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Afghanistan and It's Vedic Culture
Afghan"isthan" was once center of Vedic Culture. The Indo Aryans definitely lived in that
region before migrating further either upwards or downwards. For the Aryans Afghanistan was the
land of the Gandharvas or the celestial beings. The Gandharvas were depicted in the Vedic
scriptures as celestial beings, skillful in music, with magical powers, and beautiful forms.
In status they were not equal to the devas, but regarded as higher beings with divine powers,
mischievous at times, but mostly friendly and reliable.
In ancient times, the valleys of Afghanistan must have resonated with the sounds of
many caravans crisscrossing the country. The Indus valley people conducted their overland trade
with Mesopotamia through Afghanistan. Their caravans carried a variety of goods that included
rare and precious stones, minerals, food grains, resins, gold, silver and bronze, incense,
Pistachios and more. After the expansion of the Vedic culture and the decline of the Indus
valley civilization Afghanistan was invaded and occupied by the Persian army headed by Darius,
the Great, (522 to 486 BC). We have little information as to who were ruling Afghanistan at that
time. Probably it was part of an Indian kingdom from the Punjab region or was ruled by local
chieftains.
When Alexander marched towards India, he passed through the mountainous territories of
Afghanisthan and had to subdue many native tribes in the region. In the course of multiple
battles he fought with them, his army was put to enormous strain and loss. Since his army was
not familiar with the territory and his soldiers were not that skilled in mountain warfare, his
army was literally exhausted by the time they reached the Indian borders and lost much of their
motivation to fight further and march deeper into the subcontinent. The tired and frustrated
soldiers insisted Alexander to return to their homeland. On their way back, Alexander had
problems once again in the region and had to remain cautious till they crossed the borders of
Afghanistan.
Alexander appointed Seleucus I as the viceroy of the Asian territories he
conquered, which comprised of a vast area that stretched from the northwestern borders of India
to most of Anatolia and parts of Syria-Phoenicia. Selucus I was not able to maintain his hold on
the region for long. A few years after he took over the reign, about 303 BC, Chandragupta
Maurya, the founder of the mighty Mauryan Empire from eastern India waged a war with Seleucus
and defeated him.
As a part of the agreement, Seleucus I gave his daughter in marriage to
Chandragupta Maurya and also ceded him Afghanistan and surrounding areas. For a few centuries
from then on, Afghanistan remained under the control of the Mauryan Empire and enjoyed some
degree of stability. During the Mauryan rule, Buddhism spread into Afghanistan and became a
dominant religion there.
The Mauryan emperor who made this possible was Ashoka. He was the son of
Bimbisara and the grandson of Chandragupta Maurya. During his reign the Mauryan empire reached
its zenith. (See the Map). Perhaps under no other ruler before him or after him, so much of the
country owed allegiance to one power.
Ashoka had a special relation with Afghanistan. When he was still a young
prince, his father Bimbsara appointed him as the viceroy of this region, with Taxila
(Org.SK. Takshasila, currently located in Pakistan near Rawalpindi ) as his headquarters.
Taxila was then a great religious and trade center. It was a great seat of Vedic learning,
where flourished the study of Vedic scriptures, many arts, crafts and ancient sciences. With
the emergence of Buddhism in the region this region started attracting Buddhist scholars too.
Originally a cruel king, who allegedly ascended the throne after killing nearly
a hundred of his own brothers, Ashoka underwent a life transforming experience at the height of
his career. In the course of his conquests, which were many, he waged a bitter and bloody war
against the people of Kalinga. This kingdom existed in those days in south eastern India,
comprising the present day Orissa. The people of Kalinga were equally ferocious and stubborn
people. Hence a bloody battle ensued in which there was a huge bloodshed on both sides and
thousands of innocent people were killed, while materially nothing much was gained. The tragedy
of the war and the ruin it brought upon so many people disturbed the emperor severely and changed
his thinking forever. From a ruthless and ambitious ruler, he became converted to Buddhism and
the ideals of compassion and non violence it preached. With in a few years after the war, he
developed a philosophy of his own called the law of piety or dhamma, which was a hotch potch
of Buddhist philosophy, Vedic dharma and the prevailing social and moral values of his times.
He spent the rest of his life in pious activities and spreading his dhamma,
which he got carved into stone inscriptions in the form of edicts. He appointed a task force
to get those edicts planted all over India as a reminder to the people of the moral life he
cherished them to follow. Encouraged by his patronage and protection, the Buddhist monks traveled
to various parts of India and outside also to spread the teachings of the Buddha and bring people
to the path of righteousness.
The Mauryan empire declined after Ashoka and for sometime Afghanistan was left
to itself. But it came into lime light once again with the invasion of the Bactrian Greeks.
They invaded the subcontinent during the second century BC and established their power from the
Oxus river in the west upto the Punjab in the east. Afghanistan was under their control. Not
much is known about these new rulers. But we know that in matters of religion and social life
they adopted some local practices. While some rulers turned to Hinduism for spiritual solace,
some became devout Buddhists and patronized Buddhism.
Buddhism owes a great deal to the Bactrian Greeks, whose patronage enabled
Buddhism to gain firm foot holding in Central Asia and Chinese Tukistan. The most famous of the
Bactrian Greeks about whom we have some confirmed details was King Menander. He ruled Punjab
with Sakala as his capital and he became interested in Buddhism. The ancient Buddhist manuscript,
the Milindapatha or the Path of Milinda by Nagasena records the conversations King Menander had
with Nagasena about some aspects of Buddhism.
