinger 
                of things to come that Francis X. Clooney and Anne E. Monius, 
                both theologians with the Harvard Divinity School, are teaching 
                undergraduate and graduate courses in the Sanskrit Department. 
                More seriously, they are also advising doctoral candidates. 
               
              Â Does this mean that the Harvard Sanskrit Department may 
                eventually be absorbed into the Divinity School and lose its secular 
                character? In striking contrast, the Classics Department which 
                teaches Greek and Latin has no association with the Divinity School, 
                despite the fact that Biblical studies can hardly exist without 
                Greek and Latin. It serves to highlight the fact that Sanskrit 
                is not and can never be as central to the Western Canon as Greek 
                and Latin. It also means that Sanskrit Studies, or Indology, or 
                whatever one may call it must seek an identity that is free of 
                its colonial trappings. It was this colonial patronage in the 
                nineteenth and the twentieth centuries that sustained these programs. 
                Their slide into the fringes of academia is a reflection of the 
                changed conditions following the end of colonialism. Â  
              Â Coming at a time when worldwide interest in India is 
                the highest in memory, it points to structural problems in Indology 
                and related fields like Indo-European Studies. Also, the magnitude 
                of the crisis suggests that the problems are fundamental and just 
                not a transient phenomenon. What is striking is the contrast between 
                this gloomy academic scene and the outside world. During my lecture 
                tours in Europe, Australia and the United States, I found no lack 
                of interest, especially among the youth. Only they are getting 
                what they want from programs outside academic departments, in 
                cultural centers like the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, temples, and 
                short courses and seminars conducted by visiting lecturers (like 
                this writer).  
              Â This means the demand is there, but academic departments 
                are being bypassed. Even for learning Sanskrit, there are now 
                innovative programs like those offered by Samskrita Bharati that 
                teach in ten intensive yet lively sessions more than what students 
                learn in a semester of dry lectures. The same is true of other 
                topics related to India†history, yoga, philosophy 
                and others. And this interest is by no means limited to persons 
                of Indian origin. What has gone wrong with academic Indology, 
                and can it be reversed?  
              Â To understand the problem today it is necessary to visit 
                its peculiar origins. Modern Indology began with Sir William Jonesâ€s 
                observation in 1784 that Sanskrit and European languages were 
                related. Jones was a useful linguist but his main job was to interpret 
                Indian law and customs to his employers, the British East India 
                Company. This dual role of Indologists as scholars as well as 
                interpreters of India continued well into the twentieth century. 
                Many Indologists, including such eminent figures as H.H. Wilson 
                and F. Max Müller sought and enjoyed the patronage 
                of the ruling powers.  
               Indologists†role as interpreters of 
                India ended with independence in 1947, but many Indologists, especially 
                in the West failed to see the writing on the wall. They continued 
                to get students from India, which seems to have lulled them into 
                believing that it would be business as usual. But today, six decades 
                later, Indian immigrants and persons of Indian origin occupy influential 
                positions in business, industry and now the government in the 
                United States and Britain. They are now part of the establishment 
                in their adopted lands. No one in the West today looks to Indology 
                departments for advice on matters relating to India when they 
                can get it from their next door neighbor or an office colleague. 
                In this era of globalization, India and Indians are not the exotic 
                creatures they were once seen to be.  
               This means the Indologistâ€s position 
                as interpreter of India to the West, and sometimes even to Indians, 
                is gone for good. But this alone cannot explain why their Sanskrit 
                and related programs are also folding. To understand this we need 
                to look further and recognize that new scientific discoveries 
                are impacting Indology in ways that could not be imagined even 
                twenty years ago. This is nothing new. For more than a century, 
                the foundation of Indology had been linguistics, particularly 
                Sanskrit and Indo-European languages. While archaeological discoveries 
                of the Harappan civilization forced Indologists to take this hard 
                data also into their discipline, they continued to use their linguistic 
                theories in interpreting new data. In effect, empirical data became 
                subordinate to theory, the exact reverse of the scientific approach. 
               
              Â These often forced interpretations of hard data from 
                archaeology and even literature were far from convincing and undermined 
                the whole field including linguistics of which Sanskrit studies 
                was seen as a part. The following examples highlight the mismatch 
                between their theories and data. Scholars ignored obvious Vedic 
                symbols like: svasti and the om sign found in Harappan archaeology; 
                the clear match between descriptions of flora and fauna in the 
                Vedic literature and their depictions in Harappan iconography; 
                and also clear references to maritime activity and the oceans 
                in the Vedic literature while their theories claimed that the 
                Vedic people who composed the literature were from a land-locked 
                region and totally ignorant of the ocean. Such glaring contradictions 
                between their theories and empirical data could not but undermine 
                the credibility of the whole field.  
