Author: Ajay Mitra Shastri
Publisher: Aryan
Year: 2002
Language: English
Pages: 148
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8173052190
Description
It is often stated and the common people made to believe that the people of what was anciently called Pragjyotisha and its surroundings in the North-east were outside the mainstream of Indian life and culture, and the Aryans attempted to colonise them and impose upon them their alien culture. The utter falsity of this motivated propaganda has been amply demonstrated in the present work with strong evidences. It has been shown that the word arya had originally no racial or linguistic connotation and that in the past it was employed in purely cultural sense.
It was given, evidently deliberately, a racial sense by the Europeans with a vested interest to sow the seeds of dissension among their Indian subjects and there by perpetuate their rule which has confused large sections of people. It has been shown that from the earliest recorded times the people of the North-East and those of the rest of India were aware of and had a close interaction with one another. And with the passage of time these contacts grew more and more intimate and the region in question and the rest of the country contributed to the common cultural development enriching each other. The monograph thus seeks to trace chronologically and in a pan-Indian perspective the politico-cultural contacts that the region had with the rest of the Indian people.