Axel Michaels edited book "The Pandit"
George Hart
ghart at SOCRATES.BERKELEY.EDU
Tue Oct 30 19:12:33 UTC 2001
Thanks for your gracious response. I plead guilty to posting
something impetuously that I should not have posted -- I could quite
easily have raised the same points without any sort of apparent
personal implications (which, of course, I did not intend). It is
good to keep in mind that, with the click of a mouse, messages on
this forum go out to many different people, and, once sent, they
cannot be recalled. Once again, my apologies and thanks. GH.
> > As an addendum, I would remark the following: 1. Brahmins in South
>> India are less than 3% of the population; 2. Kalidasa, from his name,
>> must have been a Sudra (and how about Sudraka and the Suutas and
>> Magadhas who were bards and recited the epics); 3. In many non-Brahmin
>> caste groups of Tamil Nadu, some of them quite low, there are
>> extraordinarily rich non-Brahmin traditions that are quite as rich as
>> anything the Brahmins have; 4. One of the most learned groups I have
>> encountered is a group of low-caste people that performs villuppaattu
>> -- they use both Tamil and Telugu, and have broad learning in Hindu
>> things that few if any Brahmins have. I could go
>> on and on. Suffice it to say that we should become aware that Brahmins
>> represent only one of many important and central learning traditions of
>> India.
>
>I agree. As an ddendum to the addendum I like to remark the following: It
>is not justified to identify the term "pandit" with brahminhood? In fact,
>one result of the conference and the book is to see how widely the term
>was applied and that it was not at all restricted to Brahmins.
>
>With many thanks for your apologies and best wishes,
>Axel Michaels
--
More information about the INDOLOGY
mailing list