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In his Secular
Sermon published in the Asian Age dated October 17th 2004, Amulya
Ganguli, political analyst and senior journalist, takes grave objection to the
vice-president mouthing “gobbledy gook”. The vice-president, Shri Bhairon
Singh Shekhawat had said that “the arrows used during the battle (between Ram
and Ravana) were, in fact, today’s missiles” while the Pushpak viman was
actually an aeroplane. Also that “the progress that Germany and Japan have
been making today is because of the knowledge that they took from India
centuries ago. Therefore, our scientists need to study the Vedas and Indian
culture connecting them with science so that India can be put back on the path
of progress.”
What was said by
the vice-president in earnest sincerity, based on historical facts having
documentary evidence, was “laughed off” by Ganguli as “saffron gobbledy
gook” - “one of the many peculiarities associated with the medieval-minded
parivar”. Ganguli feels that such comments cannot be dismissed as of little
consequence because “the observation can make a laughing stock of India and
Indians, reaffirming the stereotypical view of a country steeped in
backwardness, mental and otherwise”. Ganguli finds an observation of the kind
made by Shekhawat, with a directive to the scientists to “properly identify
our ancient knowledge and make its best use” so that “India can again
achieve the place of vishwaguru” as “startling”. According to Ganguli,
“it is as if a serious believer in the Flat Earth theory is found adorning a
high and responsible position. Such a person does not enhance a country’s
prestige.” Ganguli’s myopic viewpoint, the gift of Macaulay’s education
system which aims at training a large class of men who are "Indian in blood
and color, but English in taste, in opinions, in morals and in intellect",
does not allow him to believe that there were scientific achievements in the
pre-Islamic and pre-Christian period of Indian history. According to him, there
were “marvelous achievements” but “those were in the intellectual and
spiritual fields, not science”.
The vice president cannot be blamed
for Ganguli’s lack of knowledge. Ancient Indians were an advanced people with
great scientific achievements, some of which surpass even the achievements of
the modern society. There are many evidences which indicate that they were very
knowledgeable in astronomy, aeronautics, mathematics, marine, metallurgy and
medicine. British historian Grant Duff once said, “Many of the advances in the
sciences that we consider today to have been made in Europe were in fact made in
India centuries ago.” For example, the velocity of light was known to the
ancient Indians for centuries while their western counterparts believed that
light traveled with infinite velocity (even Newton assumed so) until 1675 when
Roemer determined its exact velocity. The law of gravity was known and mentioned
in the Vedic literature. Isaac Newton only
rediscovered this phenomenon. The Puranas speak of the creation and
destruction of the universe in cycles of 8.64 billion years, which is quite
close to the currently accepted value regarding the time of the big bang.
Aryabhatta propounded the theory that the earth was a sphere in the 5th century
while Brahmagupta correctly estimated the circumference of the earth in the 7th
century. The binary number system, hashing, various codes, mathematical logic or
a formal framework that is equivalent to programming all arose in ancient India.
A most advanced calculus, maths and astronomy arose in Kerala several centuries
before Newton. The cast-iron pillar at Mehraully, which has not rusted for
centuries, speaks volumes of the metallurgy practiced by the ancient Indians.
History reveals that India was the foremost maritime nation 2,000 years ago. India's
maritime history predates the birth of western civilization. All this is
well known and acknowledged by scholars all over the world.
There is evidence
of nuclear war in ancient times. Most radioactive skeletons, on a par with those
found at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, were found at Mohenjodaro during excavations by
archaeologists. Ancient cities whose brick and stonewalls have literally been
fused together, can be found in India, Ireland, Scotland, France, Turkey and
other places. There is no logical explanation for the vitrification of stone
forts and cities, except from an atomic blast. Even Dr. Robert Oppenheimer,
scientist, philosopher, who was familiar
with ancient Sanskrit literature, and the Supervising Scientist of the Manhattan Project, while giving a lecture at Rochester
University only seven years after the first successful atom bomb blast in New
Mexico, gave a strangely qualified answer to a student who asked, “Was the
bomb exploded at Alamogordo during the Manhattan Project the first one to be
detonated?” The answer was, “Well - yes. In modern times, of course.”
Ancient Sanskrit
literature is full of descriptions of flying machines - Vimanas. From the many
documents found it is evident that the scientist-sages Agastya and Bharadwaja
had developed the lore of aircraft construction. The "Agastya Samhita"
gives us description of hydrogen balloons - the process of extracting hydrogen
from water is described in elaborate detail and the use of electricity in
achieving this is clearly stated, and parachute like aeroplane, which could be
opened and shut by operating chords. Vaimaanika Shastra by Maharshi Bharadwaja
deals with aeronautics, including the design of aircraft, the way they can be
used for transportation and other applications, in detail. He also described the
construction of war planes and fighter aircraft. Along with the treatise there
are diagrams of three types of aeroplanes - "Sundara", "Shukana"
and "Rukma". Evidence of existence of aircrafts is also found in the
Arthasastra of Kautilya (3rd century B.C.).
