Urdu/Hindi: An Artificial Divide: African Heritage, Mesopotamian roots, Indian Culture & British Colonialism (The Politics of Language)

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Description

In a blow against the British Empire, Khan suggests that London artificially divided India’s Hindu and Muslim populations by splitting their one language in two, then burying the evidence in difficult to understand scholarly works out of doors the public view. All language is political — and so is the boundary between one language and another. The creator analyzes the origins of Urdu, some of the earliest known languages, and propounds the iconoclastic views that, Hindi came from pre-Aryan Dravidian and Austric-Munda, not from Aryan’s Sanskrit (which, like the Indo-European languages, Greek and Latin, and the like., are rooted in the Middle East/Mesopotamia and not in Europe); Hindi’s script came from the Aramaic system, very similar to Greek, and In the 1800s, the British initiated the divisive game of splitting one language in two, Hindi (for the Hindus) and Urdu (for the Muslims). These facts, he says, have been buried and nearly lost in turgid academic works. Khan bolsters his hypothesis with copious technical linguistic examples. This may spark a revolution in linguistic history! Urdu/Hindi: An Artificial Divide integrates the “out of Africa” linguistic evolution theory with the fossil linguistics of Middle East, and discards the theory that Sanskrit descended from a hypothetical proto-IndoEuropean language and by degeneration created dialects, Urdu/Hindi and others. It shows that several tribes from the Middle East created the hybrid by cumulative evolution. The oldest groups, Austric and Dravidian, starting 8000 B.C. provided the grammar/syntax plus about 60% of vocabulary, SKT added 10% after 1500 B.C. and Arabic/Persian 20-30% after A.D. 800. The book reveals Mesopotamia as the linguistic melting pot of Sumerian, Babylonian, Elamite, Hittite-Hurrian-Mitanni, and the like., with a common script and vocabularies shared mutually and passed on to IE, SKT, DR, Arabic and then to Hindi/Urdu; in truth the creator locates oldest evidence of SKT in Syria. The book also exposes the myths of a “revealed” SKT or Hebrew and the fiction of linguistic races, i.e. Aryan, Semitic, and the like. The book supports the “one world concept” and reveals the potential for Urdu/Hindi to unite all genetic elements, races and regions of the Indo-Pakistan sub-continent. This is vital reading not only for those interested to keep in mind the divisive exploitation of languages in British-led India’s partition, but for those interested in – The science and history of origin of Urdu/Hindi (and other languages) – The false claims of “linguistic races and creation” – History of Languages and Scripts – Language, Mythology and Racism – Ancient History and Fossil Languages – British Rule and India’s Partition

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