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  • So we have finally encroached upon the giant: India.

  • Some of you've been waiting a long time for this episode.

  • I'm just gonna say straight up:

  • You all know India is incredibly complex and diverse.

  • Even Indians have trouble understanding their own country.

  • Obviously, I won't be able to scratch even the surface in this episode.

  • But I'll try my best. A lot of you Indian geograpeeps have helped me along the way.

  • So thank you, and without further ado, let's begin!

  • ♫♫♫

  • It's time to learn Geography! NOW!!! ♫

  • Hey everybody. I'm your host Barby.

  • This place doesn't even need much of an introduction.

  • Everybody has heard of India. It's big. It's loud.

  • It's colorful, and most importantly it has a plethora of confusing territorial anomalies that I just can't wait to cover. Here we go!!

  • Political Geography

  • There's an old saying: India is a place where everyone is in a hurry,

  • but no one is ever on time.

  • First of all, India is located in South Asia right on the Indian and Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal.

  • Bordered by six other countries. So close to seven but that land bridge between Sri Lanka

  • got wiped away like 600 years ago by a cyclone. India is divided into 29 states and 7 union territories

  • with the capital New Delhi which acts as its own administrative

  • unit located in the capital territory

  • Keep in mind that New Delhi is actually just the name of one of the districts in the capital territory made up of 11.

  • The largest city however, is actually Mumbai, with New Delhi, Bangalore (or Bengaluru) and Hyderabad

  • following after. However the four busiest airports are Delhi (Indira Gandhi International), Mumbai (Chhatrapati Shivaji International)

  • Bengaluru's Kempegowda International and Chennai International in the south.

  • Ah, you know why I'm smiling

  • This is my favorite part of any episode

  • we ever make: territorial anomaly time!!

  • India is loaded with strange borders and

  • deliciously complex demarcation lines.

  • First of all what exactly is a Union territory?

  • In the simplest way I can put this Union Territories are places that are two distinct to be incorporated into a state

  • but too small to have their own local governments.

  • The first one of course is the Delhi National capital territory where the capital lies.

  • Chandigarh is a post-independent city constructed to replace Lahore as the capital of the Punjab area after it was split up between India and Pakistan.

  • Then you have the Island territories the smallest one

  • Lakshadweep and Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The Andaman Islands being home to one of the last

  • uncontacted people groups on the planet:

  • the sentinelese tried who have been hostile to visitors and are therefore left alone.

  • As well as the Nicobar Islands which actually used to be a short-lived colony of Denmark.

  • Finally the three remaining territories are former European Colony towns and ports:

  • Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Daman and Diu

  • which are separated by 200 kilometers across the Gulf of Khambhat.

  • And the most confusing Union Territory: the French-speaking Puducherry

  • Which is actually split between four district cities across India:

  • Karaikal, Mahe, Yanam and Pondicherry.

  • Pondicherry is strange because it has 11 enclaves within the Tamil Nadu state or in this area you can also find the

  • experimental hippie-ish

  • commune with a little bit of controversy (look it up).

  • Here the Eastern States (also known as the Seven Sisters) are connected by this incredibly narrow 27-kilometer wide pathway known as the Siliguri Corridor.

  • This pathway is like a crucial artery that completes the India puzzle. Or so you would think?

  • Now let's discuss the juicy stuff.

  • Now in the China episode

  • I already talked about the disputed areas with India such as Aksai Chin and Arunachal Pradesh.

  • The latter pretty much just belonging to India as it's almost completely inhabited and operated by Indians.

  • So let's move to the other disputes. Now as of 2015 the Bangladesh episode is already outdated as India and Bangladesh have finally come to

  • an agreement over the frighteningly

  • complex former enclave/exclave dispute. In the end India only lost about 40 square kilometers of land to Bangladesh.

  • And now only a few enclaves and exclaves exist.

  • Now let's head North.

  • Now when you try to draw the shape of India you might want to be careful which depiction you use.

