Lars Martin,
In this respect, Dayananda states in his "Summary of my
beliefs" (at No. 30) that:
"This country is called Aryavarta because it has been the abode of
the Aryas from the very dawn of Creation. It is bounded on the north by
the Himalayas, on the south by the Vindhyachala mountains, on the west by
the Attok (Indus), and on the east by the Brahmaputra. The land included
within these limits is Aryavarta and those that have been living in it
from times immemorial are also called Aryas."
(Light on Truth: or An English Translation of the Satyarth Prakash.
Trans. Chiranjiva Bharadwaja. Delhi: Sarvadeshik Arya Pratinidhi
Sabha, 1975, p.729.)
And Yadav, in his introduction to Dayananda's autobiography,
writes:
"Dayanand's next concern was to arouse national consciousness among
his people. To begin with, he examined the plans of his predecessors and
concluded that these men, though well-intentioned, had borrowed too
heavily from the West. He believed that no nation could build its edifice
on a foreign foundation. He, therefore, gave a clarion call to his
countrymen to go back to the Vedas, and to lay their foundations
on them.
This was, as rightly put by Aurobindo Ghosh, surely a master glance of
practical intution on Dayanand's part, for, in a real sense, the Vedas
were the original source of religion, culture and civilization of
India; they were the foundations of Indian thought, philosophy and
knowledge; and they 'concealed in themselves the seed for a radical
new birth of the Indian nation.' "
(K.C. Yaday, ed. Autobiography of Dayanand Saraswati, 2d ed..
Delhi: Manohar, 1978, pp. 13-14). This book also includes the
numbered list of his beliefs.
I would also recommend:
J.T.F. Jordens. Dayananda Sarasvati: His Life and Ideas. Delhi:
OUP, 1978.
Regards,
Luis
At 04:00 PM 6/10/99 -0700, you wrote:
>Even before Sri Aurbindo, Swami Dayanda (1824-1883) rejected
the AIT.
>Reference his writings. Early Arya Samaj authors follow the Svami's
lead and
>the trend continues to this day.
>
>Regards,
>
>Vishal