               All this didnâ€t happen overnight: Harappan 
                archaeology posed challenges to colonial Indological model of 
                ancient India, built around the Aryan invasion model nearly a 
                century ago. But the challenge was ignored because the political 
                authority that supported Western Indologists and their theories 
                did not disappear until 1950, while its academic influence lingered 
                on for several more decades. It is only now, long after the disappearance 
                of colonial rule that academic departments in the West are beginning 
                to feel the heat. Â  
              Colonial Indology  
              Â Modern Indology may be said to have begun with Sir William 
                Jones, a Calcutta judge in the service of the East India Company. 
                One can almost date the birth of Indology to February 12, 1784, 
                the day on which Jones observed: Â  
              Â The Sanskrit language, whatever be its antiquity, is 
                of wonderful structure; more perfect than Greek, more copious 
                than Latin, and more exquisitely refined than either, yet bearing 
                to both of them a stronger affinity, both in the roots of the 
                verbs and the forms of grammar, than could possibly have been 
                produced by accident; so strong, indeed, that no philologer could 
                examine them all three without believing them to have sprung from 
                some common source…  
              Â With this superficial, yet influential observation, Jones 
                launched two fields of study in Western academics†
                philology (comparative linguistics) and Indo-European Studies 
                including Indology. The â€common source,†
                variously called Indo-European, Proto Indo-European, Indo-Germanische 
                and so forth has been the Holy Grail of philologists. The search 
                for the common source has occupied philologists for the greater 
                part of two hundred years, but the goal has remained elusive, 
                more of which later.  
              Â Jones was a linguist with scholarly inclinations but 
                his job was to interpret Indian law and customs to his employer†
                the British East India Company in its task of administering its 
                growing Indian territories. In fact, this was what led to his 
                study of Sanskrit and its classics. This dual role of Indologists 
                as scholars as well as official interpreters of India to the ruling 
                authorities continued well into the twentieth century. Many Indologists, 
                including such highly regarded figures as H.H. Wilson and F. Max 
                Müller enjoyed the support and sponsorship of the 
                ruling powers. It was their means of livelihood and they had to 
                ensure that their masters were kept happy.  
              Â Though Jones was the pioneer, the dominant figure of 
                colonial Indology was Max Müller, an impoverished 
                German who found fame and fortune in England. While a scholar 
                of great if undisciplined imagination, his lasting legacy has 
                been the confusion he created by conflating race with language. 
                He created the mythical Aryans that Indologists have been fighting 
                over ever since. Scientists repeatedly denounced it, but Indologists 
                were, and some still are, loathe to let go of it. As far back 
                as 1939, Sir Julian Huxley, one of the great biologists of the 
                twentieth century summed up the situation from a scientific point 
                of view: Â  
               In 1848 the young German scholar Friedrich Max Müller 
                (1823 †1900) settled in Oxford where he remained 
                for the rest of his life… About 1853 he introduced 
                into English usage the unlucky term Aryan, as applied to a large 
                group of languages. His use of this Sanskrit word contains in 
                itself two assumptions†one linguistic,… 
                the other geographical. Of these the first is now known to be 
                erroneous and the second now regarded as probably erroneous. [Sic: 
                Now known to be definitely wrong.] Nevertheless, around each of 
                these two assumptions a whole library of literature has arisen. 
               Moreover, Max Müller threw another apple 
                of discord. He introduced a proposition that is demonstrably false. 
                He spoke not only of a definite Aryan language and its descendants, 
                but also of a corresponding â€Aryan raceâ€. 
                The idea was rapidly taken up both in Germany and in England… 
               In England and America the phrase â€Aryan 
                race†has quite ceased to be used by writers 
                with scientific knowledge, though it appears occasionally in political 
                and propagandist literature… In Germany, the 
                idea of the â€Aryan race†received 
                no more scientific support than in England. Nevertheless, it found 
                able and very persistent literary advocates who made it appear 
                very flattering to local vanity. It therefore steadily spread, 
                fostered by special conditions. (Emphasis added.)Â  
               These â€special conditions†
                were the rise of Nazism in Germany and British imperial interests 
                in India. Its perversion in Germany leading eventually to Nazi 
                horrors is well known. The less known fact is how the British 
                turned it into a political and propaganda tool to make Indians 
                accept British rule. A recent BBC report acknowledged as much 
                (October 6, 2005): Â  
              It [Aryan invasion theory] gave a historical precedent to justify 
                the role and status of the British Raj, who could argue that they 
                were transforming India for the better in the same way that the 
                Aryans had done thousands of years earlier.  
