The Whiteness Myth (Throwback)

Primary Topic

This episode explores the historical and legal challenges surrounding race, focusing on the concept of "whiteness" and its impact on citizenship and identity.

Episode Summary

"The Whiteness Myth (Throwback)" by Throughline delves into the historical complexities of race, especially how the United States defined 'whiteness' in its naturalization laws. The episode centers on the story of Bhagat Singh Thind, a high-caste Indian who sought U.S. citizenship in the early 20th century. His case highlighted the contradictions and racial biases embedded in U.S. law, specifically the naturalization act which only allowed free white persons and those of African nativity to apply for citizenship. Thind's legal struggle and the Supreme Court's decisions on his case reveal the arbitrary and exclusionary nature of racial classifications used by the U.S. government, which had long-term implications for immigrants and racial definitions in America.

Main Takeaways

  1. Historical Context: The episode outlines the U.S. legal framework starting from the first naturalization law in 1790, which limited citizenship to "free white persons," and later to people of African descent.
  2. Thind's Case: Bhagat Singh Thind's battle for citizenship is chronicled, highlighting his arguments based on ancestry and how the U.S. courts manipulated the concept of race to exclude him.
  3. Legal and Racial Complexities: The episode emphasizes the fluid and often contradictory definitions of race in U.S. law and how these affected the rights of immigrants.
  4. Impact on Immigrants: The discussion on Thind's case shows the broader impact of racial definitions on immigrants, particularly those from Asia, and their quest for American citizenship.
  5. Reflection on Race and Identity: The narrative invites reflection on the social construction of race and its enduring impact on personal and collective identities in the U.S.

Episode Chapters

1: The Mother Tongue

This chapter explores the historical roots of the Indo-European languages and how these theories were later used to justify racial ideologies. Amanda Frost: "These language theories became a tool for exclusion and racial categorization."

2: Legal Battles and Citizenship

This section recounts Bhagat Singh Thind's journey through the U.S. legal system, emphasizing the racial barriers he faced. Emma Lazarus: "He was barred from naturalizing solely based on his race, despite fitting all other citizenship criteria."

3: The Definition of Whiteness

Discusses the legal and social challenges in defining who is considered white in America, impacting immigration and citizenship. Amanda Frost: "The U.S. Supreme Court wrestled with these definitions, often reflecting the prevailing social prejudices."

Actionable Advice

  • Educate Yourself on Racial History: Learn about the historical context of racial definitions to understand their impact on current societal structures.
  • Challenge Racial Stereotypes: Recognize and speak against simplified racial categories that continue to affect policy and social interactions.
  • Support Reforms in Racial Policies: Advocate for policies that dismantle racial biases in legal and governmental institutions.
  • Promote Inclusive Narratives: Engage in and promote discussions that highlight the diversity of experiences and identities within and across racial categories.
  • Reflect on Personal Biases: Take time to reflect on personal biases and educate oneself to foster inclusivity and understanding.

About This Episode

In 1923, an Indian American man named Bhagat Singh Thind told the U.S. Supreme Court that he was white, and therefore eligible to become a naturalized citizen. He based his claim on the fact that he was a member of India's highest caste and identified as an Aryan. His claims were supported by the so-called Indo-European language theory, a controversial idea at the time that says nearly half the world's population speak a language that originated in one place. Theories about who lived in that place inspired a racist ideology that contended that the original speakers of the language were a white supreme race that colonized Europe and Asia thousands of years ago. This was used by many to define whiteness and eventually led to one of the most horrific events in history. On this episode of Throughline, we unpack the myths around this powerful idea and explore the politics and promise of the mother tongue.

People

Bhagat Singh Thind, Amanda Frost, Emma Lazarus

Books

"You Are Not American: Citizenship Stripping from Dred Scott to the Dreamers"

Content Warnings:

Discussions of racial discrimination and legal battles based on race.

Transcript

NPR
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Emma Lazarus
Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.

The
The. Wretched refuse of your teeming shore.

Emma Lazarus
Send these, the homeless, tempest tossed to. Me I lift my lamp beside the. Golden door.

Amanda Frost
It'S July 4, 1913. A ship called the SS Minnesota has landed at the port in Seattle. It's carrying thousands of immigrants from India. A 20 year old man steps off that ship on onto us soil. His name is Bhagat Singh Find.

