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ravichaudhary
March 4th, 2003, 10:41 PM
Another view of jats and their history from http://www.jatsclub.com/


Ravi

In the ordinary course of nature, thousands upon thousands are born everyday; but he alone is truly born whose birth leads to the elevation of his race.” (Hitopdesh)
History of India, as it is taught in our schools, colleges and universities, leaves many questions unanswered. Almost every alternate step, we have to put a question mark, and these question marks start from the very beginning of the historical period. Were the Aryans, native to India, or did they come from outside? If the latter, from where? Who were the Nandas and Mauryas? Why are they called the initiators of the Age of Sudra rulers? What happened to the Ksaharatas and the republican Tribes? Who were the Guptas? Why do the Puranas not mention the kings of the Maurya/Gupta dynasty? Who started our national eras, the Saka and the Vikram Samvatas? Why are the Abhiras termed as Mahasudra by the the Sanskrit grammarians? They were ruling in many parts of India with the Gujjars, and yet why they were hated by the Hindu society? Who are the Jats, Gujjars, Ahirs and Rajputs? Are they the ancient Ksatriyas of India or have they come from outside? The list of such vital questions is unending indeed; and we have not found the answers because we limit our search to India alone. We take Jambudvipa to be identical with India and search for the solutions here, where, where they are not to be found.
It was only in 1925 that Prof. Kalika Ranjan Quanungo’s History of the Jats appeared. It is still the soundest book on the subject; it is a scholarly, but not an inspired work. In the last 70 rears quite a few books in Hindi came on the subject; notable by Th. Desh Raj Singh, Kaviraj Dr. Yogender Pal Shastri, Capt. Dilip Singh Ahlawat and Sri B.S. Dahiya, “JATS THE ANCIENT RULERS” in English. All these are very painstaking, laudable efforts and deserve the gratitude and appreciation of a thankful community to the various authors. These commendable works are good reference sources of different gotras, families and community; yet they fall short of rigorous, critical and authentic historical acceptance. The jats have a proud history, but no historian. They have long memories, but little sense of history. Their record in patriotic velour is glorious.
In India, after the resurrection of Hinduism against Budhism by Adi Sharachaya, Kumaril Bhatt and Ramanujam, the castle-Brahim became the sole arbiter of new order and hierarchy. They distorted history and social precedence to suit them. The Jat’s spirit of freedom and equality refused to submit to brahmanical Hinduism. That part of Kshatriyas (Martial Races) who accepted the Brahmanical Supremacy unconditionally became the favourites and were given dignified name of Raj-Putra (Son of Kings), the modern-day Rajputs. The other portion of the Kshatriyas, who joined Hinduism late reluctantly in a group (jat) and never accepted the hegemony of Brahmins drew their censure and contempt. The Brahmin’s denigration of the Jat did not in the least lower the Jat in his own eyes, On the Contrary, he assumed a somewhat condescending attitude towards the Brahmin, whom he considered little better than a soothsayer or a beggar, or the Rajput, who disdained earning an honest living and was proud of being a mercenary.
The Indo-Scythian theory, associated with the names of some of the greatest scholars in the field of Indian History and Ethnology, has so long held the field and stifled doubt by the force of autho- rity. V. A. Smith, the last learned champion of this theory, says “When the numerous Bala, Indo-Scythian, Gujjar, and Huna tribes of the 6th century horde settled, their princely houses were accepted as Rajput, while those who frankly took to agriculture became Jat.” Elsewhere he remarks, “There is reason for believing that the Jats entered India later than the Gujjars, rather about the same time.”
The following points may. however, be urged against this theory:-
(1) Col. Tod’s inscriptional evidence of the existence of a Jit ruling dynasty as old as 409 A.D.