               That is to say, the British presented themselves as â€new 
                and improved Aryans†that were in India only 
                to complete the work left undone by their ancestors in the hoary 
                past. This is how the British Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin put 
                it in the House of Commons in 1929:Â  
               Now, after ages, …the two branches 
                of the great Aryan ancestry have again been brought together by 
                Providence… By establishing British rule in 
                India, God said to the British, â€I have brought 
                you and the Indians together after a long separation, …it 
                is your duty to raise them to their own level as quickly as possible 
                …brothers as you are…â€Â 
               
              Â Baldwin was only borrowing a page from the Jesuit missionary 
                Robert de Nobili (1577 - 1656) who presented Christianity as a 
                purer form of the Vedic religion to attract Hindu converts. Now, 
                300 years later, Baldwin and the British were telling Indians: 
                â€We are both Aryans but you have fallen from 
                your high state, and we, the British are here to lift you from 
                your fallen condition.†It is surprising that 
                few historians seem to have noticed the obvious similarity. Â 
               
              Â In the circumstances it is hardly surprising that many 
                of the â€scholars†of Indology 
                should have had missionary links. In fact, one Colonel Boden even 
                endowed a Sanskrit professorship at Oxford to facilitate the conversion 
                of the natives to Christianity. (H.H. Wilson was the first Boden 
                Professor followed by Monier Williams. Max Müller 
                who coveted the position never got it. He remained bitter about 
                it to the end of his life.)Â  
               It is widely held that Max Müller turned 
                his back on his race theories when he began to insist that Aryan 
                refers to language and never a race. The basis for this belief 
                is the following famous statement he made in 1888. Â  
              I have declared again and again that if I say Aryan, I mean neither 
                blood nor bones, nor skull nor hair; I mean simply those who speak 
                the Aryan language. … To me an ethnologist 
                who speaks of Aryan blood, Aryan race, Aryan eyes and hair is 
                as great a sinner as a linguist who speaks of a dolichocephalic 
                dictionary or a brachycephalic grammar.  
              Â What lay behind this extraordinary vehemence from a man 
                noted for his mild language? Was there something behind this echo 
                of the Shakespearean â€Methinks the lady doth 
                protest too much�  
               Huxley attributes Max Müllerâ€s 
                change of heart to the advice of his scientist friends. This is 
                unlikely. To begin with, the science needed to refute his racial 
                ideas did not exist at the time. Moreover, Max Müller 
                didnâ€t know enough science to understand it 
                even if it were explained it to him. The reasons for his flip 
                flop, as always with him, were political followed by concern for 
                his position in England, not necessarily in that order. 
               
               A closer examination of the record shows that Max Müller 
                made the switch from race to language not in 1888 but in 1871. 
                That incidentally was the year of German unification following 
                Prussian victory in the Franco-Prussian War. Thereby hangs a tale.1Â 
               
               For more than twenty years, from 1848 to 1871, Max Müller 
                had been a staunch German nationalist arguing for German unification. 
                He was fond of publicity and made no secret of his political leanings 
                in numerous letters and articles in British and European publications. 
                German nationalists of course had embraced the notion of the Aryan 
                nation and looked to scholars like Max Müller to 
                provide intellectual justification. He was more than willing to 
                cooperate. Â  
              Â Things changed almost overnight when Prussia defeated 
                France in the Franco-Prussian War leading to German unification 
                under the Prussian banner. From a fragmented landscape of petty 
                principalities, Germany became the largest and most powerful country 
                in Europe and Britainâ€s strongest adversary. 
                There was near hysteria in British Indian circles that Sanskrit 
                studies had brought about German unification as the mighty â€Aryan 
                Nationâ€. Sir Henry Maine, a member of the Viceroyâ€s 
                Council went so far as so claim â€A nation has 
                been born out of Sanskrit!â€Â  
              Â The implication was clear, what happened in Germany could 
                happen also in India, leading to a repeat of 1857 but with possibly 
                a different result. All this was hysteria of the moment, but Max 
                Müller the Aryan Sage, and outspoken German Nationalist 
                faced a more immediate problem: how to save his position at Oxford? 
