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雅利安人与泰米尔人

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中文

雅利安人与达罗毗荼人

这真是一座货真价实的民族学博物馆!或许,近来在苏门答腊发现的那具进化中间环节的半猿骸骨,在这里经过搜寻也能找到。石棚墓葬绝不匮乏。燧石工具几乎在任何地方都能挖掘出土。湖居人——至少是河居人——曾几何时必然遍布各处。穴居人与叶衣人至今仍存。栖居林中的原始猎人在全国各地均有迹可循。其后便是历史上更为可考的族群——尼格里托-科尔人(Negrito-Kolarian)、达罗毗荼人与雅利安人。历经岁月,几乎所有已知种族,以及许多至今仍属未知的种族,纷纷以各种面貌加入其中——蒙古种各支,蒙古人、鞑靼人和语文学家所谓的"雅利安人"。波斯人、希腊人、昀支人、匈奴人、秦人、斯基泰人以及更多民族,熔于一炉,融而为一,还有犹太人、帕西人、阿拉伯人、蒙古人,乃至维京人的后裔与日耳曼森林之主,尚未消化——如此一片人类的汪洋,由这些种族的浪潮所构成,翻腾、沸涌、激荡,不断更易形态,此消彼长,涌现于表面,向四方蔓延,吞噬小者,复又消退沉寂——这便是印度的历史。

在这自然界的纷乱之中,相互竞争的派系之一发现了一种方法,凭借其文化的优越性,成功地将最大多数的印度人置于其统治之下。

自称优越的这一族群将自身命名为雅利安人(Âryas),意为贵族,其方法便是种姓职分制度(Varnâshramâchâra)——即所谓的种姓制度(caste)。

当然,雅利安种族的成员有意无意地为自己保留了相当多的特权;然而,种姓制度历来极具弹性,有时弹性过大,以至于无法保证文化层次极低的种族获得健康的上升机会。

至少在理论上,它将整个印度置于指引之下——这种指引并非财富,也非刀剑,而是理智——由灵性所磨砺和约束的理智。印度的领导种姓是雅利安人中最高的一级——婆罗门(Brahmins)。

尽管表面上与其他民族的社会方式有所不同,若仔细审视,雅利安种姓制度并非如此迥异,除了在以下两点上:

第一点是,在其他每一个国家,最高的荣誉属于刹帝利(Kshatriya)——即持剑者。罗马教皇乐于将自己的血统追溯到莱茵河畔某位强盗男爵。在印度,最高的荣誉属于平和之人——婆罗门,神之人。

印度最伟大的国王,会为能将自己的血统追溯到某位栖居林间的古代圣贤而深感自豪——那圣贤很可能是一位出家隐士,身无长物,仰赖村民供给日常所需,终其一生探索今生与来世的诸般问题。

第二点是,其差异在于计算单位的不同。世界上其他每一个国家的种姓法则,都将男性或女性个体作为充分的单位。财富、权力、智识或美貌,足以使个人超越出生时的地位,攀升至他所能达到的任何高度。

在这里,单位是一个种姓共同体的所有成员。

在这里,一个人同样有充分的机会从低种姓上升至较高或最高的种姓:只是,在这片利他主义的诞生之地,一个人被迫携带他整个种姓一同上升。

在印度,你不能凭借财富、权力或任何其他功绩,将帮助过你的人抛诸脑后而与你的上等人为伍;你不能剥夺那些在你获取卓越成就过程中有所助益之人应得的利益,转而以轻蔑作为回报。若你想在印度上升至更高的种姓,你必须先提升你整个种姓,而后前进的道路上便再无任何阻碍能够拦截你。

这便是印度的融合方法,从远古以来便是如此。因为在印度,此类情形远比其他地方更为普遍。"雅利安人"和"达罗毗荼人"这些称谓,仅具语文学意义,所谓颅骨学上的分化,根本找不到坚实的立足之地。

同样,婆罗门、刹帝利等名称亦复如是。它们不过代表着一个自身始终处于流动变化中的共同体所处的地位,即便在其抵达顶峰之后,一切进一步的努力都指向类型的固化——通过禁止通婚,通过被迫接纳来自低种姓或外邦的新群体纳入其麾下。

