According to
Michael Witzel, some Vedic passages point to the Indo-Aryan migrations. A translation by M. Witzel (1989) of one passage of the
Baudhayana Shrauta Sutra may be interpreted as evidence in favor of the Aryan Migration: Based on Witzel's article, historians like
Romila Thapar state that this passage contained literary evidence for Aryan migration. The translation by the late Austrian Indologist and Brahmana specialist Hertha Krick (1982), and in part T. Goto (2000), Krick writes (in German:) "Westwards Amavasyu (or: he stayed home in the west, as his name says 'one who has goods/possessions at home')". Witzel's translation has been criticized by supporters of the Indigenous Aryans theory. In 1998 Indologist
Koenraad Elst, a supporter of the Indigenous Aryans theory, was the first to criticize Witzel's translation of the BSS passage, stating: Archaeologist
B. B. Lal, another supporter of the
Indigenous Aryans theory, also suggests the mention of westward movements of some Vedic clans to be the case, rather than any movements from Central Asia or Afghanistan. The passage, or parallel passages, were also discussed by
Hans Henrich Hock and (in part) Toshifumi Goto, who also diverged from Witzel's translation. Agarwal further compared Witzel's translation with earlier translations by
Willem Caland, C.G. Kashikar and D.S. Triveda, noting that they all state that "Amavasu migrated westwards, rather than staying where he was." According to Cardona, "this text cannot serve to document an Indo-Aryan migration into the main part of the subcontinent." Nevertheless, Cardona also notes that "major arguments put forth by those who maintain that the Indo-Aryans were indigenous to the subcontinent are not cogent." He discusses in detail the various possibilities for an interpretation of the passage and concludes "Whatever interpretation one chooses, this evidence for movements inside the subcontinent (or from its northeastern borders, in Afghanistan) changes little about the bulk of evidence assembled from linguistics and from the RV itself that points to an outside origin of Vedic Sanskrit and its initial speakers." == References ==