                He had to shed his political baggage associated with the Aryan 
                race and the Aryan Nation to escape any unfriendly scrutiny by 
                his British patrons.  
               He could of course have gone along quietly but Max Müller 
                being Max Müller, he had to strike a dramatic pose 
                and display his new avatar as a staunch opponent of Aryan theories. 
                In any event he was too much of a celebrity to escape unnoticed, 
                any more than Michael Witzel or Romila Thapar could in our own 
                time. So, within months of the proclamation of the German Empire 
                (18 January 1871) Friedrich Max Müller marched 
                into a university in Strasburg in German occupied France (Alsace) 
                and dramatically denounced what he claimed were distortions of 
                his old theories. He insisted that they were about languages and 
                race had nothing to do with them. Â  
              Â He may have rejected his errors, but his followers, including 
                many quacks and crackpots kept invoking his name in support of 
                their own ideas. The climate in Oxford turned unfriendly and many 
                former friends began to view him with suspicion. In fact, the 
                situation became so bad that in 1875, he seriously contemplated 
                resigning his position at Oxford and returning to Germany. Though 
                there have been claims that this was because he was upset over 
                the award of an honorary degree to his rival Monier-Williams, 
                the more probable explanation is the discomfort resulting from 
                his German nationalist past in the context of the changed situation 
                following German unification.  
               The specter of Max Müller looms large 
                over the colonial period of Indology though he is unknown in Germany 
                today and all but forgotten in England. In fact his father Wilhem 
                Müller, a very minor German poet is better known: 
                a few of his poems were set to music by the great composer Franz 
                Schubert. In his own time, Germans despised him for having turned 
                his back on the â€Aryan race†
                to please his British masters. Indians though still revere him 
                though no one today takes his theories seriously. One can get 
                and idea of how he was seen by his contemporaries and immediate 
                successors from the entry in the eleventh edition (1911) of the 
                Encyclopædia Britannica:   
               Though undoubtedly a great scholar, Max Müller 
                did not so much represent scholarship pure and simple as her hybrid 
                types†the scholar-author and the scholar-courtier. 
                In the former capacity, though manifesting little of the originality 
                of genius, he rendered vast service by popularizing high truths 
                among high minds [and among the highly placed]. …There 
                were drawbacks in both respects: the author was too prone to build 
                on insecure foundations, and the man of the world incurred censure 
                for failings which may perhaps be best indicated by the remark 
                that he seemed too much of a diplomatist.  
              Â His contemporaries were less charitable. They charged 
                that Max Müller had an eye â€only 
                for crowned heads.†His acquaintances included 
                a large number of princes and potentatesâ€with 
                little claim to scholarshipâ€with a maharaja 
                or two thrown in. He was fortunate that the British monarchy was 
                of German origin (Hanoverian) and Queen Victoriaâ€s 
                husband a German prince (Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha). It was 
                these more than fellow scholars that he cultivated. It proved 
                valuable for his career, if not scholarship, for he had little 
                difficulty in getting sponsors for his ambitious projects. He 
                lived and died a rich man, drawing from his rival William Dwight 
                Whitney the following envious if tasteless remark: 2Â  
              He has had his reward. No man was before ever so lavishly paid, 
                in money and in fame, even for the most unexceptional performance 
                of such a task. For personal gratitude in addition, there is not 
                the slightest call. If Müller had never put his 
                hand to the Veda, his fellow-students would have had the material 
                they needed perhaps ten years earlier, and Vedic studies would 
                be at the present moment proportionately advanced. …The 
                original honorarium, of about £500 a volume, is well-nigh 
                or quite unprecedented in the history of purely scholarly enterprises; 
                and the grounds on which the final additional gift of £2000 
                was bestowed have never been made public.  
               Max Müllerâ€s career 
                illustrates how Indology and Sanskrit studies in the West have 
                always been associated with politics at all levels. He was by 
                no means the only â€diplomatist†
                scholar gracing colonial Indology, only the most successful. It 
                is remarkable that though his contributions are all but forgotten, 
                his political legacy endures. His successors in Europe and America 
                have been reduced to play politics at a much lower level, but 
                in India, his theories have had unexpected fallout in the rise 
                of Dravidian politics. It is entirely proper that while his scholarly 
                works (save for translations) have been consigned to the dustbin 
                of history, his legacy endures in politics. This may prove to 
                be true of Indology as a whole as an academic discipline. 