无论哪个种姓掌握刀剑之权,便成为刹帝利;无论哪个种姓拥有学问,便成为婆罗门;无论哪个种姓握有财富,便成为吠舍(Vaishya)。

那些已经抵达所追求目标的群体,确实试图通过在同一种姓内设立更多次级划分,使自己与新来者保持距离;但事实是,从长远来看,它们终将融为一体。这种状况就在我们眼前发生,遍及全印度。

自然而然地,一个提升了自身地位的群体会试图将特权保留于己身。因此,每逢有机会借助某位国王的力量,较高种姓,尤其是婆罗门,便会试图以刀剑——若切实可行的话——压制较低种姓中类似的渴望。然而问题是:他们成功了吗?请仔细审视你们的往世书(Purânas)与副往世书(Upa-puranas),尤其是大往世书中地方篇章,放眼看看你们身边正在发生的一切,你便会找到答案。

尽管我们有着形形色色的种姓,尽管现代有着限制通婚于同一种姓内部各次级划分的习俗(尽管这并不普遍),在一切意义上,我们都是一个混血的民族。

无论"雅利安"和"达罗毗荼"这些语文学术语意味着什么,即便退一步假定印度人类这两大次级划分皆来自西北边疆之外,自最远古以来,其分界线一直是语言的,而非血缘的。《吠陀》(Vedas)中那些表达对达修人(Dasyus)丑陋外貌的鄙视之辞,没有一条能够适用于伟大的达罗毗荼种族;事实上,若在雅利安人与达罗毗荼人之间进行外貌比较,没有任何理智之人敢于预言其结果。

印度任何种姓自我标榜的出身优越性,都不过是一个纯粹的神话,而令人遗憾的是,在印度没有任何地方,它因语言差异而找到如南方那般适宜生长的土壤。

我们有意回避深入探讨南方这种社会暴政的细节,正如我们也克制自己不去仔细审视各种现代婆罗门及其他种姓的起源。只需指出一点便已足够:马德拉斯省(Madras Presidency)婆罗门与非婆罗门之间所呈现出的极度紧张情绪。

我们相信,印度种姓制度是主赐予人类的最伟大的社会制度之一。我们也相信,尽管那些不可避免的缺陷、外来的迫害,以及最重要的——许多不配享有这一名号的婆罗门的惊人无知与傲慢,从多方面阻碍了这一最为辉煌的印度制度得到合理的结果,但它已然为婆罗多(Bharata)之地创造了奇迹,并注定将引领印度的人类走向其最终目标。

我们诚恳地呼吁南方的婆罗门,不要忘记印度的理想——培育一个婆罗门的宇宙,纯洁如纯洁本身,善良如神明本身:《摩诃婆罗多》说,这是起初如此,终末亦将如此。

那么,任何自称婆罗门的人,都应首先以彰显那种灵性来证明其所言非虚,其次要将他人提升到同样的境界。从这一标准来看,他们中的大多数似乎只是在养育一种虚妄的出身傲慢;任何能够以奉承的诡辩迎合这种虚荣与根深蒂固的懒惰的策划者,无论本国的还是外来的,似乎都能令大多数人满足。

婆罗门们,当心啊,这是死亡的征兆!奋起吧,以提升你们周围的非婆罗门来彰显你们的男儿气概,你们的婆罗门精神——不是以主人的姿态——不是带着那腐烂的自我主义之毒疮,爬满了东西方的迷信与骗术——而是以仆人的精神。因为真正懂得如何服务的人,才懂得如何统治。

非婆罗门们也一直在将自己的精力用于煽动种姓仇恨之火——这种做法毫无意义,无法解决问题——每一个非印度教徒都非常乐意向这堆火上添一把柴。

通过这些种姓之间的争吵,没有任何进步可言,没有任何困难能够消除;只会将有益的历史前进步伐阻遏,或许数世纪之久,若这把火燃为熊熊烈焰的话。

这将是佛教政治失误的重演。

在这场无知的喧嚣与仇恨之中,我们欣然发现萨瓦利罗扬(D. Savariroyan)班智达正在追循唯一合理、唯一明智的路线。萨瓦利罗扬班智达没有将宝贵的生命力浪费在愚蠢无谓的争吵之上,而是在《悉檀多深论》(Siddhânta Deepikâ)上发表了关于"雅利安人与达罗毗荼人的融合"的系列文章,不仅致力于廓清过于冒进的西方语文学所造成的大量迷雾,还为更好地理解南方的种姓问题铺平道路。