  • Some might use this picture.

  • Some might use this.

  • Some might use this

  • and those that don't really study very well might use this.

  • The point is the whole area is like the most heavily militarized

  • diplomatically stressed out region on the planet.

  • It's already had like four wars in the past half century.

  • Basically, India, Pakistan (and to some extent China) all want the entire area for themselves although

  • it's more of like a Pakistan-India thing.

  • In the China episode we already discussed the Chinese disputes with India

  • so I won't cover those in this episode if you want to learn more just watch the China episode.

  • But anyway! This entire area was a former domain known as the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir that was under Royal

  • Maharaja rulers all the way up until independence.

  • Currently this place is split up by this fenced off militarized line known as the Line of Control (LoC) between India and Pakistan.

  • Why is this?

  • Well in the quickest way I can put this:

  • Pakistan: Okay the British are out. We get to take your land.

  • J&K: No, we want to be an independent princely state.

  • Pakistan: Er..we're supposed to take your land and majority of your people are Muslim.

  • Just like us. Even though your ruler is Hindu as well.

  • Soon after...

  • J&K: Hey India. If you help me, I'll let you secede my territory to your land with autonomy.

  • India: Deal.

  • *India beats Pakistan.*

  • J&K: Ha! your problem now.

  • I love how Mike played India. He totally represents India.

  • Oh, and keep in mind Pakistan's capital

  • Islamabad is less than 80 kilometers away from all that drama.

  • The Line of control meanders through the mountains until it stops at a point called NJ-9842.

  • This is where things get really crazy because from there you hit the Siachin glacier (the second longest nonpolar glacier) in the world and this

  • is pretty much the dead man's zone. After point NJ-9842 you hit the actual ground

  • position line: a series of military outposts that extend all the way to the Chinese border.

  • That means everything in this area is ground zero for the Indo-Pak tension.

  • You know the crazy thing is there's actually literally small towns of normal regular civilians living in these areas high up in the mountains.

  • Many of which just go about daily life going to work and raising their families.

  • Otherwise they have a river dispute with Nepal

  • and various River Islands disputed with Bangladesh.

  • Outside of all the dispute stuff though

  • India not only has the world's second largest road network and three of the world's top ten mega cities and their own space program

  • but they also have a copious abundance of landmarks and notable sites way too many to list.

  • But some of the ones that you guys the Indian Geograpeeps have told me to mention include places like

  • the abandoned Dhanuskhodi Ghost City

  • Golconda Fort

  • the four Pillars of Charminar

  • The Ajanta Buddhist art Caves

  • The Elora Monolithic ruins

  • Mandu Fortress

  • The Golden Temple (which feeds over a hundred thousand people a day; for free!)

  • The Gol Gumbaz mausoleum

  • The Kalavantin Durg Post

  • The ruins of Hampi

  • The Hill Forts of Rajasthan

  • Shatrunjaya hill (which is basically like a Mecca for Jains)

  • The temple of the Bodhi tree

  • Jal Mahal

  • Bhangarh Fort (the most haunted place in India)

  • Mohabbat Maqbara

  • and keep in mind. Just like in China

  • you can find a great wall of India in Rajsamand.

  • There's also the Paritala Anjaneya Temple (with the largest statue in India depicting Hanuman)

  • and over 150 acres the Sri Ranganathaswami Temple

  • the largest Hindu Temple in the world

  • And there's also that building with the stuff and that thing and whatever.

  • We could go on for centuries talking about India's rich constructed domicile

  • But what it lies on top of is even more fascinating?

  • Physical Geography

  • Now don't make this mistake.

  • I'm going to India. All I need are my sandals and sunscreen.

  • Welcome to Kargil!

  • (freezing) Oh crap!

  • Now as the seventh largest country in land area, India has a wide range of landscapes, climates and elevations

  • that all contrast from one corner to the other.

  • First of all, let's talk about the North. India sits on the Indian tectonic plate that essentially smashed into the Eurasian plate

  • which in return created the largest Mountain range in the world: the Himalayas.