               
              Post colonial scene: passing of the Aryan gods  
              Â The post colonial era may conveniently be dated to 1950. 
                In 1947 India became free and the great Aryan â€Thousand 
                Year Reich†lay in ashes. In Europe at least 
                the word Aryan came to acquire an infamy comparable to the word 
                Jihadi today. Europeans, Germans in particular, were anxious to 
                dissociate themselves from it. But there remained a residue of 
                pre-war Indology (and associated race theories) that in various 
                guises succeeded in establishing itself in academic centers mainly 
                in the United States. Its most visible spokesman in recent times 
                has been one Michael Witzel, a German expatriate like Max Müller, 
                teaching in the Sanskrit Department at Harvard University in the 
                United States. In an extraordinary replay of Max Müllerâ€s 
                political flip-flops Witzel too is better known for his political 
                and propaganda activities than any scholarly contributions. Witzelâ€s 
                recent campaigns, from attempts to introduce Aryan theories in 
                California schools to 
                his ill-fated tour of India where his scholarly deficiencies were 
                exposed in public highlight the dependence of Indology on politics. 
                Â  
              Â While the field of Indo-European Studies has been struggling 
                to survive on the fringes of academia, lately it has become the 
                subject critical analysis by scholars in Europe and America. Unlike 
                Indians who treat the field and its practitioners with a degree 
                of respect, European scholars have not hesitated to call a spade 
                a spade, treating it as a case of pathological scholarship with 
                racist links to Nazi ideology. This may be attributed to the fact 
                that Europeans have seen and experienced its horrors while Indians 
                have only read about it.  
               In a remarkable article, â€Aryan Mythology 
                As Science And Ideology†(Journal of the American 
                Academy of Religion1999; 67: 327-354) the Swedish scholar Stefan 
                Arvidsson raises the question: â€Today it is 
                disputed whether or not the downfall of the Third Reich brought 
                about a sobering among scholars working with 'Aryan' religions.†
                We may rephrase the question: â€Did the end of 
                the Nazi regime put an end to race based theories in academia?†
                Â  
              Â An examination of several humanities departments in the 
                West suggests otherwise: following the end of Nazism, academic 
                racism may have undergone a mutation but did not entirely disappear. 
                Ideas central to the Aryan myth resurfaced in various guises under 
                labels like Indology and Indo-European Studies. This is clear 
                from recent political, social and academic episodes in places 
                as far apart as Harvard University and the California State Board 
                of Education. But there was an interregnum of sorts before Aryan 
                theories again raised their heads in West.  
              Â Two decades after the end of the Nazi regime, racism 
                underwent another mutation as a result of the American Civil Rights 
                Movement led by Dr. Martin Luther King. Thanks to the Civil Rights 
                Movement, Americans were made to feel guilty about their racist 
                past and the indefensible treatment of African Americans. U.S. 
                academia also changed accordingly and any discourse based on racial 
                stereotyping became taboo. Soon this taboo came to be extended 
                to Native Americans, Eskimos and other ethnic groups.  
              Â In this climate of seeming liberal enlightenment, one 
                race theory continued to flourish as if nothing had changed. Theories 
                based on the Aryan myth that formed the core of Nazi ideology 
                continued in various guises, as previously noted, in Indology 
                and Indo-European Studies. Though given a linguistic and sometimes 
                a cultural veneer, these racially sourced ideas continue to enjoy 
                academic respectability in such prestigious centers as Harvard 
                and Chicago. Â  
              Â Being a European transplant, its historical trajectory 
                was different from the one followed by American racism. Further, 
                unlike the Civil Rights Movement, which had mass support, academic 
                racism remained largely confined to academia. This allowed it 
                to escape public scrutiny for several decades until it clashed 
                with the growing Hindu presence in the United States. Indians, 
                Hindus in particular saw Western Indology and Indo-European Studies 
                as a perversion of their history and religion and a thinly disguised 
                attempt to prejudice the American public, especially the youth, 
                against India and Hinduism to serve their academic interests. 
