Sanskrit is Dead
Sanskrit is for all intents and purposes,
a dead language. The Brahmans are in the habit of glorifying the era of
Anglo-Brahman colonialism; yet even during this
`golden age' of Sanskritology when the likes of Max Mueller helped
propagate the study of Sanskrit throughout the world, a mere handful of
people spoke it.
Nor was it, even during the hypothesized `Gupta Golden Age' spoken
outside the closely knit circle of Brahmins, who jealously hid all knowledge,
including
that of Sanskrit, to themselves. As will be shown later on, nor did
it exist during the Vedic Dark Age; Sanskrit arose as a mongrel language
much later on.
As per the 1951 Census, out of a total population of 362 million Indians,
only 555 spoke Sanskrit ! Even languages like Italian and Hebrew, spoken
by a
handful of travelers, were more widely spoken than `Mother Sanskrit'
! This is evident from the following table : The 1921 Census of India reveals
that a whole 356 people spoke the language in the entire Indian subcontinent,
during what is considered a `Golden Age' for Sanskrit revival, the era
of Anglo-Brahmin colonialism. Several obscure languages had many more speakers
than `Mother Sanskrit' :
Brahmin Fantasies
When European scholars developed an interest
in India, their main focus was to understand Indian religion. Thus, their
primary source in all fields of Indology
were the Brahmins. These fundamentalists hence became the main source
of `knowledge' about first Indian religion, and later all of Indology in
general. Hence
the entire field of Indology dating from the colonial era has been
highly biased, being essentially a regurgitated version of Vedic-Puranic
versions of history as
seen through the eyes of the Brahmins. As this section of the population
forms a mere 5 % of the Indian population, these histories have been very
unrepresentative of the truth. Thus, Indian linguistics in its infancy
adopted the mythological Brahmanical notion that all languages were degraded
forms of
Sanskrit. Sanskrit, a language which was merely liturgical and hardly
played any role in Indian history, all of a sudden became the focus of
attention. Indeed,
this Brahminist fraud, now referred to as `The Mother Sanskrit Theory',
is one of the greatest hoaxes of the 20th century.
Tall claims were made about this language.
Sanskrit became the `mother of all languages in India', and it soon came
to be believed that all literatures in the
world, including Greek, Latin, etc. were derived frm Sanskrit ! All
these Brahmin fantasies were eagerly copied down by their European collaborators,
who
placed these absurdities in academic garb. Max Mueller and William
Jones were only the pioneers in this movement, which, whilst displaying
a superficial
novelty in Europe, were in fact based on Puranic notions. Virtually
all efforts of the European colonialists towards studying India were devoted
towards
studying Brahmanism; non-Sanskrit civilizations were given scarcely
any attention. This was, in a sense, a reward granted by the Europeans
for services
rendered by the Brahmins, who had actively collaborated with the colonialists.
This hangover continues today, and even now `Indology' virtually means
the
study of Sanskrit and Brahmanic civilization; Dravidian, Indo-Muslim
and Prakritic civilizations are blissfully ignored. It is all the more
shocking that some
European scholars still actively collaborate in propagating plainly
false Puranic theories. Thus recently, certain deluded Europeans have made
the following
statements :
David Frawley said, " It [ Sanskrit ] has
been regarded as the best language for computers because of its clarity."
[ Myth, Ch.24 ]. Those familiar with David
Frawley know him as an avid propagator of Brahmin Vedic and Puranic
fallacies, such as the Puranic `Out of India' hypothesis. According to
the Forbes magazine (July,1987), "Sanskrit is the most convenient language
for computer software programming". The import is to somehow build a halo
around Brahmanic Sanskrit. However, why Sanskrit has not then replaced
established computer languages such as Basic, C, Pascal or Fortran are
not answered. Computers still utilize binary code and no Sanskrit-based
counting system. Nor have humans adopted the binary system in which computers
can calculate so well; we are all quite satisfied with the decimal system,
which is of Harappan-Sumerian origin.
