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Off to India

Joe, I hope you and Suzi are enjoying the trip to India. To me, one of the things that we Westerners tend to overlook is the sheer diversity of India as a country. Several different languages, faiths, and cultures. Hopefully, wherever you go, the food and the people will be wonderful.
 

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Bombay is a lot like NYC, if Jackson Heights covered the entire five burroughs.

And they picked up and went to india because they wanted to. Really =)
(at least, thats what they said in an earlier thread)
 



for now, they may come back later.

and yes, india is a lot more diverse than people realize. i've met indians who look african, and ones who look chinese. i mean come on - there are about a BILLION people there, you have to expect some diversity. :)
 

watching the Indian Parliment is like seeing a rainbow of multiculturalism. they go from pale white skinned blue eyed folks from Kashmir to folks you'd swear are Maori from tamil nadu, to folks who would be better suited in Thailand from Arunchal Pradesh.

i mean seriously, short of distinctly northern european races (blonds, redheads, nordic folk) and inuit, you can find anything within the confines of India.

After millenia of mixing, though, most of us have assumed a nice uniform brownness =)
 

Which (replying to Talinthas) raises this question: What would the subcontinent be like if the Harrappans had not faded away?

Background: The Harappan civilization in the Indus Valley arose at a time when the climate was a bit more salubrious. But conditions didn't last, and as the local climate deteriorated the Harrappans were unable to maintain a level of agriculture sufficient to keep their cities fed. With the lower standard of living, and the lack of adequate nutrition diseases took their toll, and the Harrappan cities were abandoned.

Right about the time the Indo-Aryan tribes migrated down out of Central Asia. A place that had once been nicer to live in, and able to support a larger population itself. As the nomads moved into Harrappan territory they found scattered villages and bands living on the edge, in the middle of great abandoned cities. They also encountered the local diseases, which lead to a strict segregation for health reasons, and the foundation of India's caste system.

Later, with advances in agriculture, government, and transportation of goods the Indus Valley would once again become a bread basket. But these changes would take centuries.

But what if the Harappans had made those adaptations themselves? With if the advances in agriculture had come when the climatological changes first began. What if the Indo-Aryan tribes had been forced west to join fellow tribes in Iran, or east around or through Tibet into the land we know call China?

Or (making this a fantasy setting), what if Harrappan shamans and priests had developed the magic needed for the altered climate? Magics crafted to ensure good yields. Somehow making Harrappan crops able to thrive under the new conditions.

However it happens, how do you see India developing over the ages?
 

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