Emma Lazarus
As he described himself, he was an upper caste, pure Brahman Indian. Find was part of the highest caste in India, the brahmin caste. He learned about the promise of the. US in books, and he'd studied english literature in school in India and fell in love with Emerson and Thoreau and some of the american authors that he was reading and studying him. Their words were the reason he fell.

In love with America. So he made the long journey across the Pacific Ocean, hoping to continue his education in a university he attends, UC Berkeley. He works on the side in the logging and lumber industry to help finance his education, and eventually he gets a PhD. This is Amanda Frost, and I'm a. Professor of law at the University of Virginia Law School.

Amanda Frost
If Amandas voice sounds familiar, thats because its her second time on the show talking about citizenship from her book, you. Are not American Citizenship. Stripping from Dred Scott to the Dreamers. It didnt take long for thin to become patriotic, so patriotic that he enlisted in the army and fought for America in World War one. And its around this time in 1918, that he applied for us citizenship, and a federal court in Washington state granted it.

Emma Lazarus
He seems like the perfect candidate for citizenship, a veteran, an educated man earning a good living, and someone who was very passionately patriotic about the United States of America.

The
A few days later, the federal court in Washington state reversed its decision to grant Finn citizenship after pressure from the Bureau of Naturalization. This was a fraught moment in the history of citizenship in the United States. Thind reapplied for citizenship in Oregon in. 1919, and that was in the middle of a debate about who could qualify for citizenship based on their race, basically. Who belonged and who didn't.

Emma Lazarus
Because the law in the United States, starting in 1790, the very first Naturalization act said only free white persons could. Naturalize, only free white persons. That law was then amended after the Civil War to add persons of african descent or african nativity. So you could only naturalize if you were white or quote unquote black. But everybody else was barred from naturalizing.

And this raised some fascinating questions about whiteness. Who is white? What is white? Who is white? What is white?

The
These questions came at a pivotal moment for law and race in the United States. As more and more immigrants arrived in the US in the 19th and 20th centuries, federal and state governments, along with the Supreme Court, were constantly trying to define whiteness. And for the most part, they determined immigrants from Europe could fit that definition. But what about asian immigrants? That wasn't so clear.

Emma Lazarus
Not just people from South Asia, but also Syria and Armenia and the Philippines. And the government and the court are struggling to define this term white. There were only about 8000 south asian immigrants in the United States around the time that Bhagat Singh Singh fin applied for citizenship in a country of 100 million people. But the thing is, xenophobia in the US at that time was very intense and the federal government was trying to slow or stop immigrants from all over Asia from gaining citizenship. It's a very small group of people, and a significant percentage of the South Asians who applied for naturalization were convincing the that they were white and therefore being allowed to naturalize.

And this is what caught the us government's attention and what they decided to put an end to.

Amanda Frost
Soon the government started challenging these applications and those challenges were making it all the way to the Supreme Court. And the court was responding in support of the government's arguments. I feel they're like whack a mole cases. Like, you pop up with one argument about why you're white based on science, and the court whacks it down and then you pop up with your. Another argument about based on skin color, and the court says, no, that's not the test.

So in 1923, the federal government appealed their case against thin citizenship all the way up to the Supreme Court. The case became known as the United States v. Bhagat Singh thind. First, I'll tell you the question that was given to the US Supreme Court. And that question was, quote, is a high caste Hindu of full indian blood, born in Punjab, India, a white person, end quote.

Finn argued that he should be considered white because of a very specific interpretation of indian history. Finn says, I am white because I am a high caste, pure aryan Brahmin from the northern part of India, where centuries in the past, the country was invaded by Aryans, a group that is caucasian. And therefore I am white aryan, also pronounced aryan. It's a loaded word these days that most of us connect to the Nazis. At the time of thins citizenship case, the term was at the center of a controversial theory.

The
Its called Indo european language theory. Born in the 17 hundreds, it contends that languages as diverse as Latin, Greek, Sanskrit, Persian, Punjabi, and even English all have a common a mother tongue that nearly half the worlds population, including you and me, speak a language that that originated in one place. And theories about who lived in that place inspired a racist ideology that contended the original speakers of the language were a white supreme race that colonized Europe and Asia thousands of years ago. And thin was claiming to be a descendant of the white people who supposedly invaded India. He was fighting racism with racism.