This Mother Sanskrit Theory (MST) then, arose
during the Anglo-Brahmin colonial era when the Europeans adopted Brahmanic
Vedic and Puranic theories
of Indian history and civilization. As per this now discredited theory,
Sanskrit is the `Mother of all World Languages'. This model has now been
discredited,
but a variant of the MST still pervades Indian linguistics, namely
the claim that `Sanskrit is the Mother of all Indian languages'. Unfortunately,
the MST is still
being taught in Indian universities as a hangover from the Colonial
era. Elaborate family trees are still drawn up; of which a simplified version
for Indian
languages generally taught today in the North can be drawn up :
MOTHER SANSKRIT THEORY (MST)
Sanskrit
/ \
Prakrit Pali
/
Apabrahmsa
/ / \
Bengali Hindi Marathi
Thus, as per this theory, Sanskrit somehow
developed into Prakrit, simultaneously developing into Pali. Prakrit then
somehow developed into Apabrahmsa,
which then developed into the modern Indo-Aryan languages. Sanskrit
was supposedly the spoken language during the much-hyped `Golden Age of
Indian
Culture', the Gupta Empire, and was supposedly the vernacular during
the Vedic Age. Thus, all Indo-Aryan languages are seen as being mere derivatives
of
Sanskrit. Unfortunately, this wrong and highly biased view still persists
in many encyclopedias. This MST is refuted below.
Non-Existence of Sanskrit Before 500 BC
The prime fact which has been suppressed by
the Anglo-Brahmin elite is that Sanskrit did not exist prior to the 6th
century BC. This circumstance is evident
from the following points : Vedas - The word `Sanskrit' does not occur
anywhere in the Vedas. Not a single verse mentions this word as denoting
a language.
Chandasa - The Vedic language was referred to as Chandasa even by Panini
himself [ Chatt., p.63 ], and not as `Sanskrit'.
Buddha - The Buddha was advised to translate his teachings into the
learned man's tongue - the `Chandasa' standard [ Chatt., p.64 ], there
is no mention of
any `Sanskrit'. The Buddha refused, preferring the Prakrits. There
is not even a single reference in any contemporary Buddhist texts to the
word `Sanskrit'.
This shows that Sanskrit did not even exist at the time of the Buddha
and that the people at that period, even the Brahmins themselves, were
not aware of
themselves as speaking `Sanskrit'; they referred to their language
as `Chandasa'. Ramayana - The word `Sanskrit' occurs for the first time
as referring to a language in the Ramayana : "In the latter [Ramayana]
the term `samskrta' "formal, polished", is encountered, probably for the
first time with reference to the language"
-- [ EB 22 `Langs', p.616 ] It is to be noted that extant versions
of the Ramayana date only to the centuries AD.
Asokan Script - The first inscriptions in
Indian history are in Prakrit and not in Sanskrit. These are by the Mauryan
King Ashoka (c.273 BC - 232 BC ), and
number over 30. They date to the 4th century BC. The script utilized
is not `sacred' Devanagari, and the language is not `Mother' Sanskrit.
They are mostly in
the Brahmi script, while 2 inscriptions are in Kharoshtri. They are
in various Prakrits and some in Afghanistan are in Greek and Aramaic [
Bas,. p.390-1 ]. In
fact all inscriptions in India were in Prakrit till the early centuries
AD : "[T]he earlier inscriptions up to the 1st century AD, were all in
Prakrit"-- [ Up., p.164 ]
Satavahana Inscriptions - The Satavahanas,
the first historical dynasty of the Deccan, also used a Prakrit language.
There is no usage of Sanskrit. The
Nagarjunikonda insrciptions are by the Satvahana king Vijaya Satakarni
in the early 3rd century AD & end with the Ikshvaku Rudrapurusadatta
who ruled for
11 years in the second quarter of the 4th century. Most of the large
number of inscriptions are in Prakrit and only a few belonging to Ehuvulu
Santamula are in
Sanskrit (he ruled during the last 24 years of the 3rd to the early
4th century AD ) but even most of his inscriptions are in Prakrit and those
which are in
Sasnkrit are heavily influenced by Prakrit [ Bhatt., p.408 ftn.46 ].