Can all this be mere imaginative
writing or just science fiction? The Indian texts speak about things that no
other civilization thought of until the last century like air and space travel,
embryo transplantation, multiple births from the same embryo, weapons of mass
destruction (all in the Mahabharata), travel through domains where time is
slowed, other galaxies and universes, potentials very much like quantum
potential (Puranas). If nothing else, we must salute the rishis for the most
astonishing and uncanny imagination.
Are
not these achievements in the field of science? Were the marvelous achievements
of the Vedic people only limited to “the intellectual and spiritual fields”?
The vice president’s views are endorsed by many modern scholars and
historians, in India and abroad. Should well-researched concepts and ideas be
ridiculed just because Ganguli feels that aeroplanes and missiles are made by an
“industrial society”? Ganguli’s inability to see beyond what the colonial
historians wrote about India smacks of closed mentality, intolerance towards
contradicting viewpoint, immaturity, arrogance and over-confidence.
Moreover, the knowledge of the
ancient times has been successfully put to test in the modern times. It is
interesting to note that the Academy of Sanskrit Research in Melkote, near
Mandya, had been commissioned by the Aeronautical Research Development Board,
New Delhi, to take up a one-year study, ‘Non-conventional approach to
Aeronautics’, on the basis of Vaimanika Shastra. As a result of the research,
a glass-like material which cannot be detected by radar has been developed by
Prof Dongre, a research scholar of Benaras Hindu University. A plane coated with
this unique material cannot be detected using radar.
Even more interesting is the fact
that Shivkar Bapuji Talpade and his wife in 1895, full eight years before the
Wright Brothers' first flight at Kitty hawk, USA, gave a thrilling demonstration
flight on the Chowpatty beach in Mumbai. Their plane “Marutsakha” was
based on Bharadwaja's research and the details of the Pushpaka Vimana. The most
astonishing feature of Talpade’s aircraft was the power source he used- An Ion
Engine. The theory of the Ion Engine has been credited to Robert Goddard, long
recognized as the father of Liquid-fuel Rocketry. But the fact is that not only
had the idea of an Ion Engine been conceived long before Dr Goddard, it had also
been materialized in the form of Talpade’s aircraft.
It is a fact that other countries
have always taken knowledge from India. The discovery of zero and use of
numerals, the decimal system has been India’s gift to the world. 'Arabic
Numerals' are in fact Hindu numerals. Reiki, Feng-shui, judo karate – all have
their roots in India. One of the greatest scientists of the 20th century, Erwin
Schrodinger from Austria, was directly inspired by Vedanta in his creation of
quantum mechanics, a theory at the basis of all our advances in chemistry,
biochemistry, electronics, and computers.
Much of modern medicine can be
traced to Sushruta (600 B.C.), best known for plastic surgery. His other notable
achievements include treatises on medical ethics, definitions for 121 surgical
implements, control of infection through antiseptics, use of drugs to control
bleeding, toxicology, psychiatry, midwifery, cataract operations and
classification of burns. An illustrated account of an operation performed for
substitute nose near Pune by an unnamed Vaidya sometime in the 18th
century in the presence of two English doctors appeared in the Madras Gazette.
Subsequently, the article was reproduced in the Gentleman's Magazine of London
in October 1794. This description of the operation fired the imagination of
the young English surgeon J.C. Carpue, who after gathering more information on
the "Indian nose" performed two similar operations in 1814 with
successful results. After Carpue published his account, Graefe, a German
surgeon, performed similar plastic operations of the nose using skin from the
arm. After this plastic surgery became popular throughout Europe.
Only a few years ago, the Chinese
discovered some Sanskrit documents in Lhasa, Tibet and sent them to the
University of Chandigarh to be translated. The documents were found to contain
directions for building interstellar spaceships! The Chinese announced that they
were including certain parts of the documents for study in their space program.
Ganguli’s lack
of knowledge (or the deliberate distortion of the same) is a shame. For the
so-called intellectuals of the Indian media, knowledge loaded with pecuniary
benefits, comes from the west. So they mouth the “gobbledy gook” that the
west wants them to speak, oblivious of the harm done to the Indian society and
civilization. Any attempt to study Indian history independent of the colonial
viewpoint is hastily written off as “saffronisation”. It is a fact of
history that in pre-Islamic and pre-Christian India, Hindus lived a life of
glory and prosperity. Politicizing the point by attaching it with the Sangh
parivaar’s ideology cannot change history. It will only misguide the public at
large.
It is media
persons like Ganguli who make a laughing stock of India and Indians. They appear
to be still carrying the burden of the colonial yoke and fail to take pride in
their own heritage. While the west is turning to the Vedas as the books of
ultimate knowledge and wisdom, our intellectuals find studying Vedas
“reaffirming the stereotypical view of a country steeped in backwardness”.
The most modern and westernised Muslims like Imran Khan read the Koran and take
pride in their religion. So is the case with the Christians. The US President,
George Bush follows the Bible and quotes extensively from the same. The
“forwardness” of these modern people does not become questionable by their
association with their centuries old holy books, the stories of which appear to
be very childish and unreal in the modern context. On the other hand if a Hindu
talks of going back to the Vedas, which are much more scientific, secular and
broad in their outlook as compared with the Bible or the Koran, he is looked
upon as backward. Disgusting double-standards indeed!
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