Books
The cover of Nikhil Gulati and Jonathan Mark Kenoyer's book
The Harappan civilization is both a mystery of the past and of the present.
A mystery of the past because its real nature has not yet been completely unveiled and a mystery of the present because there are still living and dynamic threads connecting the present Indian culture to this civilization that was more than 5,000 years old.
While a vast abyss of time separates the present Indian society from the Harappan civilization, it is the stream of culture that unites us with them.
There are not many books in India that capture the excitement of unraveling the Harappan mystery to our children.
In the history textbooks, one used to come across the same old, dull pictures of the 'great bath' and a few pieces of jewellery, almost memorized as a ritual.
Comparing the efforts made by other countries to engage their younger generations with their past through popular books and textbooks, one can't help but feel envious.
In 1996, French-Indian writer Michael Danino penned a book titled, Invasion that Never Was, which delved into the Aryan Invasion theory and discussed the Harappan civilization.
A classroom version of the book was tailored for young children. While some may argue it shows bias against the Indo-European (‘Aryan’) migrationist school, it serves as a well-designed and welcome step in introducing young minds to the mysteries of the Harappan civilization, despite some initial inaccuracies.
In 2002, historian Dr Upinder Singh wrote Mysteries of the Past Archaeological Sites for children. Illustrated by Gautam Trivedi and published by National Book Trust, the book is a wonderful introduction to all the archaeological sites in India, from north to south.
In 2020, writer Sanjeev Sanyal brought out a children’s version of his 2016 book The Ocean of Churn, as The Incredible History of the Indian Ocean, with illustrations from Nikhil Gulati.
The book added another important milestone in taking history to children.
Sanyal admirably accomplished the challenging task of capturing the magnificence of Indian culture's antiquity, continuity, and global interactions.
The latest addition to this much needed genre of ‘taking ancient Indian history to younger generation’, is the book-The People of the Indus: and the birth of civilization in South Asia.
The story line and illustration is done by Nikhil Gulati and the content is mostly provided by Jonathan Mark Kenoyer.
Gulati is both an accomplished illustrator and a fascinating story teller.
His illustrations are crisp and filled with accurate details. One can go through each frame again and again and find a detail to fascinate oneself with – a detail that usually has come from an archaeological discovery and was then condensed and presented to us in the panel.
Kenoyer has spent a lifetime with Harappan archaeology, mostly in Pakistan. His understanding of Harappan culture and civilization is both empirical and holistic.
His collaboration in this work adds a strong element of authenticity. In his introduction, Kenoyer makes another significant observation:
The subject chosen is a veritable mine field.
A small slip and one could be branded as a 'right-wing zealot' or a 'colonised sepoy'. But the authors stick to facts and facts alone, and do not shy away from the larger picture that emerges from the science of archaeology and the knowledge of Indian culture and society.
Once one finishes the book, he or she, child or adult, even a graduate in history, will learn quite a lot of facts the Harappan civilization.
Moen-jo-Daro means ‘Mound of the Dead’. That is what every history book told us. In this one though, the author points out in a note to a panel: ‘The name could have come from the Sindhi term Mohan-jo Daro or the mound of Mohan (Krishna)’ – a small detail that our textbooks ignored.
The book reveals the city's evolution over time, showcasing different people moving in, well-planned street layouts, house designs, and even multi-storey houses.
Harappan culture is depicted as a nuanced idea, evolving from the confluence of 'regional' cultures, with various villages gradually connecting to form an urban centre. The authors explain this process in an easily understandable way.
The book's panels offer a non-linear flow, bringing the Harappan center to life with current archaeological discoveries and engaging narration, adding a magical touch to the reading experience.
An informative infographic map displays Harappan centers along the Indus and Ghaggar-Hakra (Saraswati) rivers, which can be updated with new archaeological discoveries. The authors suggest including this map in textbooks and updating it every five years in consultation with archaeologists.
The next chapter explores why Harappans never built pyramid-like buildings, focusing on their decentralized structure.
The book even presents a quasi-fictional depiction of something resembling elections, mostly reconstructed from archaeological data.
Earlier, Western scholars like Wheeler and Piggott had presented Harappan society as ‘culturally stifled by a rigid bureaucracy.’ A derivative of this view was that symbolic expressions were extremely standardised and there was little room left for creativity.
Their proto-astronomical observations, their number system, their weights system, the flora and fauna of Indus and Ghaggar valleys, their probable religious beliefs and practices, their water management systems – all unfold in the coming panels.
One panel shows similarity between Mulabandhasana and the Indus seal ‘Yogi’. One wonders why we never had such a simple depiction in any of our textbooks?
In the chapter titled 'Journey of a Bead,' Lothal assumes a significant role.