(2) The traditional enmity between the Rajput and the Jat makes it extremely doubtful that they had entered India-if they did it at all-at the same time as comrades, but had afterwards become divided into two hostile groups. Everywhere we find the earlier Jat occupant of the soil supplanted by the new Rajput immigrants. The Pramar displaced him in Malwa, and the Tunwar snatched away Delhi from him. The Rathor wrested Bikanir and the Bhatti imposed his rule upon him at Jaisalmir .

(3) The Scythians who were very probably men with broad faces, and high cheek-bones, sturdy and short in stature, are little likely to have been the ancestors of a tall-statured and long-headed people like the Jats.

(4) A great blunder committed by the enthusiastic exponents of the Indo-Scythian theory was to overlook the line of migration of the people who call themselves Jat to-day. The tradition of almost all the Jat clans of the Punjab (even including an apparently extra-Indian people, the Babbar Jats of Dera Ghazikhan), points to the east or south-east—Oudh, Rajputana and the Central Provinces - as their original home. If popular tradition counts for anything, it points to the view that they are an essentially Indo- Aryan people who have migrated from the east to the west, and not Indo-Scythians who Poured in from the Oxus Valley. Un-doubtedly a certain section of the Jats migrated outside India along with the Bhattis and after several centuries were swept back from the borders of Persia to the east of the Indus. But they cannot be justly called foreign invaders on that account.

It is perhaps against the rule of historical evidence to identify the Jats with the Gaete, Yuti, Yetha or other Indo-Scythian people simply for the sake of the resemblance of sound between their names, in defiance of the evidence of philology and ethnology to the contrary. It is of little use to point out the place of the Jatas or Su-jatas in the great genealogical tree of the Yadu race, when doubt hangs upon the very origin of the Yadu race, themselves. CoI. Tod made a rather desperate attempt to prove the common origin of the Tatars, the Chinese and the Aryan Kshatriyas of the Luuar race by a study of the comparative genealogical trees of these three races and the traditions of their origin.

Wilson, who held the Purans to be not older than 1045 A.D., also suspected that the Hayas and the Haihayas of the Hindus had some connection with the Hia, .......”who make a figure in the Chinese history. It is not impossible, however, that we have confirmatory evidence of the Scythian origin of the Haihayas as Col. Tod supposed”. In short, it has been suspected by many European Orientalists that a Central Asian genealogy entered India with the Indo-Scythic races and was cleverly engrafied on the Indo-Aryan genealogical tree by the unscrupulous Hindu ethnologist, who dubbed the descendants of the barbarian invaders as Kshatriyas of the Lunar race.


Fictitious genealogies both of individuals and peoples are among the commonest phenomena in the history of all nations. But what is the motive behind this ? First, a successful upstart or a little esteemed tribe rising to importance which had no brilliant past wants to create one of fanciful grandeur to serve as worthy background of their bright present and brighter future. Secondly, people adapt their genealogy to their newly-adopted religion or to that of their more powerful and more civilized neighbours. Such is the case with the Muhammadan people outside Arabia. Many tribes of Afghanistan, who were idol-worshipping Buddhists as late as the time of Sultan Mahmud Ghaznavi, are found to-day claiming descent from Khalid, a renowned contemporary of the Prophet (Dom’s trans. of the Makhzan-i-Afaghana]. The Buddhistic Turks on their conversion to Islam made similar changes to suit the Arab tradition. It is notorious how Indian converts to Islam set up ludicrous claims to Shaikh or Sayyid origin. What Arabia was to the Muslim people outside it, that India had been before the birth of Christ to the Buddhistic people of the Middle and the Far East. It is a known fact of history that China and Tartary received Buddhism from the Indian missionaries. No Hindu has been ever known to claim a Chinese origin, but the people of China, as Sir William Jones pointed out, claim a Hindu lineage.