  • The force is so strong that it's estimated that the Himalayas grow about 2.4 inches

  • or 6.1 centimeters every year. It's also here we can find Kanchenjunga: the tallest mountain in India or the third in the world, right on the border of Nepal.

  • Keep your eye on these mountains. These are pretty much the source of most of India's major rivers that give

  • life to the whole country.

  • That's why India takes these mountains so seriously.

  • You can also find the largest natural lake Wular, up in the Jammu & Kashmir area.

  • Below the Himalayas you reach the North Indian River plains, sometimes referred to as the Indus-Ganga.

  • This is the most fertile part of India where the most important Rivers like the Ganges and its tributaries flow.

  • Heading a little south you Reach the Satpura and Vindhya ranges that pretty much divide North India from South India.

  • On each side you get the Western and Eastern Ghat mountains which in return creates this massive triangle thing called the Deccan plateau.

  • This place is moderately forced especially in the east and the Chota Nagpur plateau

  • where you get a section of the swampy Sunderbans that they share with Bangladesh (check out the Bangladesh episode).

  • Head a little West and you get the dry Thar desert along the border with Pakistan.

  • As well as the Runn of Kutch (known as the salt desert)

  • And finally the only active volcanic area would be the Andaman and Nicobar Islands

  • with Barren Island having actual conical eruptions and Baratang having tame mud Volcanoes

  • Now here's the thing: although India has a relatively high population density

  • they do relatively well with maintaining their ecological footing

  • In fact in 2016 they beat a world record by planting (disputably) 50 million trees in one day.

  • They've also agreed to reforest about 12 percent of the country by 2030. The most heavily forested area being the Seven Sister states in East India.

  • Now one of the factors that contributes to this would be the fact that India has the lowest meat consumption in the world with

  • the highest population percentage of

  • vegetarians at around 40% (most of whom are lacto-vegetarian that consume milk products)

  • By the way in India when buying groceries this label means

  • Vegetarian and this one means

  • Non-vegetarian.

  • Nonetheless, the remainder of the population does typically eat some kind of animal

  • protein (mostly in the form of seafood or chicken).

  • But almost never beef or pork (unless a fewer part of the muslim or Christian minorities scattered throughout the west and east areas).

  • Now let's talk about the role of Cattle, shall we?

  • India has more cattle and livestock than anywhere else in the world at around 330 million

  • And it's interesting because since they have prevalent Hindu traditions, the killing of cows is illegal in many of the states except for a few,

  • and each state has varying degrees of punishment for committing intentional cow slaughter.

  • Keyword: Intentional. Cows accidentally get hit by cars all the time.

  • Once the cows too old to produce milk it typically is released into the open

  • to die naturally in the wild. "Ideally".

  • Nonetheless male cattle get it much worse as they are deemed as kind of "useless". Some places use them as draft animals for labour.

  • Some religious sects use them as sacrifices, but otherwise

  • They're typically sold to the underground market for beef or hides.

  • To this day, there are about six times as many female cows as male cattle in India so that means: yeah something's happening to the males.

  • Nonetheless, India does have the third highest carbon emission rate after China and the US. Fourth if you consider the EU.

  • However emission per capita they rank pretty low at only about two kilotons per person.

  • Contrast that with Qatar at about 40.

  • There are 94 national Parks, 501 Animal Sanctuaries

  • across the country where you can find some of the national animals like the Peacock,

  • the Ganges River Dolphin, the King Cobra,

  • the Indian elephant,

  • and the highest population of Bengal tigers in the world

  • which are all highly protected.

  • India also has the most irrigated land in the world

  • which allows them to become the number one producer of multiple products like

  • Millet

  • Bananas

  • Lemons (limes?),

  • Mangos,

  • Ginger,

  • Chickpeas,

  • milk, butter,

  • Fennel,

  • Jute,

  • and about 75% of the world's Spices alone come from India.