The Nanaghat cave inscriptions in Poona distt.
are in Prakrit and are the work of the Satavahana Satakarni I. They have
been dated to the first half of the 1st
century BC. The contemporary relgiion of this region was Vedic. Indra
and Vasudev are mentioned as the Vedic gods then worshipped [ Bas, p.395
]. The
later cave inscriptions of Nasik in the 1st and 2nd centuries AD are
in the local Prakrit [ Bas, p.395 ]. Thus, although the Vedic religion
was followed in the
Satavahana regions, Sanskrit was not in use. Gandhari - Even Gandhari
existed prior to Sanskrit. The Pali Dhammapada in Gandhari was discovered
at Khotan in Kharoshtri script. It dates to the 1st or 2nd century AD.
A Gandhari insrcription was discovered on a copper casket containing relics
of the Lord Sakyamuni [ Bas, p.393 ].
Kharavela's Kalinga Inscription - Kharavela's
Kalingan inscription of the 1st century BC were in a Prakrit of the East
Indian type. Interesting is the first
mention of the word Bharatavarsha in an inscription. Kharavela is described
as invading Bharatavarsha, which then evidently denoted only North India
[ Bas,
p.393 ].
First Sanskrit Inscription : 150 AD - The
earliest inscription in Sanskrit is by the Saka Mahakshatrapa Rudradaman
at Junagarh in Gujarat dated to AD 150.
However, even here several of the words are wrong according to Sanskrit
grammatical rules, some words show Prakrit influence and a few are un-Paninian
[
Bas 397-8 ]. This inscription is several centuries later than the earliest
Prakrit inscriptions, and are the creation of Sakas, not Arya kings.
Refutation of the Mother Sanskrit Theory (MST)
As usual, the load of Sanskrit-centric theories
were a heap of nonsense. The following developments have been instrumental
in overturning the old colonial
reverence for the language : Brajbuli dates to 1000 BC - A central
assumption of the MST is that all Prakrit vernaculars must be of a very
late date. With the first mention of `Sanskrit' in a Ramayana dating to
the ealy centuries AD, any Prakrit existing prior to this necessarily contradicts
the Mother Sanskrit Theory. Indeed, even the Brahmanic myths themselves
present evidence of this with the Prakrit Brajbuli. Brajabuli, the precursor
to the modern Braj Bhasa, is said to have been used by Krishna and the
gopis of Vraja (Vrindavan, whence Braj) and it was thus popular amongst
Vaishnava poets [ Assam, p.422.n3 ]. Krishna is dated to ca. 1000 BC,
and this internal evidence would imply that Braj Bhasa dated to 1000
BC. Recently, Krishna's city, Dvaraka, has been excavated, showing that
he probably
was a historical person. The stories are hence based on fact, and this
evidence cannot be dismissed as a `myth'. `Prakrit' = Vernacular - The
term `Prakrta' or Prakrit means `common', `natural', while the term `Samskrta'
or Sanskrit natural means `polished, refined' [ Up.164 ]. Thus Prakrit
refers to any of the natural languages, while Sanskrit refers to the `purified'
language. This etymology itself indicates that Sanskrit is derived from
Prakrit rather than the other way around. This necessarily implies that
Sanskrit is, like Old Church Slavonic, a polished version of various vernaculars.
Apabrahmsa is a Prakrit - Apabrahmsa, which in the MST is seen as a derivative
of Prakrit, is in fact itself a Prakrit known as Abhiri. It was actually
comtemporary with all the other Prakrits, and the view that it succeeded
Prakrit is wrong. Several dramas have characters speaking Apabrahmsa and
Prakrits side by side. This shows that Apabrahmsa is not the second stage
in the development from Sanskrit, but was merely another Prakrit language.
Different Prakrit Languages - Prakrit is not a single language. Since the
beginning there were several different Prakrit languages, which had different
grammars
and dictionaries.
Modern Prakrits - As per the MST, the Prakrits
are all dead languages, having `degraded' into the modern Indo-Aryan tongues.
However, Prakrits never
disappeared. All the modern Indo-Aryan (IA) languages are Prakrits
(Bengali, Marathi etc.). The ancient Prakrits are the direct precursors
of the modern
languages, thus Vangi -> Bengali, Odri -> Oriya, and Maharastri ->
Marathi. All these so-called `Prakrits' such as Vangi, Odri and Maharastri,
can all be
understood by the speakers of their respective IA languages with the
same ease with which a modern speaker of English can understand Anglo-Saxon.