The exponents of the Indo-Scythian theory must, in all fairness, admit that if the Central Asian Gaete could somehow become the Aryan Jadu or Jat, by a reverse process the Indian Jadu might as well degenerate into the Gaete in Central Asia. From the time of the conquest of the Indus valley by Darius to the dissolution of the Maurya empire (cir. 600 B.C.-200 B.C.), Indian tribes streamed out in continuous flow into other parts of Asia, under various circumstances. Just as the English Government encouraged the Gurkha and Sikh mercenaries to find colonies in different parts of the Indian empire, specially in Burmah, and as the Russian Government a few centuries back established the hardy and war- like Tatar Cossacks on the Don and other exposed points of their empire, similarly, the Indian mercenaries or forced recruits who served the Persian empire from the day of Marathon and Thermopylae to ihat of Arbela-were perhaps settled on the coast of the Black Sea where they became known as the Sindis and Kerketae. Besides military service, commercial enterprise also possibly took the Indian people to different countries.

The greatest impetus to this foreign migration was given by the extension of the Maurya empire to the Hindukush, and the subsequent spread of Buddhism throughout Central Asia and China. The rapid Indianization of Turkistan, attested by Fa-Hian and other Chinese pilgrims who passed through that region to India, could not have been achieved by a handful of missionaries only but also perhaps by the Indian merchant and the Indian mercenary. As with the spread of Islam, the Arab was always a welcome emigrant among Muslim people, so had been the Indian in the newly converted Buddhistic countries. It can be legitimately inferred that those Central Asian Buddhistic kingdoms as well as the Greek principalities of the Middle East encouraged the migration of the Indian people into their own country in pursuit of a policy like that of Peter the Great of Russia, who recruited his official nobility from the Germans and encouraged the migration of artisans from the countries of Western Europe to westernise the Oriental Russia. And the lead in the foreign migration was given by the unorthodox and enterprising Yadus who rapidly multiplied, absorbing no doubt many outlandish elements from the Punjab tribes. That the race of Yadu migrated outside India is supported by the tradition of the Bhattis of Jaisalmir, who ruled Zabulistan till the advent of Islam in that country. In their foreign colonies only the aristocratic section of the Yadus, such as the Bhattis, perhaps kept their blood unadulterated; but the rank and file freely inter-marrying with the alien races of Tartary had produced a people of Turkoman type, speaking a Turkish language. Alberuni mentions a Turkish tribe with an unmistakeable Indian name Bhattavaryan. Two other tribes of Central Asia who are supposed to be the ancestors of the Jats are the Dahae and Massagetae (Great Gate), on the eastern coast of the Caspian [Rajasthan]. The Dahae are said to be the same people as the Dahas of the Vishnu Puran (Wilson, Vishnu Puran) and the modern Dahiya Jats. This is a mere suggestion without any historical proof except the similarity of sound. On the same principle one may hold that the Dahae on the Caspian were a section of the Yadus, who bore in the time of Mahabharat the tribal name of Dashai, easily reducible to Dahai

.
We are told that the Jats were called Sus, A bars, and by many other names. The fact is not that the Jats adopted the name of Su-Sakas or Abhirs but that these latter people took the tribal designation of the former, their more esteemed superiors. Further we find “The Yuchi, established in Bactria and along the Jihoon, eventually bore the name of Jeta or Yetan, i.e., the Gaetes.” [Histoire des Huns]. What on earth could induce all these conquering tribes, the Saka, the Yuchi, the Hun, and other Turkish people to assume such designations as Yeta, Gaete, and Bhattavaryan? This leads one naturally to suspect that there must be some fascination, some great tradition of nobler blood and higher civilization associated with this name, having as much attraction for these Central Asian tribes as the proud name “Rajput” has for all the martial Hindu tribes of India.

These descendants of the ancient Indo-Aryan colonists settled on the banks of the Oxus and the coast of the Black Sea stood in the same relation to Aryandom Aristrocracy of Aryans as the descendants of the present generation of the Indian emigrants in the far off Fiji and in the wilderness of Africa will stand to ours after a century or two when their Indian nationality will hardly be recognizable owing to admixture of blood, and religious and linguistic differences from their parent stock.
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