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SOUTH ASIA (CHAPTER 8). THE REALM Five Regions India Pakistan Bangladesh Mountainous North Southern Islands.

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Presentation on theme: "SOUTH ASIA (CHAPTER 8). THE REALM Five Regions India Pakistan Bangladesh Mountainous North Southern Islands."— Presentation transcript:

1 SOUTH ASIA (CHAPTER 8)

2 THE REALM Five Regions India Pakistan Bangladesh Mountainous North Southern Islands

3 MAJOR GEOGRAPHIC QUALITIES OF SOUTH ASIA Well defined physiographically The world’s second largest population cluster Low income economies Population concentrated in villages - subsistence agriculture Boundary problems - Kashmir FEDERAL SYSTEM  ADOPTED BY INDIA IN 1947  PROVIDES REGIONS AND PEOPLES WITH SOME AUTONOMY AND IDENTITY

4 Monsoons --“To know India and her people, one has to know the monsoon.” --To the people of India, the monsoons are a source of life, but it also causes destruction. -- Very distinctive seasonal precipitation regime

5 CULTURE A culturally fragmented realm Religious and linguistic diversity Religious Patterns:  Islam is predominant in Pakistan and Bangladesh.  Hinduism is predominant in India, generally.  Sikhism thrives in northern India.  Buddhism is predominant in Sri Lanka.

6 CULTURE HEARTH The Indus River Where an early culture emerged and developed  Arts and trade routes emerged from isolated ethnic groups and villages to towns and beyond.  Hinduism emerged from the beliefs and practices brought to India by the Aryans (6th century BC)  Buddhism born of discontent; made the state religion of India in 3rd century BC  Islam swept through central India from the 8th -10th centuries AD

7 EARLY CULTURE HEARTHS

8 LANGUAGES

9 RELIGION

10 HINDUISM One of the world’s oldest religions Diffused south and east down the Ganges River (see text for holy site). Absorbed and eventually supplanted earlier native religions and customs

11 HINDUISM Not just a religion; an intricate web of religious, philosophical, social, economic, and artistic elements No common creed, no single doctrine No direct divine revelation No rigid narrow moral code

12 MAJOR TENETS OF HINDUISM Three main ideas are important in understanding the Hindu religion and the Caste System  Reincarnation  Karma  Dharma

13 REINCARNATION Every living thing has a soul. When a living thing dies, its soul moves into another living creature. Souls are reborn in a newly created life.

14 KARMA Every action brings about certain results. There is no escaping the consequences of one’s actions. Good behavior is rewarded when the soul is reborn into a higher ranking living creature; bad behavior is punished when the soul is reborn into a lower ranking living creature.

15 DHARMA A set of rules that must be followed by all living things if they wish to work their way up the ladder of reincarnation. Each person’s dharma is different.

16 Puja or worship (also, Hindus do not eat beef) Cremation of the dead Regulations of the caste system (note video) THREE BASIC PRACTICES

17 ORIGINS AND SPREAD OF BUDDHISM Siddhartha Gautama (563 - 483 B.C.) – a.k.a Buddha. Born in Nepal. Buddhism came from Hinduism (just as Christianity came from Judaism). Emperor Asoka adopted it as the state religion (3rd Century B.C.) Adherents object to harsher features of Hinduism (e.g. Caste System) Focuses on knowledge, especially self- knowledge Elimination of worldly desires, determination not to hurt or kill people or animals E. J. PALKA

18 FOUR “NOBLE TRUTHS” OF BUDDHISM Sorrow and suffering are part of all life. People suffer because they desire things they cannot have. The way to escape suffering is to end desire, to stop wanting, and to reach a stage of not wanting. To end desire, follow the “middle path,” i.e., the path that avoids the extremes of too much pleasure and desire.

19 FALL OF BUDDHISM ON THE SUBCONTINENT Hinduism was broad and tolerant, accepting many of the teachings of Buddha, so many stayed with Hinduism Also, Buddhists in India were willing to compromise with the beliefs and customs of Hinduism Final blow to Buddhism came in the 8th century, with the arrival of Islam, which: -- Destroyed the great Buddhist monasteries -- Burned libraries -- Killed monks Today there are only 1 million Buddhists in India – in the region where it started!

