Urdu/Hindi: An Artificial Divide

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Management number 231941805 Release Date 2026/06/18 List Price $13.78 Model Number 231941805
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This groundbreaking work challenges the conventional understanding of Urdu and Hindi as distinct languages rooted in racial and religious divisions. Drawing on linguistic evidence, genetics, and historical documentation, Abdul Jamil Khan presents a radical reframing of how these languages evolved and why they were artificially separated.The book traces Urdu/Hindi's linguistic components to Mesopotamia, while human language itself evolved from Africa. The book traces the surprising journey of Urdu/Hindi back through Mesopotamia, revealing shared vocabulary and grammatical structures with Sumerian, Akkadian, and other ancient languages. Khan demonstrates that everyday words like "rab" (chief/god), "gu" (cow), and "banāna" (make) connect modern South Asian speech to man's oldest written records. Rather than descending from a mythical Proto-Indo-European language, Urdu/Hindi emerges as a hybrid creation drawing from five distinct linguistic families: Munda, Dravidian, Sanskrit, Persian, and Arabic.A central revelation concerns how nineteenth-century European scholars weaponized linguistics. The book documents how British colonial powers deliberately created "Hindi" as a separate language to divide Hindu and Muslim populations, replacing Arabic-Persian vocabulary with newly invented Sanskrit terms and changing scripts as tools of political control. This wasn't academic work—it was calculated strategy to fragment resistance to colonial rule.Khan systematically catalogs vocabulary contributions from each linguistic layer. Sanskrit provided verbs like "khelna" (to play) and "hasna" (to laugh). Arabic-Persian enriched everyday speech with words like "bāzār" (market) and "dil" (heart). Dravidian and Munda contributed foundational terms often overlooked by traditional linguistics. The book includes detailed tables showing these etymologies and how modern Hindi deliberately substituted Sanskrit words for the Urdu/Persian vocabulary that had organically developed over centuries.The narrative spans from Mesopotamian roots through the Mughal period's secular cultural flowering, the British colonial manipulation of language politics, and modern Hindi's systematic vocabulary replacement program. Khan examines how films, literature, and popular culture maintained linguistic unity despite official division. His genetic analysis reveals that both populations share common African ancestry, further undermining racial justifications for linguistic separation.This work offers more than historical correction—it presents a scientific framework for understanding South Asian languages free from mythological bias and religious doctrine. For readers interested in the politics of language, India-Pakistan relations, and how power structures shape cultural narratives, this book provides documented evidence that linguistic division served colonial interests rather than reflecting natural linguistic evolution. Read more

ISBN10 0875864384
ISBN13 978-0875864389
Edition illustrated edition
Language English
Publisher Algora Publishing
Dimensions 6.24 x 1.24 x 9.24 inches
Item Weight 1.6 pounds
Print length 418 pages
Publication date May 12, 2006

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