Archaeologist MS Vats unearthed three enigmatic stone structures resembling Shiva Lingas at the Harappa excavation site in 1940. These artefacts, potentially dating back over 5,000 years, raise serious questions about the deeply rooted spiritual traditions of the civilisation and their connection to Sanatan Dharma.
The Harappa site, located on the now-dry banks of the Ravi River in eastern Punjab, Pakistan, has been one of the most significant excavation sites of the Indus Valley Civilisation (IVC). Since the first systematic excavations were initiated by British archaeologist Sir John Hubert Marshall in 1921, findings at Harappa and its twin city Mohenjo-daro have revealed an advanced urban civilisation complete with sophisticated drainage systems, well-planned city grids, and monumental structures indicating a highly organised administrative system. However, the discovery of what appears to be a Shiva Linga at Harappa—along with similar findings in Kalibangan and other IVC sites—suggests that religious and spiritual elements within the civilisation were far more pronounced than previously acknowledged.
The 1940 Discovery: A Shiva Linga in Trench Ai?
The most intriguing find came in 1940 when archaeologist M.S. Vats uncovered a striking stone structure in Trench Ai, buried 5 feet 6 inches below the surface. According to his official excavation report (Excavation at Harappa, Vol. 2), the artifact measured 11 inches in height and 7 inches in diameter, resembling a traditional Shiva Linga—a symbol of Bhagwan Shiva worshipped in Sanatan Dharma since time immemorial.
Despite its clear physical resemblance to a Linga, scholars have hesitated to categorise it definitively as an object of worship. Was it merely a random stone artifact, or does its discovery signify a long-standing tradition of Shiva worship dating back to the Indus Valley Civilisation? If the latter is true, this would fundamentally reshape our understanding of the region’s religious history, directly linking it to the present-day Hindu civilisation that continues to revere the Shiva Linga as a sacred symbol.
The discovery at Harappa is not an isolated incident. Similar findings at Kalibangan, an important IVC site located in present-day Rajasthan, India, lend further credence to this theory. Noted archaeologist B.B. Lal discovered a terracotta representation that bears a striking resemblance to a Shiva Linga, dating back to approximately 2500-1900 BCE.
Other archaeological finds, including fire altars, water purification structures, and seals depicting horned deities resembling Pashupati (an early form of Shiva), suggest that ritualistic and religious practices were an integral part of Indus Valley society. Given the clear symbolic connections to later Vedic and Hindu traditions, dismissing these findings as mere coincidences raises more questions than answers.
For decades, mainstream academic discourse—heavily influenced by colonial-era biases—has sought to separate the Indus Valley Civilisation from later Hindu traditions. Western scholars and even some Indian historians have resisted acknowledging the direct link between the Indus Valley Civilisation and Sanatan Dharma, often arguing that the civilisation had no tangible religious structures or scriptural connections.
But with mounting evidence of Shiva Lingas, fire altars, ritualistic water tanks, and Pashupati-like seals, the claim that Hindu traditions evolved separately from the IVC becomes increasingly untenable. If the Indus people indeed worshipped Bhagwan Shiva in some form, it would mean that Hindu spiritual beliefs are not only among the oldest in the world but that they have survived virtually unchanged for over 5,000 years.
This has profound implications. It challenges the artificially imposed divide between the Indus Valley Civilisation and later Vedic traditions, reinforcing the idea that Sanatan Dharma is not just a religion but an ancient, unbroken cultural continuum that dates back to the dawn of civilisation itself.
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