没有人通过乞讨能获得任何东西。我们只获得我们所应得的。应得的第一步是渴望;而当我们感到自己配得到时,渴望才会成功。

因此,轻柔而清晰地拂去所谓"雅利安理论"及其一切有害推论的蜘蛛网,是绝对必要的,尤其对于南方而言;同时,通过了解雅利安种族伟大先祖之一——伟大的达罗毗荼人——过去的辉煌,来建立恰当的自尊。

尽管面临西方理论的挑战,我们仍坚守我们在圣典中所找到的"雅利安"(Arya)一词的定义,该定义仅指我们现在称为印度教徒的那个群体。这一雅利安种族,本身便是两大种族——讲梵语者与讲泰米尔语者——的融合,适用于所有印度教徒。某些法论书(Smritis)中将首陀罗(Shudras)排除于这一称谓之外,并不说明什么问题,因为首陀罗过去是、现在也依然是等待时机的雅利安人——处于见习期的雅利安人。

尽管我们知道萨瓦利罗扬班智达正行走在相当不稳固的地基之上,尽管我们对他关于吠陀名称与种族的许多大刀阔斧的解释持有异议,但我们仍为他承担了一项任务而感到欣慰——那就是开始对这伟大的印度文明之母的文化进行适当的考察——若讲梵语的种族是父亲的话。

我们也为他大胆推进古达罗毗荼人的阿卡德-苏美尔族裔认同感到高兴。这使我们为那个在所有其他文明之前便已盛放的伟大文明的血脉感到自豪——与其古老性相比,雅利安人和闪米特人不过是孩子。

我们还建议,埃及人所称的"普特之地"(Punt)不仅仅是马拉巴尔(Malabar),而且埃及人作为一个种族,是从马拉巴尔渡海迁移,沿着尼罗河由北向南进入三角洲地带,而他们始终深情地回望着那个他们称之为"福地"的故土普特。

这是朝着正确方向迈出的一步。随着对达罗毗荼语言以及梵文文学、哲学与宗教中达罗毗荼元素的更深入研究,更为详尽与审慎的工作必将随之而来。有谁比那些以达罗毗荼语言为母语的人更具资格承担这项工作呢?

至于我们吠檀多主义者(Vedântins)和游方僧(Sannyâsins),我们为我们讲梵语的吠陀祖先而自豪;为我们讲泰米尔语的祖先而自豪——他们的文明是迄今所知最为古老的;我们为我们的科尔人祖先而自豪,他们比上述两者都更为古老——他们在森林中生活与狩猎;我们为我们使用燧石工具的祖先而自豪——他们是人类最早的成员;若进化论是真理,我们也为我们的动物祖先而自豪,因为他们比人类本身还要古老。我们为自己是整个宇宙——无论有情还是无情——的后裔而自豪。为诞生而自豪,为劳作而自豪,为受苦而自豪——更为自豪的是,当任务完成之时,我们死去,永远进入那个再无幻象的国度。

English

ARYANS AND TAMILIANS

A veritable ethnological museum! Possibly, the half-ape skeleton of the recently discovered Sumatra link will be found on search here, too. The Dolmens are not wanting. Flint implements can be dug out almost anywhere. The lake-dwellers — at least the river-dwellers — must have been abundant at one time. The cave-men and leaf-wearers still persist. The primitive hunters living in forests are in evidence in various parts of the country. Then there are the more historical varieties — the Negrito-Kolarian, the Dravidian, and the Aryan. To these have been added from time to time dashes of nearly all the known races, and a great many yet unknown — various breeds of Mongoloids, Mongols, Tartars, and the so-called Aryans of the philologists. Well, here are the Persian, the Greek, the Yunchi, the Hun, the Chin, the Scythian, and many more, melted and fused, the Jews, Parsees, Arabs, Mongols, down to the descendants of the Vikings and the lords of the German forests, yet undigested — an ocean of humanity, composed of these race-waves seething, boiling, struggling, constantly changing form, rising to the surface, and spreading, and swallowing little ones, again subsiding — this is the history of India.

In the midst of this madness of nature, one of the contending factions discovered a method and, through the force of its superior culture, succeeded in bringing the largest number of Indian humanity under its sway.