Amanda Frost
And this wouldn't be the last time Indo european language theory would be used to decide who is and who is not white, who lives and who dies. On this episode of Throughline from NPR, we're going to unpack the myths around this powerful idea and explore the politics and promise of the mother tongue.

Jamison
Hi, this is Jamison from San Francisco, California. And you're listening to threeline by NPR.

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The
He was sent there on a mission by the british government to immerse himself in the culture and the language of northern India.

He would do just that, learning and studying, for nine years. And during that time, he made a discovery that forever changed our understanding of human history. His name was William Jones.

Jamison
Sir William Jones grew up already knowing several different languages. This is David Anthony. I wrote the horse, the wheel, and language. And the subject of the book is the spread of the indo european languages. David was a professor of archaeology for decades at Hartwick College in New York.

Amanda Frost
He says William Jones was into language from a young age. He was fascinated with languages in his university career, learned the classical languages of Latin and Greek. Everybody had to learn that in university in the 17 hundreds. He graduated from Oxford and eventually studied law. But all the while, he did linguistics on the side.

On his own. He especially had an interest in middle eastern and asian languages, so much so that he'd written a book on the. Grammar of the persian language. In fact, he was the first person to write in English a grammar of Persian. And it was really meant to help english diplomats to extend their control over the rest of the world.

Persian was the traditional language of government and court in northern India. William Jones would master it and 28 other languages in his lifetime. And that was the reason that he was sent to India.

The
This was the era when the british empire was seizing control of land all over the world, and India was no exception. So William Jones main job was to serve as a judge in the legal system the British had imposed over the lands they controlled. Really, he was supposed to bring a british law to India and somehow mesh it with a very complex and ancient system of hindu law. And in order to do that, he had to learn what the legal system was already in India. And in order to learn that, he had to read the Vedas, and he had to get up someone who would teach him vedic law, philosophy and language so that he could read it in the original.

The Vedas are the most ancient hindu religious text. Theyre in Sanskrit, dating all the way back to the second millennium BCE. And William Jones had to learn it quick. But its not like he could just sign up for a course. It was something that only priests from the highest caste, Brahmins, the same caste Bhagat din Singh was from, were allowed to learn.

Vaibhav Purindare
Brahmin priests at that time had monopoly rights over the language. This is Vaibhav Purindari, a senior editor at the Times of India, who has written about indo european languages. The other caste in India could not really use it or could not teach it, so he had to learn it from a priest, basically.

Jamison
And he went about for years learning the ancient form of Sanskrit in which the laws were preserved.

The
This is a recitation of the Vedas in the sanskrit language.

While studying it, William Jones discovered words in Sanskrit that were very similar and in some cases identical to other european languages he knew. And he found many similarities between Sanskrit and Greek and Latin. And he came across a number of similar words, phrases and so many similar things between these languages.

Jamison
Mater, mother, father, nama, nomen, name, anomica, anonymous calendar. All of a sudden he realized, my gosh, this is the same as Latin and Greek. These languages are closely related. As William Jones compared the languages he kept discovering shared vocabulary and grammar, his mind was completely blown. There's no way you could look at the similarities between them and not come to the conclusion that they came from a common source.

Amanda Frost
And that common source meant that these languages were part of one family, a language family that came to be called Indo European. The Indo european languages are a family of languages which is today spread all over the world. About half the people in the world speak an indo european language today. All of these languages, including English, most of the european languages, ancient Persian, Iranian, all of these languages belong to the Indo european language family. William Jones gave a lecture about his findings in 1786, and his colleagues were.

Jamison
Also blown away when he said that, you know, Latin, Greek and Sanskrit were sprung from a common source. Everyone in back home in England was. Surprised, astonished, astonished because this was the age of european imperialism. Most british people would have viewed Indians as completely alien, having almost nothing in common with british culture. And heres William Jones saying, actually our languages both came from the same same mother tongue.

The
This was a revolutionary discovery by William Jones. It pointed to a deep linguistic and cultural connection between Asia and Europe. It could have been a finding that stayed in academia. But instead, the discovery of the Indo european language family ended up becoming fodder for a racist movement. And a single word came to characterize this movement, a word William Jones used to simply describe the south asian branch of the language family, Arya.