                Â  
              Â The fact that Americans of Indian origin are among the 
                most educated group ensured that their objections could not be 
                brushed away by â€haughty dismissals†
                as the late historian of science Abraham Seidenberg put it. Nonetheless, 
                scholars tried to use academic prestige as a bludgeon in forestalling 
                debate, by denouncing their adversaries as ignorant chauvinists 
                and bigots unworthy of debate. But increasingly, hard evidence 
                from archaeology, natural history and genetics made it impossible 
                to ignore the objections of their opponents, many of whom (like 
                this writer) were scientists. But in November 2005, there came 
                a dramatic denouement, in, of all places, California schools. 
                Academics suddenly found it necessary to leave their ivory towers 
                and fight it out in the open, in full media glare†
                and under court scrutiny. Â  
              Â It is unnecessary to go into the details of the now discredited 
                campaign by Michael Witzel and his associates trying to stop the 
                removal of references to the Aryans and their invasion from California 
                school books. What is remarkable is that a senior tenured professor 
                at Harvard of German origin should concern himself with how Hinduism 
                is taught to children in California. Witzel is a linguist, but 
                he presumed to tell California schools how Hinduism should be 
                taught to children. It turned out that Hinduism was only a cover, 
                and his concern was saving the Aryan myth from being erased from 
                books.  
              Â Ever since he moved to Harvard from Germany, Witzel has 
                seen the fortunes of his department and his field, gradually sink 
                into irrelevance. Problems at Harvard are part of a wider problem 
                in Western academia in the field of Indo-European Studies. As 
                previously noted, several â€Indology†
                departmentsâ€as they are sometimes calledâ€are 
                shutting down across Europe. One of the oldest and most prestigious, 
                at Cambridge University in England, has just closed down. This 
                was followed by the closure of the equally prestigious Berlin 
                Institute of Indology founded way back in 1821. Positions like 
                the one Witzel holds (Wales Professor of Sanskrit) were created 
                during the colonial era to serve as interpreters of India. They 
                have lost their relevance and are disappearing from academia. 
                This was the real story, not teaching Hinduism to California children. 
                Â  
               Witzelâ€s California misadventure appears 
                to have been an attempt to somehow save his pet Aryan theories 
                from oblivion by making it part of Indian history and civilization 
                in the school curriculum. Otherwise, it is hard to see why a senior, 
                tenured professor at Harvard should go to all this trouble, lobbying 
                California school officials to have its Grade VI curriculum changed 
                to reflect his views. Â  
              Â To follow this it is necessary to go beyond personalities 
                and understand the importance of the Aryan myth to Indo-European 
                Studies. The Aryan myth is a European creation. It has nothing 
                to do with Hinduism. The campaign against Hinduism was a red herring 
                to divert attention from the real agenda, which was and remains 
                saving the Aryan myth. Collapse of the Aryan myth means the collapse 
                of Indo-European studies. This is what Witzel and his colleagues 
                are trying to avert. For them it is an existential struggle. 
               
              Â Americans and even Indians for the most part are unaware 
                of the enormous influence of the Aryan myth on European history 
                and imagination. Central to Indo-European Studies is the beliefâ€it 
                is no more than a beliefâ€that Indian civilization 
                was created by an invading race of â€Aryans†
                from an original homeland somewhere in Eurasia or Europe. This 
                is the Aryan invasion theory dear to Witzel and his European colleagues, 
                and essential for their survival. According to this theory there 
                was no civilization in India before the Aryan invaders brought 
                it†a view increasingly in conflict with hard 
                evidence from archaeology and natural history. Â  
              Â In this academic and political conundrum it is important 
                not to lose sight of the fact that the Aryan myth is a modern 
                European creation. It has little to do with ancient India. The 
                word Arya appears for the first time in the Rig Veda, Indiaâ€s 
                oldest text. Its meaning is obscure but it seems to refer to members 
                of a settled agricultural community. It later became an honorific 
                and a form of address, something like â€Gentleman†
                in English or â€Monsieur†in 
                French. Also, it was nowhere as important in India as it came 
                to be in Europe. In the whole the Rig Veda, in all of its ten 
                books, the word Arya appears only about forty times. In contrast, 
                Hitlerâ€s Mein Kampf uses the term Arya and Aryan 
                many times more. Hitler did not invent it. The idea of Aryans 
                as a superior race was already in the air†in 
                Europe, not India.3Â  
               It is interesting to contrast Witzelâ€s 
                political campaigns against Max Müllerâ€s. 
                Where Max Müller hobnobbed with Indian and European 
                aristocracy including princes and Maharajas, Witzel has had to 
                content himself waiting on California schoolteachers and bureaucrats. 