  • Speaking of which: food.

  • Typically you can find the staples: Roti, chapati and Naan in the North.

  • Idli and Dosa in the south

  • and everybody eats rice. More commonly commercialized Indian foods

  • that we in the west grew up knowing like:

  • Samosas, Tikka Masala

  • Tandoori and my favorite Indian dish: Palak Paneer.

  • These usually come to the Northern regions of India.

  • Mmm seriously India, you took spinach and made it fat.

  • I love you guys.

  • Otherwise the West is Mostly known for their chutneys,

  • and pickled foods as well as beef since there's a high number of Muslims and Christians

  • The south uses a lot more coconut and has

  • Some of the best curries like Poriyal, Sambar, Rasam and Tooto.

  • And the east is known for having the best desserts like Peda, Mishti doi, Rasgulla or Sandesh.

  • Speaking of which India is so diverse and complex that sometimes even Indian people need translators when going to different states.

  • It's about to get 10 times more confusing in about 3, ,2 1...

  • Demographics

  • Shashi Tharoor once said, "In India we celebrate the commonality of major differences;

  • we are a land of belonging rather than of blood".

  • First of all India has a population of about 1.3 Billion people and is the second most populous country in the world after China

  • with about 18% of the world's population.

  • About 72% of the country is indo-Aryan and a quarter are dravidian

  • and the majority of the remainder are Mongoloid Asian and other people groups.

  • They also use the Indian rupee as their currency. They use the type C, D and M plug outlet

  • and they drive on the left side of the road.

  • By the way, technically it's illegal for these banknotes to leave the country.

  • But you guys have sent me a lot of them for fan mail for fan Friday videos.

  • So I don't want to go to jail...again. (what)

  • Now, keep in mind those statistics that I just mentioned are incredibly generalized.

  • Of the Indo-Aryan and Dravidian communities there are about

  • two thousand different ethno-linguistic people groups in India with about

  • 645 District indigenous tribes (52 major ones). So obviously we can't cover them all.

  • But what we do know is that the North is very different from the South.

  • For one, the North mostly speaks in languages that are all related to the Indo-Aryan branch with languages like

  • Hindi, Bengali Punjabi and Gujarati.

  • Whereas the South speaks a completely unintelligible Dravidian branch with languages like

  • Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada.

  • Otherwise there's also pockets of Sino-Tibetan in austroasiatic languages spoken in the Far north and East

  • So how do they communicate with each other?

  • Great question! Although India does not have an official language there are 22 recognized national languages and of these two are the most prevalent taught

  • in schools and used by government officials: Hindi and English.

  • And very often these two are like mixed mid-sentence.

  • It's weird. Don't be surprised if you hear someone speaking Hindi and then suddenly finishing off in English.

  • It's like:

  • *random gibberish in Hinglish*

  • Now of course let's discuss the one thing

  • that goes hand in hand with India: Hinduism.

  • About 80% of India claims to be Hindu or at least part of the hindu practicing community.

  • Now we don't have time to explain everything about the tenants and multi-layered philosophies and practices of Hinduism.

  • You want to know? Just talk to a Hindu person.

  • But basically one thing you do need to know is that Hindu-driven ideologies pretty much dominate most of life in India.

  • Everything from family to business. You will see colorful

  • mesmerizing shrines, temples, statues and rituals being performed everywhere, even in public.

  • And the Bharat Mata (the mother of India) statues are everywhere.

  • She's like this symbol of India.

  • The largest Hindu pilgrimage: the Kumbh Mela happens every three years

  • rotating between four cities in which the adherents bathe in the Ganges river

  • and enjoy a massive festival with tens of millions of people.

  • Like seriously, you can practically see it happening from space.

  • Now a controversial topic in relation to Hinduism would be the caste system.

  • Which is basically a belief that people are born into a socio-economic

  • life that they are destined to serve into.

  • Today however, the system is more fluid and loose from what it used to be from a long time ago.

