Published June 4, 2026
| Version v1
Working paper
Open
The Undivided River: Indus Valley Civilization, Buddhist Gandhara, and the Sufi Continuity of Sacred Civilization in the Indus Basin
Authors/Creators
- 1. Sacred Civilization Research Archive (SCRA), Mandi Bahauddin, Punjab, Pakistan
Description
SCRA Indus Basin Studies Series No. 1. A forensic reconstruction of five structural continuities connecting Indus Valley Civilization (c. 3300-1300 BCE) through Buddhist Gandhara (c. 250 BCE-700 CE) to the Alid-Sufi tradition: (1) the holy person as access point to the divine -- from IVC ritual specialists to Gandharan Buddhas to the Sufi shaykh; (2) the sacred mound as architectural theology -- from IVC citadels to Buddhist stupas to the dargah complex; (3) repetitive sonic technology as spiritual instrument; (4) devotional music as path to God -- from IVC ritual music through Buddhist devotional culture to qawwali; (5) ego dissolution as spiritual apex -- from IVC meditation imagery through Buddhist anatta to Sufi fana. The Great Bath of Mohenjo-daro and the dargah of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar: connected by thirty kilometers of Sindhi landscape and four thousand years of recognition.
Notes
Files
Files
(52.6 kB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
md5:358e883a55a2cab73e771ea8e39f0751
|
52.6 kB | Download |