                These were his masters who held the keys to his career and reputation. 
                It may be no more than a reflection of changed circumstances and 
                the loss of power and prestige of the aristocracy but the contrasts 
                are nonetheless striking.  
              Â No less striking is the contrast between their legacy 
                and reputation. While we may look at Max Müllerâ€s 
                foibles and failures with amused tolerance and appreciate his 
                monumental work in compiling the fifty-volume Sacred Books of 
                the East, Witzelâ€s name is unlikely to command 
                any respect much less affection. In addition to his support for 
                the Aryan theories and the California campaign, Witzel is known 
                for his association with the notorious Indo-Eurasian Research 
                (IER), which has been accused of a hate campaign against the Hindus. 
               
              Â An article that appeared the New Delhi daily The Pioneer 
                (December 25, 2005) began: â€Boorish comments 
                denigrating India, Hindus and Hinduism by a self-proclaimed â€Indologist†
                who is on the faculty of Harvard University has unleashed a fierce 
                debate over the increasing political activism of â€scholars†
                who teach at this prestigious American university. Prof Michael 
                Witzel, Wales professor of Sanskrit at Harvard, is in the centre 
                of the storm because he tried to prevent the removal of references 
                to India, Hinduism and Sikhism in the curriculum followed by schools 
                in California which parents of Indian origin found to be inadequate, 
                inaccurate or just outright insensitive.† 
               
              Â The author of The Pioneer article (Kanchan Gupta) went 
                on to observe: â€Witzel declared Hindu-Americans 
                to be "lost" or "abandoned", parroting anti-Semite 
                slurs against Jewish people. Coincidence or symptom? Witzel's 
                fantasies are ominously reminiscent of WWII German genocide. He 
                says that 'Since they won't be returning to India, [Hindu immigrants 
                to the USA] have begun building crematoria as well. … 
                Witzel demeans the daughters of Indian-American parents, who take 
                the trouble to learn their heritage through traditional art forms. 
                In the worst of racist slander, Witzel claims that Indian classical 
                music and dance reflect low moral standards.â€Â 
               
              Â One cannot imagine any publication today, let alone in 
                India, write in this vein about Max Müller, whatever 
                one may feel about his politics and scholarship. Nor can one imagine 
                Max Müller write in the style of Witzel about India 
                or anyone else. Â  
               It must be recorded that Max Müller was 
                emphatically not a racist. He was also a man of exemplary humility 
                in dealing with fellow scholars. In a letter to the Nepalese scholar 
                and Sanskrit poet Pandit Chavilal (undated but written probably 
                just before 1900) Max Müller wrote:  
              Â I am surprised at your familiarity with Sanskrit. We 
                [Europeans] have to read but never to write Sanskrit. To you it 
                seems as easy as English or Latin to us… We 
                can admire all the more because we cannot rival, and I certainly 
                was filled with admiration when I read but a few pages of your 
                Sundara Charita.  
               This reflects great credit on Max Müller 
                as a scholar. One has to wonder if his present day counterparts 
                are capable of such exemplary humility. Certainly none was in 
                evidence during Michael Witzelâ€s recent disastrous 
                lecture tour of India where he was severely embarrassed by schoolchildren 
                and scholars alike, where he was shown to be completely at sea 
                with basic rules of Sanskrit grammar. More than a hundred years 
                ago, Max Müller declined invitations to visit India 
                probably because he sensed that a similar fate awaited him. He 
                chose discretion over bravado.  
               The decline from Max Müller to Witzel 
                serves as a metaphor for the decline of Indology itself in our 
                time.  
              State of Sanskrit studies in the West  
               In recent months there have been cries of â€Sanskrit 
                in danger of disappearing†from Sanskrit professors 
                and other Indologists in Western academia. This is certainly true 
                in their own case, but their next claim that they need more funding 
                (what else?) to reverse the decline must be taken with a large 
                grain of salt. Sanskrit existed and flourished for thousands of 
                years before Indology and Indologists came into existence, and 
                will no doubt continue to exist without them. If Sanskrit ever 
                faces extinction, it will be for reasons of social and political 
                developments in India and not due to lack of funds for Indologists 
                in the West. They can no more save Sanskrit than Indian scholars 
                can save classical Greek. Â  
              Â We may now take a moment to assess the contribution of 
                Western Sanskritists from an Indian perspective. For those who 
                believe that Western scholarship has made a major contribution 
                to Sanskrit, such people are not limited to the West, here is 
                an objective measure to consider: Indians began studying English 
                (and other European languages) about the same time that Europeans 
                began their study of Sanskrit. Many Indians have attained distinction 
                as writers in English. But there is not a single piece in Sanskritâ€not 
                even a shloka (verse)â€by a Western Sanskritist 
                that has found a place in any anthology. This was acknowledged 
                by no less an authority than Max Müller in passage 
                quoted at the end of the previous section. Â  
               These are not the people who can â€save†
                Sanskrit, even if it needs to be saved. Sanskrit is Indiaâ€s 
                responsibility just as Greek and Latin are Europeâ€s. 
