Weekly Assignment 2 Classical Civilizations (p ; MUST READ p , p , p ) AP World History

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Weekly Assignment 2 Classical Civilizations (p. 34-78; MUST READ p. 34-39, p. 55-57, p. 74-78) AP World History Task I: Digging Deeper (10 pts.) Compare the influence of TWO of the following belief systems in their respective societies in the Classical Era (600BCE-600CE): Hinduism Buddhism Confucianism Legalism In your response, be sure to: Identify similarities and differences in the influence of the belief systems on TWO P.E.R.S.I.A.N. aspects of society. You should discuss ONE similarity and ONE difference within each aspect of P.E.R.S.I.A.N. that you choose. Please be careful not to compare the belief, but their influence on society. (4 pts; one point per similarity/difference) Explain the reasons for each similarity and difference discussed. Many reasons will boil down to the basic principles of the belief systems discussed. (4 pts; one point per reason) Provide evidence to support your reasons for the similarities and differences discussed. (2 pts.) Task II: Current Events (8 pts.) Using the article Untouchable from National Geographic, answer the guided questions with the article and address the tasks below: I. Paragraph I: Briefly answer the questions at the end of the article (2 pts.) a. How does Hindu Law play a different role in Indian lives today that it did during the Vedic Age? How did its value to society transform? b. Why do you think Hindu Law has not evolved with time? II. III. Paragraph II: Make a connection between the content of the article and Hinduism and Buddhism s impact on classical Indian society (Mauryan and Gupta Empires). Consider the impact of ideologies on daily life as you conduct your search. Be sure to find an article that interests you! (4 pts.) Paragraph 3: Explain how the article addresses one of the SPICE THEMES of AP World History. Remember that the themes are not simply topical, but represent a process of development, change, and interaction. (2 pts.) Theme 1: Development and Transformation of Social Structures Theme 2: State-Building, Expansion, and Conflict (Political) Theme 3: Interaction Between Humans and the Environment Theme 4: Development and Interaction of Cultures Theme 5: Creation, Expansion, and Interaction of Economic Systems Task III: Vocabulary (2 pts.) Define the following terms: - bureaucracy - Aryan migrations - caste system - Upanishads - Vedas - Siddhartha Gautama - Tripitaka - Mauryan Empire - Qin Dynasty - Han Dynasty

Untouchable National Geographic Magazine By Tom O Neil Laxman Singh Lost his legs after a beating by upper caste villagers in Rajasthan. The sins of Girdharilal Maurya are many, his attackers insisted. He has bad karma. Why else would he, like his ancestors, be born an Untouchable, if not to pay for his past lives? Look, he is a leatherworker, and Hindu law says that working with animal skins makes him unclean, someone to avoid and revile. And his unseemly prosperity is a sin. Who does this Untouchable think he is, buying a small plot of land outside the village? Then he dared speak up, to the police and other authorities, demanding to use the new village well. He got what Untouchables deserve. One night, while Maurya was away in a nearby city, eight men from the higher Rajput caste came to his farm. They broke his fences, stole his tractor, beat his wife and daughter, and burned down his house. The message was clear: Stay at the bottom where you belong. Girdharilal Maurya took his family and fled the village of Kharkada in India's western state of Rajasthan. It took two years for him to feel safe enough to return and then only because human rights lawyers took up his case, affording him a thin shield of protection. "I see them almost every day," Maurya now says of his attackers. "They roam around freely." Maurya has agreed to meet me after dark in the dirt courtyard of his village house. He is a tall, handsome man of 52, his hair white, his face lined with worry. On a chilly February night he pulls a bathrobe tight around him. His wife moves in the shadows preparing tea. They live with the rest of their caste on the southern end of the village, downwind of the upper caste families who believe that they must not smell Untouchables. The court case against his attackers drags on, Maurya explains in a tense, level voice. He tries to sound positive: Untouchables use the well pump now; one of his sons has advanced to college, the first of his caste from the village. But once Maurya confesses that he is still scared of his attackers, his voice rises and his wife turns up the radio inside to mask it. "The government refuses to address problems like this business about the well because they say the caste system legally does not exist. Well, look around you. People treat animals better than us. This is not natural. We're only asking for human rights." His voice grows even louder to beseech the surrounding night: "Why did the gods let me be born in such a country?"