The superior race styled themselves the Âryas or nobles, and their method was the Varnâshramâchâra — the so-called caste.

Of course the men of the Aryan race reserved for themselves, consciously or unconsciously a good many privileges; yet the institution of caste has always been very flexible, sometimes too flexible to ensure a healthy uprise of the races very low in the scale of culture.

It put, theoretically at least, the whole of India under the guidance — not of wealth, nor of the sword — but of intellect — intellect chastened and controlled by spirituality. The leading caste in India is the highest of the Aryans — the Brahmins.

Though apparently different from the social methods of other nations, on close inspection, the Aryan method of caste will not be found so very different except on two points:

The first is, in every other country the highest honour belongs to the Kshatriya — the man of the sword. The Pope of Rome will be glad to trace his descent to some robber baron on the banks of the Rhine. In India, the highest honour belongs to the man of peace — the Sharman the Brahmin, the man of God.

The greatest Indian king would be gratified to trace his descent to some ancient sage who lived in the forest, probably a recluse, possessing nothing, dependent upon the villagers for his daily necessities, and all his life trying to solve the problems of this life and the life hereafter.

The second point is, the difference of unit. The law of caste in every other country takes the individual man or woman as the sufficient unit. Wealth, power, intellect, or beauty suffices for the individual to leave the status of birth and scramble up to anywhere he can.

Here, the unit is all the members of a caste community.

Here, too, one has every chance of rising from a low caste to a higher or the highest: only, in this birth-land of altruism, one is compelled to take his whole caste along with him.

In India, you cannot, on account of your wealth, power, or any other merit, leave your fellows behind and make common cause with your superiors; you cannot deprive those who helped in your acquiring the excellence of any benefit therefrom and give them in return only contempt. If you want to rise to a higher caste in India, you have to elevate all your caste first, and then there is nothing in your onward path to hold you back.

This is the Indian method of fusion, and this has been going on from time immemorial. For in India, more there elsewhere. Such words as Aryans and Dravidians are only of philological import, the so-called craniological differentiation finding no solid ground to work upon.

Even so are the names Brahmin, Kshatriya, etc. They simply represent the status of a community in itself continuously fluctuating, even when it has reached the summit and all further endeavours are towards fixity of the type by non-marriage, by being forced to admit fresh groups, from lower castes or foreign lands, within its pale.

Whatever caste has the power of the sword, becomes Kshatriya; whatever learning, Brahmin; whatever wealth, Vaishya.

The groups that have already reached the coveted goal, indeed, try to keep themselves aloof from the newcomers, by making sub-divisions in the same caste, but the fact remains that they coalesce in the long run. This is going on before our own eyes, all over India.

Naturally, a group having raised itself would try to preserve the privileges to itself. Hence, whenever it was possible to get the help of a king, the higher castes, especially the Brahmins, have tried to put down similar aspirations in lower castes, by the sword if practicable. But the question is: Did they succeed? Look closely into your Purânas and Upa-puranas, look especially into the local Khandas of the big Puranas, look round and see what is happening before your eyes, and you will find the answer.

We are, in spite of our various castes, and in spite of the modern custom of marriage restricted within the sub-divisions of a caste (though this is not universal), a mixed race in every sense of the word.

Whatever may be the import of the philological terms "Aryan" and "Tamilian", even taking for granted that both these grand sub-divisions of Indian humanity came from outside the Western frontier, the dividing line had been, from the most ancient times, one of language and not of blood. Not one of the epithets expressive of contempt for the ugly physical features of the Dasyus of the Vedas would apply to the great Tamilian race; in fact if there be a toss for good looks between the Aryans and Tamilians, no sensible man would dare prognosticate the result.

The super-arrogated excellence of birth of any caste in India is only pure myth, and in no part of India has it, we are sorry to say, found such congenial soil, owing to linguistic differences, as in the South.

We purposely refrain from going into the details of this social tyranny in the South, just as we have stopped ourselves from scrutinising the genesis of the various modern Brahmins and other castes. Sufficient for us to note the extreme tension of feeling that is evident between the Brahmins and non-Brahmins of the Madras Presidency.

We believe in Indian caste as one of the greatest social institutions that the Lord gave to man. We also believe that though the unavoidable defects, foreign persecutions, and, above all, the monumental ignorance and pride of many Brahmins who do not deserve the name, have thwarted, in many ways, the legitimate fructification of this most glorious Indian institution, it has already worked wonders for the land of Bharata and is destined to lead Indian humanity to its goal.