                Let them study Sanskrit just as Indians should study Greek, but 
                it is too much to expect a few sanctuaries in the West protect 
                and nurture a great and ancient tradition when they are having 
                a hard time saving themselves. Â  
              Â The principal contribution of the West has been in bringing 
                out editions of ancient works like the Rigveda and translations 
                like Max Müllerâ€s monumental 
                fifty volume Sacred Books of the East. These too have their limitations. 
               
              Summary and conclusions  
              Â We may now conclude that that Western Indology is in 
                steep decline and may well become extinct in a generation. The 
                questions though go beyond Indology. Sanskrit is the foundation 
                of Indo-European Studies. If Sanskrit departments close, what 
                will take their place? Will these departments now teach Icelandic, 
                Old Norse or reconstructed Proto Indo-European? Will they attract 
                students? Can Indo-European Studies survive without Sanskrit? 
                A more sensible course would be for Indian and Western scholars 
                to collaborate and build an empirically based study of ancient 
                Indian and European languages†free of dogma 
                and free of politics. 
              Â A basic problem is that for reasons that have little 
                to do with objective scholarship, Indologists have been trying 
                to remove Sanskrit from the special space it occupies in the study 
                of Indo-European languages and replace it something called Proto-Indo-European 
                of PIE. This is like replacing Hebrew with a hypothetical Proto-Semitic 
                language in Biblical Studies. This PIE has literally proven to 
                be a pie in the sky and the whole field is now on the verge of 
                collapse. The resulting vacuum has to be filled by a scholarship 
                that is both sound and empirical, based on existing languages 
                like Sanskrit, Greek and the like. Additionally, Indian scholars 
                will have look more to the east and search for linguistic and 
                other links to the countries and cultures of Indonesia, Cambodia, 
                Vietnam and others that have historic ties to India of untold 
                antiquity.  
              NOTES AND REFERENCESÂ  
                This is explained in more detail in this writerâ€s 
                The Politics of History and also in Vedic Aryans and the Origins 
                of Civilization, Third Edition, by Navaratna Rajaram and David 
                Frawley, both published by Voice of India, New Delhi. Some recent 
                developments may be found in Sarasvati River and the Vedic Civilization 
                by N.S. Rajaram, Aditya Prakashan, New Delhi. For the record the 
                full name of Max Müller was Friedrich Maximillian 
                Müller, but he is better known as Max Müller, 
                the name used also by his descendants. 
                Â  
                Max Müllerâ€s aristocratic Indian 
                friends included the Raja of Venkatagiri (who partly financed 
                his edition of the Rigveda) as well as Dwarakanath Tagore, the 
                grandfather of the Nobel laureate Rabindranath. When Max Müller 
                was a struggling scholar in Paris, Tagore helped him with Sanskrit 
                as well as financially. He knew also British and European nobility 
                having met Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. In his early years 
                his patrons included Dwarakanath Tagore and Baron Bunsen, the 
                Prussian Ambassador to Britain. It is a tribute to Max Müllerâ€s 
                personality and liberal character that he could attract the friendship 
                of such a wide range of people.  
              3. It should be noted that the Nazis appropriated their ideas 
                and symbols from European mythology, not India. Hitlerâ€s 
                Aryans worshipped Apollo and Odin, not Vedic deities like Indra 
                and Varuna. His Swastika was also the European â€Hakenkreuz†
                or hooked cross and not the Indian svasti symbol. It was seen 
                in Germany for the first time when General von Luttwitzâ€s 
                notorious Erhardt Brigade marched into Berlin from Lithuania in 
                support of the abortive Kapp Putsch of 1920. The Erhardt Brigade 
                was one of several freebooting private armies during the years 
                following Germanyâ€s defeat in World War I. They 
                had the covert support of the Wehrmacht (Army headquarters). 
               
              
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