ManishH wrote:At some level, it is sad to see that the defence of OIT lies in the hand of people unwilling to check basic Sanskrit grammar. And at the same time accuse a scholar like Julius Eggeling who, with the limited resource of 19th century, has devoted his whole life to study of Vedic texts of "no cultural insight". What cultural insight, maharāya, do you show when you fumble at basic 'sup' vibhakti taught in lesson 1 or 2 of Sanskrit ? I suspect it is because you don't like that he was a westerner.
You see when the Kshatriyas of a nation get bought over and co-opted and either they align with the Mughals or they conscript themselves in the British Army as Sepoys, then of course the common farmer would have to pick up the lathi!
It is indeed sad as you say!
But the thing is very few on this thread are really claiming to be Sanskrit scholars, so really any rebuke for less than perfect knowledge of Sanskrit by them is nothing more than
'putdown-rhetoric', which one sees so often in the 'Western Sanskritist circles'. It is like hitting a baby in the face and saying one is strong!
In India there has been almost zero research in comparative and historical linguistics which involves non-Indic languages, and if there has been any, Indian academics have really taken over what the racist Westerners had fabricated earlier, all in the Macaulayist submissive manner! The Indian political leadership has simply not deemed it important to encourage this field of study, and the various traditional Sanskrit scholars in India are not acclimatized to an academic environment of peer reviews and Western accredited scholarship.
It is indeed sad as you say!
So no, Sanskrit may not be the strong point of many of us here, nor do we claim it to be so, but what 'Indigenists' do have is logic on their side, enough logic to see when some fakeology is being promoted in the name of scholarship!
The biggest in-the-face-glaring fakeology starts with the Language Tree itself! It is nice that the linguists have tried to decorate it like a Christmas Tree, but it is a fake plastic tree!
Where in the tree are all the languages which were spoken in Europe before the arrival of the "Indo-Europeans" there? Why is Basque an isolate? What is the history of the substrates in various Germanic languages? Why are Hindi, Gujarati, Bengali, Punjabi all daughters of Sanskrit?
The whole common origin theory of Proto-Indo-European is really nonsense because that flies in the face of how languages develop. It would be far more a bidirectional graph than a hierarchy!
So if the basic model of European linguistics is wrong, how is one to evaluate the sciences of such a community. Of course as fakeology, because the whole effort of these linguists is channelized in upholding this unnatural tree, a simplistic thinking which grew out of the simple minds of the 19th century European scholars!
On the other hand it must also be said, that linguistics can be used to show commonality relationships between various languages, and perhaps their evolution, but never evolution as long as they adhere to linear sound-change evolution models.
The biggest fakeology is
"Common Source == Single Source"!
So what the farmers with their lathis are going to do is to improve their martial skills and with time bring down the AIT fortress based on make-believe scholarship!
The Sikhs did it once with arms, and Indics too though yet not learned in the ways and 'sorcery'

of the Western 'Sanskritists' can do so by nibbling at their foundations with teeth of logic!
Somebody please give me a prize for corny rhetorical poetry - the Zafar Shamsheer Prize would be good! 