20 RELIGIOUS CONTRASTS ISLAM  Monotheistic  No idols  One sacred book  Uniform dogma - 5 pillars  Intolerant (of other religions)  Eat beef/Sacrifice cows  Bury Dead  Social Equality (in theory)  Theocratic society (state religion encouraged) HINDUISM  Polytheistic  Many idols  Various sacred writings  Varying beliefs  Absorbed other religions  Don’t eat beef/Venerate cows  Burn dead (cremation)  Caste separation  Having the religion as part of the “State” is of secondary importance

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23 INDIA

24 ENCOMPASSES 3/4s OF SOUTH ASIA’S TOTAL AREA A FEDERATION OF 28 STATES, AND 1 National Capital Territory. POPULATION OF 1.124 BILLION PEOPLE – the world’s largest democracy. 28% URBANIZED 14 MAJOR AND NUMEROUS MINOR LANGUAGES

25 ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT (INDIA) 38% LIVE BELOW THE POVERTY LINE A MIXTURE OF TRADITIONAL VILLAGE FARMING AND MODERN AGRICULTURE HANDICRAFTS, OLD AND NEW BRANCHES OF INDUSTRY; CLOTHING INDUSTRY (note video) MULTITUDE OF SUPPORT SERVICES AND NUCLEAR POWER

26 E. J. PALKA

27 GREEN REVOLUTION THE SUCCESSFUL DEVELOPMENT OF HIGHER YIELD, FAST-GROWING VARIETIES OF RICE AND OTHER CEREALS IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES  INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH PROGRAM-1960s  FOCUSED ON THE FOOD CRISES  INCREASED PRODUCTION PER UNIT AREA VIA: MIRACLE CROPS NEW IRRIGATION SYSTEMS INTENSIVE USE OF FERTILIZERS

28 INDIA’S GREAT CITIES MUMBAI (BOMBAY) - 18.9 MILLION  ACHIEVED “PRIMACY” BASED ON ITS SITUATION. It was the nearest Indian Port to Europe. KOLKATA (CALCUTTA) - 14.6 MILLION  500,000 HOMELESS  FORMER BRITISH COLONIAL CAPITAL (1772- 1912) DELHI (NEW AND OLD) - 16.2 MILLION  BRITISH AND INDIAN SEAT OF GOVERNMENT

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30 West Pakistan East Pakistan India PAKISTAN (AT PARTITION, 1947)

31 PAKISTAN ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF PAKISTAN POPULATION OF 166.9 MILLION 80% SUNNI MUSLIMS; 16% SHIA MINORITY 34% URBANIZED

32 KASHMIR (Jammu and Kashmir) Although its population is mainly Muslim, much of Jammu and Kashmir became part of India in 1947. India and Pakistan have fought two wars over the territory, and there has been a separatist insurgency in the area. INDEPENDENCE & PARTITION  FACED WITH THE CHOICE OF JOINING EITHER HINDU INDIA OR MUSLIM PAKISTAN  HINDU MAHARAJA BUT MUSLIM POPULATION JANUARY 1949 – U.N. CEASE FIRE 1980 to 88 – Muslim extremists continue insurgency

33 BANGLADESH INDEPENDENT SINCE 1971 FORMERLY EAST PAKISTAN (see previous slides) 85% MUSLIM, 12% HINDU 147.3 MILLION PEOPLE DENSITY = 3,914/sq mi 2.1% ANNUAL GROWTH RATE NATURAL HAZARDS – CYCLONES

34 THE MOUNTAINOUS NORTH

35 THE SOUTHERN ISLANDS MALDIVES  >1,000 ISLANDS  <115 SQ MI / 300 SQ KMS  POPULATION OF 300,000  OVERWHELMINGLY MUSLIM  HIGHEST GNP IN THE REALM SRI LANKA  FORMERLY CEYLON  INDEPENDENT SINCE 1948

36 SRI LANKA 20.1 MILLION PEOPLE (70% BUDDHISTS) PLANTATION AGRICULTURE:  TEA, RUBBER, COCONUTS SOUTH (MAJORITY OF POPULATION) ARYAN BUDDHISTS SPEAK SINHALA (INDO-EUROPEAN) NORTH (18% OF THE POPULATION) DRAVIDIAN HINDU TAMIL LANGUAGE

37 SRI LANKA SINHALESE vs. TAMILS TAMILS DEMAND EQUAL RIGHTS: -- EDUCATION -- EMPLOYMENT -- LAND OWNERSHIP -- LANGUAGE AND POLITICS LTTE – LIBERATION TIGERS OF TAMIL EELAM

38 E. J. PALKA

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