This
fact alone is sufficient to refute the MST. Far from being dead, Prakrit
is still spoken in all parts of India just as it has been for thousands
of years. The word
Prakrit itself merely means `natural' and refers to all the Indo-Iranian
languages as spoken by the common man in India. Thus, even the literal
meaning of the
word `Prakrit' implies that it is far from dead.
Prakrit Older than Sanskrit - The MST claims
that Sanskrit is older than Prakrit. However, it is Prakrit which is older
than Sanskrit, since several features of
Prakrit can be traced to the Rig Veda, which are not found in Sanskrit.
This is because Chandasa, when invented by the Brahmins ca. 5th century
BC, was a
refined form of vernacular IA languages, thereby losing certain features
which were preserved in Prakrit.
Other features -
Pali poses another problem for the MST. As
per the MST, it is an independent derivation from Sanskrit, and is not
a Prakrit. However, Pali is in fact a dialect
of Magadhi Prakrit and not a separate language as evidenced by the
mutual comprehensibility between these two tongues. The Prakrits can be
understood by the respective speakers of modern Indo-Aryan languages, ie.Vangi
can be understood by modern Bengali speakers, Odri Prakrit can be understood
by modern Oriyas, Maharashtri Prakrit can be understood by modern Marathis
yet in the Sanskritic viewpoint Prakrits are dead.
Brahman Invention of Sanskrit, The Liturgical Language
The lack of a standard liturgical language
was a grave defect for the 6 orthodox (`astika') schools of Brahmanism
(comprising Aryan Vaishnavism, Vedanta,
Yoga, Vedism, etc.). With the rise of `nastika' heterodxies, ie. Jainism
(`jainas'), Buddhism (`bauddhas'), etc. (collectively referred to as `Sramanism')
associated with East Indic kingdoms, the Aryans of Aryavarta &
Brahmavarta sought to counter this novel threat to Vedic orthodoxy by introducing
a
standard liturgical language (perhaps in emulation of the Buddhist
Pali and Jain Ardhamagadhi). The state of Panchala played a central role
in this process. This
nation arose in the 8-9th centuries BC and united different groups
speaking North Indic and Midland Indo-Aryan languages. It is here that
Panini created the
`chandas' language. Soon thereafter the label `samskrta' (polished,
whence later Sanskrit) was applied to this liturgical language. Thus Sanskrit
is a synthesis of
several languages:
Vedic Languages :
Rigvedic
Samvedic
Atharvic and
Yajurvedic
Brahmanic, the language of the Brahmanas
Upanishadic, the language of the Upanishads
North Indo-Aryan languages, eg. Bal Sarasvati (the precursor of Konkani),
Gandharvi (the precursor of Gandhari), etc.
Midland Indo-Aryan languages, eg. Braj buli (the language of Krishna
and Matsyi (the precursor of Sauraseni).
In this regard the origin of Sanskrit is exactly analogous to that of
Old Church Slavonic.
1.6 Mother of None
The Mother Sanskrit Theory (MST) has been now discarded. A new tree
diagram can now be drawn.
___________ Indo - Iranian _____________
/ / \ \ \
Indo-Aryan East Indic Dardic Scythic Iranic
/ \ \ \ (East Iranic) \
Vedic Madhyi Udicyi Pracyi \ \
/ Bibhasas Bibhasa \ Rajastani
Sanskrit / | | |\ Lahnda, Languages
/ | | | \ Old Sindhi
/ | | | \
Kanauji Sauraseni Gandhari Magadhi Vangi
/ (extinct) | | \
Braj Bhasa Magahi Bengali Kamrupi
/ \ \
Braj Bhakhta Khari Boli Assamese
[ P R A K R I T S ]
The dialect of Pracya was the one current is what is now Oudh and Eastern
U.P. and probably also Bihar. This language was prevalent among the vratyas
who were wandering Aryan-speaking tribes who did not owe allegiance
to the Vedic fire-cult and the social and religious organization of Brahmanism
[ Chatt.,
p.61 ].