However, the study of marine plankton in that rectangular structure at Lothal provides a different perspective. Microfossil deposits of marine organism Foraminifera have played a crucial role in helping scientists determine the nature of the rectangular structure at Lothal, which was discovered by the late archaeologist Shikaripura Ranganatha Rao.
Dr. Rajiv Nigam, a senior marine scientist, explains how an interdisciplinary investigation resolved the situation:
There may be still objections. Yet for young readers the above use of marine microfossils in deciding a question of archaeology would have made an exciting reading.
The book then moves to the most controversial aspect of Harappan civilization – what language did they speak and what was their relation to Vedic people?
The book presents the arguments of the invasionist school without caricaturing them. The authors also present Michael Witzel’s thesis that the Vedic people who entered the region first encountered Munda culture and only later the Dravidian, thus making Munda a strong candidate for the language of the Harappans (p.121).
However, the following panels present counter-arguments, including the lack of archaeological evidence for an invasion or large people's movement into the Indus regions, astronomical data supporting the antiquity of the Vedas, and mistranslations of Vedic passages.
The authors use the presence of retroflex consonants in the oldest books of Rig Veda, which are not found in other Indo-European languages but are present in Munda and Dravidian, as evidence of the very early presence of Indo-European language speakers in the Indus region.
The book then delves into a detailed description of the paleo-river Saraswati.
The book combines both the so-called indigenous and migrationist schools, offering a credible and thoroughly researched argument for a prolonged interaction model.
According to this model, population groups have been moving in and out of the region for centuries, if not for at least a millennium.
But what were actually these ‘Vedic belief systems’?
Fire rituals? Then what about Kalibangan fire altars?
Soma ritual?
Varuna worship?
According to Iravatham Mahadevan, definitely a migrationist, Soma held a significant place in Harappan culture and was later adopted by the incoming 'Aryans'.
According to Mahadevan, the Soma ritual, a central aspect of Vedic tradition, is connected to one of the most prevalent symbols of Harappan civilization, the Unicorn symbol.
If either Mahadevan or Parpola, or both, are correct, then the core of the 'Vedic' religion is deeply rooted in Harappan culture. In that case, we can conclude that it is likely a marginal linguistic system, slowly evolving within the Harappan milieu, which itself was a synthesis of non-Indo-European (IE) and IE linguistic elements that eventually became dominant.
Was the Varna system then part of the ‘marginal’ Vedic religion?
The book highlights an essential characteristic that it identifies as potentially unique to Harappan civilization: the decentralized and almost egalitarian nature evident in its archaeological remains. The narrator informs readers about this in three panels:
This observation by Kenoyer and the two observations made by Gulati may be related.
From all the descriptions we have of ancient and classical India, the Brahmins never lived a rich affluent life.
In a typical pre-colonial Indian village, there were various quarters with some gradations, but overall, there wasn't much difference in terms of affluence and richness. The huts where Brahmins lived and the huts where farmers lived were quite similar. Archaeologically speaking, the differences between such habitation sites would be minimal.
Even in later periods, the prominent buildings in ancient and classical India were primarily temples, which were common structures housing water bodies, granaries, associated hospitals, and Veda pathasalas (schools).
However, large palaces were conspicuously absent during these periods. It was only during medieval and post-medieval India that such palaces began to appear in the country.
According to Iravatham Mahadevan, the human bearer symbols with jar and lance seen in Harappan seals represented officials with priestly and military duties, respectively.
Another repeated terminal sign of a harrow was interpreted as 'farmer, tiller, tenant,' and this sign, combined with the 'jar,' 'lance,' or 'bearer' signs, suggested a combination of categories or service under them.
Simple humans without the bearer symbols were considered 'servant, attendant, or lower functionary.'
It is quite possible that this was the dominant social system of Harappa, which later integrated into the evolutions from Harappan civilization. Mahadevan even speculates that the pre-Mauryan Janapadas could have descended from this aspect of Harappan civilization.
In other words every element that we see in Vedic tradition has been identified by one scholar or the other as the predominant feature of Harappan society.
The current book, being a masterpiece in itself, would have been enriched further if it had included the scholarly and insightful views of Mahadevan.
The book excels itself in showing the slow and steady decline of Harappan civilization and its various causes. It is not dramatic or apocalyptic. Instead, Gulati creatively showcases his visual and storytelling skills to present the facts and scientific evidence to young readers, illustrating how a civilization declines and then undergoes transformation.
While the term "second urbanization" may be considered a misnomer, there is a compelling case for continuity with significant changes.
This is a book that is a must in every school library. This is a book which should be a mandatory guide to every text-book writer.
Only a few people are fortunate enough to experience and comprehend a living bronze culture with significant continuities while being an integral part of that culture itself. Nikhil Gulati not only possesses this blessing but has also utilized his creative talents in visualization and storytelling to produce this marvellous contribution.