Everybody wants to take the name for great development

Topic started by Indian (@ hor186103.uea.ac.uk) on Thu Aug 8 06:03:42 .
All times in EST +10:30 for IST.

I have read an article posted in russia.com which indirectly cliam that they were aryans who invaded india. And in some german magazine they claim themselves to be the aryans who established the culture. Now are we result of them or are they result of us ?
http://www.russia.com/forums/showthread.php3?threadid=8360
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Russian Similar To Sanskrit :--
The Indo-European languages, which are spoken in most of Europe, and much of Iran, Pakistan, and India, really do come from a common ancestor. This can easily be seen when one looks at the astonishing similarity between Russian and Sanskrit.

This is from pages 58 and 59 of DREVNOST': AR'I. SLAVYANYE. (ANTIQUITY: ARYANS. SLAVS). Moscow, Paleya. 1996. "Link Between Russian and Sanskrit" , a lecture given on Feb 22 1964 in Moscow by Prof. Durga Prasad Shastri at the Indo-Soviet Cultural Society:

"If I were asked what two languages of the world resembled each other most, I would reply without hesitation: 'Russian and Sanskrit.'"

"When I went to Moscow, the Manager of my hotel game me the key for Room No. 234 and said 'Dwesti tridtsat chetire'. For a moment I could not decide whether I was standing before a pretty girl in Moscow or I was in Banaras or Ujjain of our classical period of some 2,000 years ago. In Sanskrit 234 is 'Dwishat tridasha chatwar.'"

"Here is another Russian sentence; 'To vash dom, etot nash dom'. [That is your house, this is our house] In Sanskrit it is: 'tat vas dham, etat nas dham.'"

"How I wished that Panini, the great Indian grammarian who lived some 2,800 years ago, could listen to the language of his own times so wonderfully preserved with the least possible variations in this part of the world. The Russian word "sewn'[syn] is 'son' in English, and 'soonu' in Sankskrit. Also, 'madiy' of Sanskrit may be compared with 'moy' of Russian and 'my' of English. But it is only Russian and Sanskrit in which the possessive pronoun 'moy' and 'madiy' must be changed to 'moya' and 'madiya' because it qualifies the word 'snokha' which is feminine. The Russian word snokha is snukha in Sanskrit and can be pronounced either way. Here the relationship goes beyond the son on to the wife of the son too by similar words in both languages."

"The word 'is' is also very similar in both, 'est' in Russian and 'asti' in Sanskrit and yet another 'estestvo' in Russian and 'Astitva' in Sanskrit meaning 'existence' in both."

The Lithuanian language is even more similar to Sanskrit.
Indo-European formed in eastern Ukraine and the area to the east of there around 4000 BC. The migrations of the Indo-Aryans can be traced in archaeology across Kazakhstan and Afghanistan into the Indus River Valley. Ancient Indian writings are adamant that these people were white Aryan invaders from a very cold land far to the north who looked down on the dark-skinned natives of South Asia. Some had blond hair and blue eyes. Anthropology and genetics also confirm their European origin. Skeletons from this period were similar to those of Europe, while modern Y-chromosome studies indicate the European origin of about half of the Y chromosomes in northern India. Mitochondrial studies of the female line indicate that about 5% are of European origin. The Aryans took many concubines among the dark-skinned Dravidians they conquered.

Some Hindu nationalists, American Maharishi cultists, and American liberals have joined forces to make pseudo-scientific claims that Sankrit originated in India and that there was no Aryan invasion, but this is just wishful thinking and ignorance.


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