  • And thanks to economic reforms anybody with enough drive can kind of move up the social ladder regardless of birth.

  • Nonetheless, India is home to every major religion in the world.

  • Even a few jews including the Bnei Menashe, an indigenous group that claim to be

  • one of the lost tribes of Israel.

  • In fact Judaism and Christianity actually had a head start in India way before it even kicked off in Europe.

  • As tradition holds Cochin or Malabar Jews migrated around 1000 BC to trade during the times of King Solomon.

  • And in 53 AD Thomas the Apostle of Jesus arrived in what is now the state of Kerala to establish the first church in India.

  • Today, most Christians are found in the Southwest and far East Seven Sisters regions.

  • India also holds the highest population of Sikhs, Jains and Zoroastrians,

  • mostly found in the North, and the second largest Muslim population in the world after Indonesia.

  • Most muslims are populated around the Northwest areas by Pakistan or in the east by Bangladesh.

  • Oh, and don't forget the Buddhists. in fact Buddhism actually started in India.

  • Today the Dalai Lama even takes refuge in kiss port in the state of Assam.

  • Oh that was a lot of information. Ahhhh!!! Okay, so by now

  • you can probably get a grasp of how incredibly mixed and diversified India's population is.

  • But what exactly holds the country together?

  • Well for one, you kind of have to understand Indian history which will take way too long to explain

  • but in the quickest way I can put it:

  • Indus Valley;

  • Maurya and Gupta Empires;

  • Southern Empires;

  • Golden age;

  • Middle Kingdoms;

  • A ton of new religions come flocking in;

  • the North fell to the Delhi sultanate;

  • the South Became the Vijayanagara Empire

  • Mughal Empire starts;

  • British East India Company;

  • Direct British Rule;

  • Nationalist Movements;

  • Independent Republic;

  • Economic liberalization in 1991;

  • And here, we are today.

  • Vijaya

  • Essentially India used to be made up of around 500 smaller royal Princely states,

  • and when the British came in they kind of exploited them to manage such a huge population.

  • Along India is a democratic federal republic (and the largest democracy in the world)

  • the old royal families still exist today and although they have

  • no political power they hold high positions of influence in their communities across India

  • So today, technically you could meet someone that would be considered an Indian prince or princess.

  • Nonetheless, the biggest thing that really united Indians in the past

  • two centuries would probably be their hatred of British rule. It was kind of like:

  • Well, this is not cool. Yep.

  • What do you say you and I work together enough and uh, end this thing?

  • *friendship noises*

  • Especially one good thing you could say that came out of imperialism was

  • that it kind of stopped all the internal squabbling and unified the

  • groups towards one common goal to get rid of imperialism.

  • Today Indians are just proud to be Indians.

  • I mean a Tamil soccer player can get cheered on by a Rajasthani and Punjabi pop Star can sell out tickets in Orissa.

  • Speaking of which all Indians love movies and music.

  • India has the second largest film industry in terms of volume pumping out nearly

  • 2,000 films per year

  • surprisingly Nigeria pumps out more.

  • However the box office revenues grossed out at only about two billion dollars annually compared to Hollywood at over 10 billion.

  • But still it's impressive and keep in mind that it's not just Bollywood

  • but it's also Tollywood, Gollywood, Kollywood, Pollywood and so on.

  • There's like 20 different woods in India.

  • And like every movie in India has at least one scene where everybody breaks out in song and there's almost always a happy ending.

  • Unfortunately mainstream media has also put an aesthetic strain on many of the people as it's almost become an obsession to be light or

  • fair-skinned causing people to go so far as to buy skin bleaching products.

  • Some other controversies include things like illiteracy being an issue in many parts of the country (especially in the rural areas).

  • But I mean come on when your country has literally hundreds of different writing systems. Go figure.

  • I mean give them a break.

  • Also, many of you guys (the Indian geograpeeps) have asked me to bring awareness to the fact that India does unfortunately

  • have some of the highest rates of human trafficking and child slavery.

