Speakers at Science Congress Say Ancient India Mastered Advanced Space Flight Thousands of Years Ago

A controversial paper presented at the prestigious science conference, the 102nd Indian Science Congress in Mumbai, claims human aviation and advanced space flight was achieved and mastered by the ancient Indians, thousands of years before the Wright brothers in 1903.
Speakers at Science Congress Say Ancient India Mastered Advanced Space Flight Thousands of Years Ago
Left: Rama welcomed back to Ayodhya, including the celestial flying machine, the Pushpak Vimana. Right: An illustration of the Shakuna Vimana that is supposed to fly like a bird with hinged wings and tail, drawn in Bangalore, India, in 1923. Background: A file photo of Sanskrit text. (Wikimedia Commons)
Liz Leafloor
1/21/2015
Updated:
8/30/2015

A controversial paper presented at the prestigious science conference, the 102nd Indian Science Congress in Mumbai, claims human aviation and advanced space flight was achieved and mastered by the ancient Indians, thousands of years before the Wright brothers in 1903.

The paper, presented by Captain Anand Bodas and Ameya Jadhav within a session titled “Ancient Sciences through Sanskrit,” details that in Vedic texts from 7,000 years ago, airplanes are described as being able to fly backwards and side-to-side. They could also shuttle between countries, continents, and even planets. 

“There is official history and unofficial history,” said Captain Bodas, according to The National. “Official history only noted that the Wright Brothers flew the first plane in 1903,” but the inventor of the airplane was really a sage named Bharadwaja, who lived around 7,000 years ago. “The ancient planes had 40 small engines.” 

The Vedas are a large collection of Sanskrit texts originating in ancient India and constitute the oldest layer of Sanskrit literature and the oldest scriptures of Hinduism. Some of the collection, such as the Samhitas, are known to date back to at least 1,700 B.C., although it is believed that many go back much further.

The subject of “flying machines has been a popular subject among ancient astronaut theorists, who argue that some extracts are evidence of extra-terrestrial visitations. The Ramayana, a Hindu epic said to have its origins in the 4th or 5th century B.C., states: ”The Pushpaka (flowery vimana) chariot that resembles the Sun and belongs to my brother was brought by the powerful Ravana; that aerial and excellent chariot going everywhere at will… that chariot resembling a bright cloud in the sky... and the King (Rama) got in, and the excellent chariot at the command of the Raghira, rose up into the higher atmosphere.”

Captain Bodas said that ancient Indians invented the technology and that it was later forgotten because of the passage of time and foreign rulers. The Times of India reported that the paper, presented at the conference—which included six Nobel laureates, and other award-winning academics and scientists in its roster—has been met with skepticism, claims of “pseudo-science,” and the argument that the theory undermines empirical evidence by citing ancient religious texts.

The Indian Science Congress Association (ISCA) is a premier scientific organization of India, with more than 30,000 scientist members. The ISCA’s mandate is to publish journals, hold conferences and advance and promote the cause of science.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaks at the inauguration of the102nd Indian Science Congress (ISC) in Mumbai on Jan. 3, 2015. (Indranil Mukherjee/AFP/Getty Images)
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaks at the inauguration of the102nd Indian Science Congress (ISC) in Mumbai on Jan. 3, 2015. (Indranil Mukherjee/AFP/Getty Images)

NASA scientist Dr. Ram Prasad Gandhiraman started an online petition before the conference was held to oppose certain lectures which were thought to advance a mix of science, mythology, and the politics of Hindu nationalists. Others, however, such as an Indian scientist who attended the conference from the United States, seemed to find the examination of ancient testimony compelling, saying, “Knowledge always grows, its flow never stops. So if all this knowledge was available in the ancient days, I need to know where it stopped. Why did it fail to grow? Why was there no advancement? When did it stop? I am not aware of the chronology of events, but I am definitely willing to learn more and find out.” 

 Republished with permission. Read the original at Ancient Origins.

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Liz Leafloor is an Editor, Writer, Blogger and Designer based in Canada. Having worked in online media for years, Liz covers exciting and interesting subjects like spirituality, history, science, archaeological discoveries, life and death, and the unexplained. She is an editor for popular archaeology and history site Ancient-Origins, and contributing blogger for international news media organization Epoch Times.
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