Vaibhav Purindare
The word arya means noble in Sanskrit, and it comes from the sanskrit language. And broadly, the sanskrit texts refer to people who follow the hindu faith as Aryans. So that's where the word comes from. And William Jones took it from Sanskrit because he had read the Sanskrit. The Indo european languages of northern South Asia are called as a group Indo Aryan languages.

Jamison
And the word Aryan was used as a self designation, an ethnic self designation by the ancient speakers of iranian and the ancient speakers of Sanskrit. So if the Indo european languages had a common source, what was that language? Who spoke it? Where were they from? Within a century, the name Aryan spiraled beyond its original linguistic confines, with many Europeans calling those ancient people Aryans, claiming that they were light skinned conquerors who about 1500 years ago spread their language and culture through large parts of Europe and South Asia, including India.

The
It was the pseudo scientific origin of white supremacy. That racist theory was the basis for Bhagat thin Singh's argument that because he was the descendant of white Aryans, he qualified for us citizenship. But before we get to the origins of that racist theory, we're going to explore what modern genetics and archaeology have to say about who the original Indo Europeans really were.

Amanda Frost
Coming up, David Anthony tells us a story of an ancient culture called the Yamnaya.

Jamison
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Part two the Yamnaya when William Jones discovered indo european languages in 1786, he brought up an even more mysterious set of questions. Where did this language come from? Who spoke it, when? Where? How did it get spread all over the place?

Jamison
It's out there as one of the great unsolved problems in western intellectual history. That's a reason that I decided to pretty much dedicate my career to trying to solve this. That's David Anthony again as an archaeologist. He's gone about trying to solve this problem like a detective would. He studies evidence like human and animal fossils, migration patterns and language to piece together a story, a story about what he calls the mother tongue.

Where was the mother tongue for these languages located? That's a one question. And when was it there and then how did it spread? There were many theories that floated around in the 18 hundreds. Some people thought the indo european languages originated in South Asia.

The
Other people said the Himalayas, and some insisted it was from northern Europe. But it wasn't until the turn of the 20th century, when the modern practice of archaeology emerged, that the picture became clearer.

Amanda Frost
When early archaeologists explored the region north of the caspian and black seas and what's now Ukraine and Russia, they started to notice a pattern. There were excavations where they differentiated between three different kinds of graves, catacomb graves. Timber graves and pit graves. That last one, pit graves, that's the one we're gonna focus on because soon archaeologists started finding them all over what's now Ukraine, Russia and Kazakhstan. They looked like large mounds of grass and dirt.

And buried underneath was usually a body surrounded by its earthly belongings, sometimes weapons. The oldest ones dated back to 3200 bce, over 5000 years ago. The russian version of pit grave is Yamnaya. Yamnaya is the name the archaeologists gave the ancient people who created these pit graves. Yamnaya cultura, the Yamnaya culture graves are.

Often used by archaeologists to learn things about ancient people because mourning is a form of cultural expression. And these pit graves, this form of cultural expression were starting to be recognized in places farther and farther away. That practice of burying people under burial mounds spread from there both to the east and to the west, thousands of. Miles away in both directions. These burial mounds, they are radiocarbon dated.

Jamison
They show up around 3000 bc. They don't look local. Archaeologically, it looked like an intrusion, an. Intrusion into already existing ancient communities in Europe and Asia. Radiocarbon dating showed that the practice of pit graves spread fast in just a few hundred years.

But the question remained, did people spread with it?

Or was it just that the practice, the ritual practice was adopted by people next door? We couldn't really solve that problem archeologically.

The
Until 2015 when new evidence emerged, genetic evidence.

Jamison
Geneticists came up with the ability to extract not just some DNA, but the entire human genome from ancient individuals. This allowed researchers to actually see exactly which genes were spreading around Eurasia. And when it was revolutionary technology that opened a whole new window into the story. One of the things that the ancient DNA revealed that archaeologists were not certain about is that with the burial mounds came a population, the Yamnaya culture. So modern genetic testing confirmed that people related to the original Yamnaya people had migrated as far west as central Europe and as far east as Mongolia.