To be born a Hindu in India is to enter the caste system, one of the world's longest surviving forms of social stratification. Embedded in Indian culture for the past 1,500 years, the caste system follows a basic precept: All men are created unequal. The ranks in Hindu society come from a legend in which the main groupings, or varnas, emerge from a primordial being. From the mouth come the Brahmans the priests and teachers. From the arms come the Kshatriyas the rulers and soldiers. From the thighs come the Vaisyas merchants and traders. From the feet come the Sudras laborers. Each varna in turn contains hundreds of hereditary castes and subcastes with their own pecking orders. A fifth group describes the people who are achuta, or untouchable. The primordial being does not claim them. Untouchables are outcasts people considered too impure, too polluted, to rank as worthy beings. Prejudice defines their lives, particularly in the rural areas, where nearly three-quarters of India's people live. Untouchables are shunned, insulted, banned from temples and higher caste homes, made to eat and drink from separate utensils in public places, and, in extreme but not uncommon cases, are raped, burned, lynched, and gunned down. The ancient belief system that created the Untouchables overpowers modern law. While India's constitution forbids caste discrimination and specifically abolishes Untouchability, Hinduism, the religion of 80 percent of India's population, governs daily life with its hierarchies and rigid social codes. Under its strictures, an Untouchable parent gives birth to an Untouchable child, condemned as unclean from the first breath. Yet Untouchables don't look different from other Indians. Their skin is the same color. They don't wear rags; they are not covered with sores. They walk the same streets and attend the same schools. In Untouchable villages, women sweep their dirt yards and wash the family clothes. Children play cricket, usually with tree limbs and tennis balls, and paste pictures of athletes and pop stars on the walls of their one-room mud houses. Men bend to their work, sewing shoes, stitching carpets, drying cow dung for fuel, and, like men of every caste in every village, throw money away on drink and gambling. But despite outward signs of normalcy, Untouchables may as well wear a scarlet tattoo on their foreheads to advertise their status. "You cannot hide your caste," insists Sukhadeo Thorat, a faculty member at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi and among the few Untouchables in India with a Ph.D. in economics. "You can try to disguise it, but there are so many ways to slip up. A Hindu will not feel confident developing a social relationship without knowing your background. Within a couple of months, your caste will be revealed." Family name, village address, body language all deliver clues, but none so much as occupation. Untouchables perform society's "unclean work" work that involves physical contact with blood, excrement, and other bodily "defilements" as defined by Hindu law. Untouchables cremate the dead, clean latrines, cut umbilical cords, remove dead animals from the roads, tan hides, sweep gutters. These jobs, and the status of Untouchability, are passed down for generations. Even the vast number of Untouchables who work at "clean" jobs, mostly lowpaying farmwork for landlords, are considered impure. In an outwardly free society, Untouchables are trapped at the bottom of a system that can't function without discrimination.

Many people would point out that the crudest, most overt forms of discrimination have largely disappeared, the result of sporadic reform movements before and after India's independence in 1947. It's true that at least in the public sphere, Untouchables have made progress since the days within living memory when they were beaten if their shadow touched a higher caste person, wore bells to warn of their approach, and carried buckets so their spit wouldn't contaminate the ground. Untouchables couldn't enter schools or sit on a bench near a higher caste person. The 1950 constitution mandates a quota system that reserves seats in the federal legislature equal to the Untouchable share of the population: 15 percent. In legal and administrative parlance Untouchables are now known as the Scheduled Castes. Reserved spots extend to positions in state legislatures, village councils, civil service, and university classrooms. India's ruling parties have supported this quota program despite widespread opposition, some of it violent. Mobs rioted for 78 days in 1981 in the state of Gujarat when a high-caste student was denied entry to a medical school to make space for an Untouchable. Though many quota positions go unfilled, particularly at universities, employment in the vast Indian bureaucracy has lifted the living standard for some Untouchables, propelling thousands into the middle class. But for all the laws and regulations on the books, the hard heart of caste remains unmoved. There are 160 million Untouchables in India a country that trumpets itself as a model for developing nations: the world's most populous democracy, a modern power outfitted with software industries, communication satellites, and plants for making nuclear energy and nuclear bombs. During the winter I spent in India, hardly a day passed that I didn't hear or read of acid thrown in a boy's face, or a wife raped in front of her husband, or some other act whose provocation was simply that an Untouchable didn't know his or her place. 1. How does Hindu Law play a different role in Indian lives today that it did during the Vedic Age? How did its value to society transform? 2. Why do you think Hindu Law has not evolved with time in rural parts of India?

PERSIAN Aspect: PERSIAN Aspect: Brainstorming Outline for Task I: My belief systems: and Similarity Reason for Similarity Difference Reason for Difference Similarity Reason for Similarity Difference Reason for Difference Outline for Task 2: 3-4 sentence summary of the article. Similarity between the article and what we ve learned in class What theme is evident and how so? Paragraph 1 Paragraph 2 Connect Hinduism s impact on modern Indian society to its impact on classical Indian society. Paragraph 3 Consider how that aspect of society is being affected: Positively or negatively? Is this an important impact? Why or why not?