  • The government is trying to crack down and culture is slowly being reformed

  • but for now, it's a sad reality that still does exist.

  • Hey here at GN, we talk about the good and the bad. I'm just saying.

  • Otherwise sports do definitely tie everyone together as well.

  • Especially cricket: the most popular sport (even though they also used to do really well in field hockey).

  • India also has a lot of their own indigenous sports like:

  • Dopkhel in Assam,

  • Bull racing in Kerala in South,

  • Insuknawr rod pushing in Mizoram;

  • and Malakhamba the strange pole Yoga gymnastics thing in the South.

  • Otherwise some notable people from India or of Indian descent might include people like:

  • Siddhartha gautama or the Buddha;

  • Mahavira;

  • Ashoka the great;

  • Prithviraj Chauhan;

  • Aurangzeb;

  • Shivaji of the Maratha Empire;

  • Mahatma Gandhi;

  • Indira Gandhi;

  • Subhash Chandra Bose;

  • Jawaharlal Nehru;

  • Rabindranath Tagore (first Nobel laureate of Asia);

  • CV Raman (first Indian scientist to win Nobel);

  • Satyendra Nath Bose;

  • Bhagat singh;

  • Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam;

  • Shah Rukh Khan;

  • Amitabh Bachchan;

  • Aamir Khan;

  • Salman Khan;

  • Priyanka Chopra;

  • Ben Kingsley;

  • Sundar Pichai (current CEO of Google);

  • Satya Narayana Nadela (current CEO of Microsoft);

  • AR Rehman;

  • Sachin Tendulkar and Mahendra singh Dhoni;

  • There's also literally millions of other famous people

  • I missed out on if you want to mention them please there's a comment section below. Use it.

  • In the meantime we got to finish this info marathon. Shall we?

  • Friendzone

  • Now, no surprised India is huge and therefore has a huge international outreach when it comes to diplomacy to almost everyone

  • except their immediate neighbors.

  • First of all countries with large population percentages of Hindus and Indians like Fiji, Guyana, Suriname,

  • Trinidad and Tobago, Mauritius and Malaysia typically stay close to India's roster of go-to friends. They enjoy cordial relations with trade.

  • Now the UK may have left on a sour note

  • but they still have a lot of ties to their former colonizer in terms of business and tourism.

  • India still part of the commonwealth (NOT Commonwealth realm there's a difference).

  • And the UK has over 1.5 million citizens of Indian descent.

  • As mentioned in the China episode, China is kind of like India's "I'm only here to do business with you and nothing else" friend

  • as drama still hasn't been subsided in regards to the territory complex.

  • Now when it comes to the US things started kind of sour back in the 70s during the Indo-Pak war of 1971

  • when the US sided with Pakistan, their arch-nemesis.

  • Today relations have cooled off mostly the US supports

  • India's move towards democracy and as a key ally in the military conflicts in the Middle East.

  • When it comes to their best friends however, most of the Indians I talked to have said Russia and Bhutan.

  • Russia because during the Indo-Pak Wars Russia came in and supported them and ever since then especially has global superpowers.

  • Bhutan and India signed a treaty of friendship -each country has held a high position of respect for the other-

  • almost immediately after independence

  • The two countries have shared interests and a currency pegged system as well. Bhutan even supported the annexation of their cousins in the Sikkim state

  • into India as it gave a nice buffer of lands from China's stick to their claim.

  • In conclusion, you will not find anywhere else on Earth like India. Thousands and millions of people inhabiting a colourful majestic green

  • slightly greedy at times slab of Earth blessed and cursed in so many ways yet wonderfully harmonized

  • mostly in a unity unlike anywhere else.

  • In the end, that's In-di-ah!! AAHHH!!!

  • Stay tuned, Indonesia is coming up next.

  • ♫♫♫

So we have finally encroached upon the giant: India.

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地理Now!インド (Geography Now! India)

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    Samuel に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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