The
Destinations more than 3000 miles apart, where their genes were spreading right alongside culture and with it probably language. After 2015, we could see that. We couldnt see that before.

David Anthony saw a story in all of this evidence, a story that could answer the question William Jones asked in 1786 when he discovered the connection between indo european languages. Who were the speakers of the original mother tongue? David Anthony thinks it might have been the Yamnaya. Now we have to be clear here. This is a theory, a widely accepted one, but one among many.

At any rate, it goes like.

Amanda Frost
The. Amnaya culture beast, begins around 3200 bc and goes till about 2600 bc, about 600 years. Just to give you a sense of scale, this is over 5000 years ago, before the first pyramids were being built in Egypt. And when there were still woolly mammoths. Walking the earth, their primary source of food was meat and milk.

They lived in the steppes north of the Black Sea and Caspian Sea, a vast land located on a grassy plain. Rolling hills covered with open grasslands. Very few forests except down in the river valleys, which are like these ribbons that are hundreds of kilometers long of high resource density, surrounded by nothing. Therefore, almost all of the resources that humans cared about were initially in the river valleys and the human population avoided the open grasslands and stayed in the river valleys.

The
At some point around 3200 BCE, the Amnaya began moving away from those river valleys and spreading across the inhospitable plains. They didn't leave any writing behind, but David Anthony has some idea about how they began to do it. And the underlying innovations that allowed this to happen was, number one, horseback riding and number two, wheeled vehicles. Horseback riding, according to David's research, allowed them to grow their animal herds. Because herds are easier to control from the back of a horse than on foot.

Jamison
Horseback riding made it possible to have much larger herds. But much larger herds without foddering them required you to move a lot because they would eat up their pasture. And the question the problem of human mobility to stay with the herds was. Solved by wagons, wagons with wheels. It was a new invention from other parts of the world that the yamnaya had adopted.

They could carry tents, firewood, food, water. It allowed the yamnaya to travel across the plains and beyond, looking for greener pastures for their animals. You begin to see Yamnaya, kurgan, cemeteries in the plains between the river valleys. And all of the settlements in the river valleys are abandoned. Generation after generation, Yamnaya pushed out beyond their homeland, steppe.

The
In the span of about 1500 years, their culture and genetics began to appear in places from northern Europe all the way to South Asia. They expanded out of the steppes and attempted to establish the nomadic economy over much of Eurasia.

The migration took hundreds of years and likely happened in waves. So there's no way to tell exactly what happened happened. But what we do know for sure is that they left signs of their existence in the genetics and the languages of the people living everywhere from Ireland to India to Iran.

Amanda Frost
The two languages I speak best are Farsi, the language spoken by most Iranians, and English. Both of these languages are part of the Indo european language family. So the word for mother in English is nearly identical to the word for it in Farsi. Mawdar, or father in Farsi is pedar. The word for daughter in Farsi is Dokhtar.

When I first learned this fact, it made me obsessed to find out more.

Jamison
This is where the language you and I are speaking right now, this is where it came from. People are interested. People want to know where their language came from and what its roots are and origins. And it's fascinating to see that we're actually connected to each other in this very deep cultural way.

Amanda Frost
David Anthony's story of the Yamnaya people and their role in spreading common culture and language is a testament to how modern scientific discoveries can help us answer previously unknowable questions about ancient history. Maybe it allows us to see ourselves in each other, in our deep connections. But theres another, more sinister way people have and still view the existence of this connection, a metanarrative thats centered around race. Its the claim that these original speakers of the indo european mother tongue were white and that their so called racial supremacy allowed them to colonize much of Europe in Asia. This was the basis of the argument thin made in front of the Supreme Court when he claimed that as a descendant of that race which had supposedly colonized India thousands of years ago, he should be considered white.

But David Anthony said says attributing any racial characteristics to any ancient people is a big mistake. I think myself, as an archaeologist, that applying the modern word race to any group of people in the ancient past is not acceptable. I never used the word race applied to any archaeological group because race carries though that word carries a huge amount of baggage, historical, emotional. We think of it in terms of modern categories, how race is defined in the modern world today. And I think those categories did not exist in the ancient world.

Jamison
They did not have categories like that.

The
Coming up, a movement was born in the 19th century to make theories about the spread of indo european languages a tool for white supremacy. This movement eventually culminates in one of the worst atrocities in human history.