We earnestly entreat the Brahmins of the South not to forget the ideal of India — the production of a universe of Brahmins, pure as purity, good as God Himself: this was at the beginning, says the Mahâbhârata, and so will it be in the end.

Then anyone who claims to be a Brahmin should prove his pretensions, first by manifesting that spirituality, and next by raising others to the same status. On the face of this, it seems that most of them are only nursing a false pride of birth; and any schemer, native or foreign, who can pander to this vanity and inherent laziness by fulsome sophistry, appears to satisfy most.

Beware, Brahmins, this is the sign of death! Arise and show your manhood, your Brahminhood, by raising the non-Brahmins around you — not in the spirit of a master — not with the rotten canker of egotism crawling with superstitions and the charlatanry of East and West — but in the spirit of a servant. For verily he who knows how to serve knows how to rule.

The non-Brahmins also have been spending their energy in kindling the fire of caste hatred — vain and useless to solve the problem — to which every non-Hindu is only too glad to throw on a load of fuel.

Not a step forward can be made by these inter-caste quarrels, not one difficulty removed; only the beneficent onward march of events would be thrown back, possibly for centuries, if the fire bursts out into flames

It would be a repetition of Buddhistic political blunders.

In the midst of this ignorant clamour and hatred, we are delighted to find Pandit D. Savariroyan pursuing the only legitimate and the only sensible course. Instead of wasting precious vitality in foolish and meaningless quarrels, Pandit Savariroyan has undertaken in his articles on the "Admixture of the Aryan with Tamilian" in the Siddhânta Deepikâ, to clear away not only a lot of haze, created by a too adventurous Western philology, but to pave the way to a better understanding of the caste problem in the South.

Nobody ever got anything by begging. We get only what we deserve. The first step to deserve is to desire: and we desire with success what we feel ourselves worthy to get.

A gentle yet clear brushing off of the cobwebs of the so-called Aryan theory and all its vicious corollaries is therefore absolutely necessary, especially for the South, and a proper self-respect created by a knowledge of the past grandeur of one of the great ancestors of the Aryan race — the great Tamilians.

We stick, in spite of Western theories, to that definition of the word "Arya" which we find in our sacred books, and which includes only the multitude we now call Hindus. This Aryan race, itself a mixture of two great races, Sanskrit-speaking and Tamil-speaking, applies to all Hindus alike. That the Shudras have in some Smritis been excluded from this epithet means nothing, for the Shudras were and still are only the waiting Aryas — Aryas in novitiate.

Though we know Pandit Savariroyan is walking over rather insecure ground, though we differ from many of his sweeping explanations of Vedic names and races, yet we are glad that he has undertaken the task of beginning a proper investigation into the culture of the great mother of Indian civilisation — if the Sanskrit-speaking race was the father.

We are glad also that he boldly pushes forward the Accado-Sumerian racial identity of the ancient Tamilians. And this makes us proud of the blood of the great civilisation which flowered before all others — compared to whose antiquity the Aryans and Semites are babies.

We would suggest, also, that the land of Punt of the Egyptians was not only Malabar, but that the Egyptians as a race bodily migrated from Malabar across the ocean and entered the delta along the course of the Nile from north to south, to which Punt they have been always fondly looking back as the home of the blessed.

This is a move in the right direction. Detailed and more careful work is sure to follow with a better study of the Tamilian tongues and the Tamilian elements found in the Sanskrit literature, philosophy, and religion. And who are more competent to do this work than those who learn the Tamilian idioms as their mother-tongue?

As for us Vedântins and Sannyâsins, ore are proud of our Sanskrit-speaking ancestors of the Vedas; proud of our Tamil-speaking ancestors whose civilization is the oldest yet known; we are proud of our Kolarian ancestors older than either of the above — who lived and hunted in forests; we are proud of our ancestors with flint implements — the first of the human race; and if evolution is true, we are proud of our animal ancestors, for they antedated man himself. We are proud that we are descendants of the whole universe, sentient or insentient. Proud that we are born, and work, and suffer — prouder still that we die when the task is finished and enter forever the realm where there is no more delusion.


文本来自Wikisource公共领域。原版由阿德瓦伊塔修道院出版。