Encyclopedia Britannica now acknowledge that the old MST is discarded: " As Classical Sanskrit is not directly derivable from any single Vedic dialect, so the Prakrits cannot be said to derive directly from Classical Sanskrit" -- [ EB 22 `lang ', p.618 ]
Comparison with Old Church Slavonic
Thus, Classical Sanskrit is exactly analogous to the Old Church Slavonic
language [ EB 22.696 ], which was created in 863 AD by Orthodox Slavs to
counteract the effect of the Latin Catholic Church. Old Church Slavonic
was a synthesis of West Slavic languages and Byzantine Greek. This occurred
in the
Moravian kingdom, which united West Slavs in the 9th century AD. Thus,
both Sanskrit and Old Church Slavonic arose as syntheses of various languages
and both arose as standard liturgical languages to counter heterodoxies.
Consequences of the MST & Sanskritisation
The MST and the Brahminist policy of Sanskritisation had several disastrous
consequences for pre-Brahmanic civilizations : Undermining of Pre-Brahmanic
Languages - The MST had the debilitating effect of undermining pre-brahmanic
languages and caused great harm to these vernaculars. The modern Indo-Aryan
languages were viewed as `degraded', since they were merely distorted forms
of Sanskrit. This led to most Indians developing a dislike for their own
mother tongue.
Destruction of Non-Brahmin History - The Indo-Aryan
languages were viewed as being recent in origin, since each vernacular
and its respective Prakrit were
seen as separate languages. Thus, instead of accepting the fact of
these languages originating in 1000 BC, the MST held that Bengali, Marathi,
Oriya etc. were
born between 1400-1500 AD ! Thus, instead of being respected for having
histories of 3000 years, these languages with a rich history were denigrated
as
recent innovations. Cultural Genocide - Since these languages (Marathi,
Gujarati, Bengali, etc.) were viewed as being merely degraded forms of
Sanskrit, the MST naturally led to the idea of abolishing these languages
and replacing them with Sanskrit. Since these languages were supposedly
of recent origin, having been spoken only for the last 300-500 years, whereas
Sanskrit had been purportedly spoken for 3500 years, this seemed a natural
conclusion. Such concepts have been
adopted by the Sangh Parivar, which seeks to abolish all Prakritic
languages and replace them with Sanskrit.
Hampering of Development - Sanskritisation
hampered the free development of these languages, since they had to depend
on Sankrit vocabulaery and literary
models. The vernaculars were deliberately corrupted with excessive
Sanskritisation. In many cases, the indigenous languages have been undermined
and are
nearing extinction. The native Marathi script has been replaced by
Devanagari during the Anglo-Brahmin Empire; Bhojpuri, Magahi, Mithili and
Koshali have
all been replaced by Khari Boli Hindi, Bengali was Sanskritised and
undermined in the early part of the 20th century, being saved only by Tagore;
and
Rajasthani is nearing extinction, with the Brahmins having obliterated
the Mahajani script. Everywhere, the advance of Brahmanic Khari Boli Hindi
is evident,
which in the MST is considered `purer' as being closer to Sanskrit
than the `degraded' vernaculars it is replacing.
1.9 Sanskrit is 30 % Dravidian. Many authors have made the fallacious
claim that Sanskrit is the purest of languages. In fact, Sanskrit has many
Dravidian loanwords, and many Prakritisms. Thus, "Classical Sanskrit was
profoundly influenced by Middle Indo-Aryan [ ie. Prakrits ]. Not only were
a large number of Middle Indo-Aryan words adopted into Sanskrit, but a
whole host of Prakrit root and verbal bases of both Aryan and non-Aryan
or uncertain origin were slightly altered to look like Sanskrit and bodily
adopted... This was realized by the ancient scholars with whom Sanskrit
represented just a variant, an earlier or fuller form (patha) of Prakrit.
"
-- [ Chatt., p.95 ] Some scholars hold that more than 50 % of the vocabulary
of Sanskrit is of Dravidian and foreign origin; thus Lahovery writes that
the vocabulary of Sanskrit "is largely formed of Dravidian and other loanwords"
[ Lah., p.407 on Wool ]. The composition of Sanskrit vocabulary can be
approximately given by:
70 % Non-Vedic
40 % Dravidian
30 % Prakrits and Others
30 % Vedic (Old Indo-Aryan)