Lou
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Get started@betterment.com. dot investing involves risk. Performance is not guaranteed. Part three the deadly myth when I. Was a teenager, I had the most confusing experience.

Amanda Frost
I was visiting a hindu temple in suburban Maryland where I grew up with a friend's family for some kind of special occasion. It was my first time. It was beautiful. The walls were covered with ornate symbols, and the place smelled like incense, the best kind. But among those symbols on the wall was something that stopped me in my tracks.

I had to do a double take to make sure I was seeing it correctly. It was like a cross with each of the arms bent at a right angle. It looked like the symbol at the center of the nazi flag. I leaned over to my friend and said, yo, bro, why is there a swastika on the wall? He told me, okay, it's a swastika, but, like, not that kind of swastika.

I was like, is there more than one kind? He said, shut up, bro. I'll tell you later. We never discussed it again. But what I did learn later is that he was right.

There is more than one kind. And the Og version has long been used in Hinduism and Buddhism and went back thousands of years. And the way it ended up on the nazi flag is a story about how a seemingly harmless metanarrative, like the indo european language theory could end up being one of the most dangerous ideas on earth.

Alfred Rosenberg
A nation without a vital myth drifts aimlessly throughout history. Myth gives purpose and meaning to the civilization. Myth makes a people a nation, and a nation a race, and a race a contributor to the world. These are the words of the german race theorist Alfred Rosenberg. Myth shapes the race so that the race may fulfill the potential of its individuals.

The myth makes us conscious that we are a race and not merely an arbitrary, purposeless, ill defined conglomerate of men and women and women. Alfred Rosenberg was one of the most influential race propagandists of the 20th century. And he was very interested in indo european language theory. He adopted William Jones linguistic theory and. Conflated this with the concept of race.

Vaibhav Purindare
And what was a linguistic concept became a racial concept. This is Vaibhav Purundade. Again. He's explaining where Rosenberg and other european racists thought the original indo european people, who they called Aryans, came from. According to him, the Aryans had come from the global north and specifically from Germany.

And some 1500 years ago, they landed in India, from the northwest, these. These blond Europeans with blue eyes. One of the things they did was to separate themselves from the local population. This local population was inferior. They were dark people.

And essentially, he takes the word Aryan. The word arya, like is a sanskrit term. It means noble. He thinks the word Aryan actually is a word that is, describes the nordic race, the race of the white people that's supposed to rule over the earth and that's supposed to enslave people of brown and black color.

Amanda Frost
Rosenberg's ideas were captured in his popular book, the myth of the 20th century. Among his followers was a former soldier, failed artist named Adolf Hitler. Hitler imbibes these theories, and he thinks that the Aryans went from Germany to India, but they lost their aryan ness there. And the Indians are not the remnants of the aryan race. For Hitler, the racial element is the most important element in life and in the organizing of humanity.

In the late 19th century and early 20th century, there was a movement we now call race science. Basically, it was a bunch of european and american academics who were searching for scientific ways to organize the world according to race. It was a way of defining who is white and, quote, superior. And William Jones ideas about indo european language were co opted by this movement as a part of their racial purity project. This is where Rosenbergs strange racist ideas were born.

The
And Hitler genuinely believed them, so much so that he even adopted an ancient symbol, one which he believed was a white aryan symbol, to represent his political party, the swastika. The swastika is a symbol that's hugely popular in India. And not only is it popular, but it's a much revered symbol. It's one of the most revered symbols of Hinduism. And what does a swastika mean?

Vaibhav Purindare
It is a symbol that represents auspiciousness, goodness, purity, and it's a symbol that is supposed to bring prosperity. It's a symbol that is also used in other places, like Tibet. He truly believed that the swastika was a symbol of the nordic race, of the Europeans, of the white Europeans. And the inferior Indians had taken it from the nordic race and imbibed it and adopted it as their own symbol. But what he does is he takes a symbol and he.

He turns it on its head in a way. He, like, rotates it. It's, like the wrong. It's. It's not quite right.

Absolutely. What Hitler does is he actually rotates the symbol and changes the shape of the symbol, and he also. He makes it black. A symbolic distortion. Hitler was basically just taking an idea and molding it to fit his political and philosophical needs.