The Bactrian Greeks were soon over thrown by the invading armies of Scythians
and Parthians, followed by the Kushanas. The Kushanas were originally Chinese in origin, and
came from a nomadic tribe by the name Yueh-chih. They reached India in a circuitous way through
Central Asia, Bactria and Afghanistan and into the plains of the Punjab. They established a
great empire that extended from the sea of Aral in the present day Russia in the north and the
Chinese Turkmenistan in the east upto the northwestern frontiers of India including Afghanistan.
Kanishka (2nd century AD) was the most famous of the Kushana rulers. His period
was marked by the rise of Mahayana Buddhism. Pali bacame the principal language of literary
experssion. And most important of all the period witnessed the remarkable maturing of the
Gandhara school of art. The artists of this school blended both the Indian and Greek traditions
of in a very harmonious way to produce remarkable pieces of art. It was an art that used Indian
motifs but mostly Greek techniques.
Foremost among the works produced by this school of art were the statues of the
Buddha and the Bodhisattvas. Many of them now adorn the museums all over the world, while some
were stolen and may be in the private collections. We also do not know fully the fate of those
pieces that are presently lying in the Kabul Museum, and whether they Government there destroyed
them or preserved them.
The Kushanas were subsequently ousted by the Sassanids or Sassanians. They ruled
Persia (modern Iran) and parts of northern Afghanistan from AD 224 to 651. Ardasir I was the
founder of this dynasty and he was succeeded by his son Shapur I, whose reign lasted from AD 240
to AD 272. Shapur I defeated the Romans and expanded his empire considerably. The Sassanids were
fire worshippers and followers of Zarathushtra. But they did not interfere much with way of life
in Afghanistan, for Buddhism continued to flourish in the region. Probably after conquering the
land, the Sassanids left the governance to local rulers because of the difficulties involved and
their preoccupation with other the regions of their empire.
This period is significant in the history of Buddhism because during this period
the giant statues of the Buddha at Bamiyan were carved, which were considered to be the largest
stone statues in the world, standing 177 feet tall. It is now well know that they were destroyed
recently by the government of Afghanistan as a part of its religious zeal.
Buddhism continued to flourish in this region till the 5th Century AD and
declined there after. Two factors contributed to this trend. One was the invasion of Hunas.
The Hunas were a barbarian and cruel band of vandals who perpetrated many religious atrocities
against the native people and put many Buddhists to death.
The second factor was the emergence of the Gupta empire. The Guptas were staunch
followers of the Vedic religion, especially Vaishnavism, and they took upon themselves the task
of reviving Hinduism which was then in a state of decline because of the popularity of Buddhism.
Politically, however, Afghanistan continued to retain its strategic importance, because it still
facilitated a great deal of trade along the silk route that connected Xinjiang or the Chinese
Turkistan with the Middle east.
With the invasion of Arabs in AD 642, for the first time Afghanistan encountered
Islam. The Arabs converted some people there to Islam, but did not stay there for long because
of the resistance from the Persians. Islam had to wait for another 300 and odd years to take its
roots in the soil. Not much is known about the history of Afghanistan during this period
following the Arab invasion. Probably the land was under the control of petty rulers who owed
allegiance to the Persians.
Then came the Ghaznavids. The Ghaznavid was a Turkish Muslim dynasty, which
captured power in AD 970 and ruled Afghanistan and parts of Iran till AD 1087. Mahmud Gazni was
the most aggressive ruler of this dynasty and is well known in the subcontinent for the 17 so
called "holy wars" he conducted against the present day Pakistan and India. A materialist to the
core who loved the best things of life, and a lover of arts who patronized poets and writers,
his main objective was not to spread Islam, but to plunder and loot the rich kingdoms of the
subcontinent in the name of religion. He destroyed many Hindu temples, looted the rich treasures
of the native rulers and converted some native Hindus and Buddhists to Islam through wanton
destruction and use of cruelty and force.
After the Ghazanivids, Afghanistan once again came under the rule of petty rulers
and plunged into anarchy. In the 12th Century AD it was invaded by the Mongols under the
leadership of Genghis Khan (1167-1227) a ruthless, cruel and notorious ruler, who indulged in
the destruction of many cities, including Herat, Ghazni, and Balkh. The fertile regions of
Afghanistan were left follow as many peasants either fled their homes or were killed by his
cruel and destructive soldiers.
Genghis Khan's invasion was one of the many in a series of invasions by the
foreign powers into Afghanistan. One name that is worth mentioning at this juncture is Babur.
Babur was the founder of Mughal empire in the Indian subcontinent. He was a descendent of Timur,
who in turn was a descendent of Genghis Khan.
A petty ruler with a mighty ambition, Babur ruled parts of Afghanistan for
sometime, with Kabul as his capital, before he decided to invade India and try his fortunes.
A freebooter with a natural instinct for leadership, he gathered a band of committed soldiers and
invaded India supposedly on invitation from some local nobility to fight against Ibrahim Lodi,
who was then the ruler of the Delhi Sultanate. The Sultanate was already in a state of decline
and was ready to collapse any time. The two armies fought a fierce battle on the grounds of
Panipat in 1526 and Babur won because of his superior planning, organized army and committed
leadership. After the victory, Babur decided to stay in India and consolidate his empire through
further conquests.
For nearly two hundred years thereafter Afghanistan remained partly under the
control of the Mughals and partly under the Saffavids of Persia. The eastern parts owed their
allegiance to the Mughals while the western part to the Safavids. In 1747, following the assassination
of Nadirshah of Persia, Ahmed Shah Durrani (or as he is also known Ahmed Shah Baba) established his rule as an
independent ruler supported by Pashthun tribal council. The Pasthuns controlled Afghanisthan
till the Communist regime came to power in 1978.
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