He's using symbols that are foreign to him. He is using a word called arya, or Aryan, that is foreign to him. He is using a group of languages, the indo european group of languages, to justify his whole racial philosophy, which is essentially inhuman, and starts using and exploiting that theory in order to actually destroy an entire population.

Amanda Frost
On November 9, 1938, nazi party paramilitary forces executed a coordinated, planned attack on jewish businesses and synagogues across Germany and Austria. At least 91 people were killed, and thousands of jewish men were arrested and sent to concentration camps. Many historians believe that this event, Kristallnacht, began one of the most deadly phases of the Holocaust that killed 6 million Jews and other people deemed racially inferior to pure Aryans by the nazi party. That same year, Heinrich Himmler, one of Adolf Hitlers top commanders, sent a team of nazi scientists on a mission. Himmler sets up a unit within the SS.

Vaibhav Purindare
The name of this unit is the Bureau of Ancestral Heritage. And what is its job? Its job is to find out the origins of the aryan race. In 1938, he sends a team of five members of this unit to Tibetan. But why?

The
The answer to that question makes this story even weirder.

Vaibhav Purindare
One of the theories is that there was this island called Atlantis, somewhere between England and Portugal, and the Aryans lived there. Himmler thought the Aryans might be from the lost city of Atlantis. And one fine day, a divine thunderbolt hit the island. The island sunk, and the people of the island fled elsewhere. They swam to safety, and they looked for a more secure place to live in.

These were the real Nordics, according to the racial theories. And eventually they moved to the Himalayas and specifically to Tibet. Why? Because, well, Atlantis had sunk soon. So you want to go to a place where you don't get a sinking feeling.

One way of doing it is to get into the mountains, and the Himalayas are really tall mountains, and Tibet in particular is known as the roof of the world, so you'll be safest there. Himmler was searching for evidence of these Atlantis Aryans, and it was all part of a larger nazi project to legitimize their racist views through quote unquote, science. Himmler was hoping to come up with the exact definition of the aryan race, the defining features that distinguish them from the rest of humanity, so that it would be so much more easier to identify those who are allegedly racially inferior. That was the whole idea.

So he sends this team of five people. They first arrive in Sri Lanka, then they go to India and work their way all the way up to Tibet. By 1939, they enter Tibet on the. Backs of mules, carrying those swastika flags. The symbol of their country and ideology.

Now, the Tibetans are not surprised by the swastika flags at all, because the swastika is very much a part of tibetan culture. The team pays their respects to the, the tibetan leaders at the capital of Lhasa. Then they get to work. They get friendly with the local people of Tibet, and they start taking measurements. They measure the noses of the tibetan people, the eyes of the tibetan people, the ears of the tibetan people, the facial details of the tibetan people.

The
They take photographs, literally thousands of photographs, hardcore race science stuff. They start making casts, their faces of ears of noses and other parts of the body. They do this to hundreds of Tibetans. They take fingerprints and in fact, thousands of fingerprints. And what did the tibetan people think this was all for?

Vaibhav Purindare
People are told that they are here on a scientific expedition, which has got to do entirely with zoology and anthropology. But nazi memos made it clear that one objective was to find the army homeland.

Now, suddenly, when they are in the midst of this pseudo scientific expedition, the war is on the horizon, and in August 1939, they are forced to leave and head back home. Himmler, of course, is very proud of this team, and he goes to the Munich airport himself to receive the team, and he is happy with what they got. They are now going to get into their lab and look at where the original Aryans really came from. Ultimately, Himmlers quest to find evidence of the original Aryans was not successful. But what it shows is how deeply he and other nazi leadership believed this wild idea.

The
They were willing to go to any length to define the aryan race. As for the signs, scientists who went on the mission, their work for the nazi regime would go on. Bruno Beggar, the anthropologist, is sent to Auschwitz, the notorious concentration camp, to take measurements of the Jews there. And that is for an entirely different reason. That is, to examine the characteristics of people who are allegedly inferior.

Using a linguistic theory as a way to define racial superiority, and in the process, exclude and murder people who do not fit that category. This is what the Nazis did during the 1930s and 1940s in their quest for so called aryan purity. A distortion with devastating consequences.

Amanda Frost
A distortion of a distortion, all stemming from a discovery showing the deep linguistic similarities that connect so many of us to each other.

Bhagat Singh Thind
The term Aryan has to do with linguistic and not at all with physical characteristics. And it would seem reasonably clear that mere resemblance in language indicating a common linguistic root buried in remotely ancient soil is altogether inadequate to prove common racial origin. This is from the ruling in the 1923 US versus Bhagat Singh thin court case. It is a matter of familiar observation and knowledge that the physical group characteristics of the Hindus render them readily distinguishable from the various groups of persons in this country commonly recognized as white. The children of English, French, german, italian, scandinavian, and other european parentage quickly merge into the mass of our population and lose the distinctive hallmarks of their european origin.

On the other hand, it cannot be doubted that the children born in this country of hindu parents would retain indefinitely the clear evidence of their ancestry. The Supreme Court rejected thin's petition for citizenship, claiming that he just didn't look white enough. They rejected his argument that his aryan origin, that his language family, was equal to race. And the court said, we think the average educated American would be shocked to think that a South Asian could be white. This is Amanda Frost again.

Emma Lazarus
And they said, we know it when we see it. We know who's white. They dismissed all of Finn's, quote, scientific arguments and basically just said, you are not us. And that comes through in several different points in the opinion. You are not us.

Amanda Frost
The fallout of the case was devastating for dozens of southeastern Asian Americans whose citizenship, just like Finn's, was revoked. After the ruling, the government went after the people, the South Asians, who gained citizenship in the years leading up to Finn's case and denaturalized at least 65 people between 1923 and 1927. This was only about ten years before the Nazis would use similar language to commit a genocide. And the irony is that Supreme Court is widely viewed as one of the most racist in american history, and they came to the correct conclusion that language is not the same as race. But they came to this conclusion in order to exclude South Asians from us citizenship.

It's like they were right about the issue for all the wrong reasons. It's a mind bending hypocrisy that the United States eventually changed. After World War two, War II, the. US could see what Nazi Germany was doing, and the us government recognized. I think it was a mirror held up where the us government saw these ideas of racial purity that we've had.

Emma Lazarus
We are seeing them played out in the extreme in Nazi Germany, and that is not us. And I think that is partly why the us government slowly rescinded these restrictions on naturalization, the last one falling in 1952.

The
And as for Bhagat, Singh Thind, his story goes to a place you might not expect. He did not leave the United States, and it appears he did not reject the United States. He stayed in the country, wasn't deported. And then in 1935, Congress passed a law giving citizenship to veterans. And as a veteran, he took advantage of that law and became a citizen in 1936.

Emma Lazarus
He got married in 1940, relatively late in life, to a woman named Vivian Davies and had a son and a daughter. And then he had this very successful speaking career around the United States. He was an ordained minister, a religious leader, and he wrote books about his philosophy and his religion. And he gave speeches throughout the United States. And he even gave a speech entitled what America means, means to me.

And at the end of the day, he became a us citizen and had a successful and long life in the United States. And he went back to India about 50 years after he left and visited with family and his community there as well.

The
That's it for this week's welcome to the show. I'm rund Abdelfattah. I'm Ramtin Arablouei. And you've been listening to throughline from NPR. This episode was produced by me and.

Amanda Frost
Me and Lawrence Wu, Julie Cain, Anya. Steinberg, Yolanda Sanguin, Casey Minor, Christina Kim. Devon Kadayama, Giordanos, Tis fazion. Fact checking for this episode was done by Kevin Volkal. Thank you to Allison Katyama for their voiceover work.

Thanks also to Sanjukta Podar, Olivia Chukoti, Micah Ratner, Rachel Seller, Taylor Ash, Tamar Charney, and Anya Grundmann. This episode was mixed by Robert Rodriguez. Music for this episode was composed by Ramtin and his band Drop Electric, which. Includes Anya Mizani, Navid Marvy show Fujiwara. We would love to hear from you.

Send us a voicemail to 8725-8805 and leave your name where you're from and say the line you're listening to throughline from NPR, and tell us what you think of the show. We might even feature your voicemail in a future episode. That number again, is 872-58-8805 and finally. If you have an idea or like something you heard on the show, please write us@throughlinepr.org. dot thanks for listening.

Lou
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