The Adivasi of India : A History of Discrimination, Conflict, and Resistance
Professor Ram Lakhan Meena, Central university of Rajasthan, Ajmer
Adivasi - the
ethnically vibrant cultural festival is one of the most attractive
Agenda of SC & ST Development Department. The ‘tryst with destiny”
speech of Pt. Nehru and the vibes inherent in the message for nation
building provided the required impetus to organize the adivasi. The
67.7 million people belonging to "Scheduled Tribes" in India are
generally considered to be 'Adivasis', literally meaning 'indigenous
people' or 'original inhabitants', though the term 'Scheduled Tribes'
(STs) is not coterminous with the term 'Adivasis'. Scheduled Tribes is
an administrative term used for purposes of 'administering' certain
specific constitutional privileges, protection and benefits for specific
sections of peoples considered historically disadvantaged and
'backward'.
The Constitution
of India, which came into existence on 26 January 1950, prohibits
discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of
birth (Article 15) and it provides the right to equality (Article 14),
to freedom of religion (Articles 25-28) and to culture and education
(Articles 29-30). STs are supposedly addressed by as many as 209
Articles and 2 special schedules of the Constitution - Articles and
special schedules which are protective and paternalistic. However, this
administrative term does not exactly match all the peoples called
'Adivasis'. Out of the 5653 distinct communities in India, 635 are
considered to be 'tribes' or 'Adivasis'. In comparison, one finds that
the estimated number of STs varies from 250 to 593. For practical
purposes, the United Nations and multilateral agencies generally
consider the STs as 'indigenous peoples'. With the ST population making
up 8.08% (as of 1991) of the total population of India, it is the nation
with the highest concentration of 'indigenous peoples' in the world!
Article 341 and
342 provides for classification of Scheduled Castes (the untouchable
lower castes) and STs, while Articles 330, 332 and 334 provides for
reservation of seats in Parliament and Assemblies. For purposes of
specific focus on the development of STs, the government has adopted a
package of programmes, which is administered in specific geographical
areas with considerable ST population, and it covers 69% of the tribal
population. Despite this, and after the largest "modern democracy" of
the world has existed for more than half a century, the struggles for
survival of Adivasis - for livelihood and existence as peoples - have
today intensified and spread as never before in history. Over centuries,
the Adivasis have evolved an intricate convivial-custodial mode of
living. Adivasis belong to their territories, which are the essence of
their existence; the abode of the spirits and their dead and the source
of their science, technology, way of life, their religion and culture.
Back in history,
the Adivasis were in effect self-governing 'first nations'. In general
and in most parts of the pre-colonial period, they were notionally part
of the 'unknown frontier' of the respective states where the rule of the
reign in fact did not extend, and the Adivasis governed themselves
outside of the influence of the particular ruler. The introduction of
the alien concept of private property began with the Permanent
Settlement of the British in 1793 and the establishment of the
"Zamindari" system that conferred control over vast territories,
including Adivasi territories, to designated feudal lords for the
purpose of revenue collection by the British. This drastically commenced
the forced restructuring of the relationship of Adivasis to their
territories as well as the power relationship between Adivasis and
'others'. The predominant external caste-based religion sanctioned and
practiced a rigid and highly discriminatory hierarchical ordering with a
strong cultural mooring.
This became the
natural basis for the altered perception of Adivasis by the 'others' in
determining the social, and hence, the economic and political space in
the emerging larger society that is the Indian diaspora. Relegating the
Adivasis to the lowest rung in the social ladder was but natural and
formed the basis of social and political decision making by the largely
upper caste controlled mainstream. The ancient Indian scriptures,
scripted by the upper castes, also further provided legitimacy to this.
The subjugated peoples have been relegated to low status and isolated,
instead of either being eliminated or absorbed. Entry of Europeans and
subsequent colonisation of Asia transformed the relationship between the
mainstream communities and tribal communities of this region.
Introduction of capitalism, private property and the creation of a
countrywide market broke the traditional economy based on use value and
hereditary professions.
All tribal
communities are not alike. They are products of different historical and
social conditions. They belong to four different language families, and
several different racial stocks and religious moulds. They have kept
themselves apart from feudal states and brahminical hierarchies for
thousands of years. In the Indian epics such as Ramayana, Mahabharata
and Puranas (folklores) there are many references to interactions and
wars between the forest or hill tribes and the Hindus. Eminent
historians who have done detailed research on the epic Ramayana (200 B.C
to 500 B.C) have concluded that 'Lanka', the kingdom of the demonic
king Ravana and 'Kishkinda', the homeland of the Vanaras (depicted as
monkeys) were places situated south of Chitrakuta hill and north of
Narmada river in middle India. Accordingly, Ravana and his demons were
an aboriginal tribe, most probably the Gond, and the Vanaras, like
Hanuman in the epic, belonged to the Savara and Korku tribes whose
descendants still inhabit the central Indian forest belt. Even today,
the Gond holds Ravana, the villain of Ramayana, in high esteem as a
chief. Rama, the hero of Ramayana, is also known for slaughtering the
Rakshasas (demons) in the forests!
The epic of
Mahabharata refers to the death of Krishna at the hands of a Bhil
Jaratha. In the ancient scriptures, considered to be sacred by the upper
castes, various terms are used depicting Adivasis as almost non-humans.
The epics of Ramayana and Mahabharata, the Puranas, Samhitas and other
so-called 'sacred books' refer to Adivasis as Rakshasa (demons), Vanara
(monkeys), Jambuvan (boar men), Naga (serpents), Bhusundi Kaka (crow),
Garuda (King of Eagles) etc. In medieval India, they were called
derogatorily as Kolla, Villa, Kirata, Nishada, and those who surrendered
or were subjugated were termed as Dasa (slave) and those who refused to
accept the bondage of slavery were termed as Dasyu (a hostile robber).
Ekalavya, one of their archers was so skillful that the hero of the
Aryans, Arjuna, could not stand before him. But they assaulted him,
cutting his thumb and destroying his ability to fight - and then
fashioned a story in which he accepted Drona as his Guru and surrendered
his thumb as an offering to the master! The renowned writer Maheshwata
Devi points out that Adivasis predated Hinduism and Aryanism, that Siva
was not an Aryan god and that in the 8th century, the tribal forest
goddess or harvest goddess was absorbed and adapted as Siva's wife.
Goddess Kali, the goddess of hunters, has definitely had a tribal
origin.
History of the Adivasis’
Little is known
about the relationship between the Adivasis and non-Adivasi communities
during the Hindu and Muslim rules. There are stray references to wars
and alliances between the Rajput kings and tribal chieftains in middle
India and in the North-East between the Ahom Kings of Brahmaputra valley
and the hill Nagas. They are considered to be ati-sudra meaning lower
than the untouchable castes. Even today, the upper caste people refer to
these peoples as jangli, a derogatory term meaning "those who are like
wild animals" - uncivilised or sub-humans. The Adivasis have few food
taboos, rather fluid cultural practices and minimal occupational
specialization, while on the other hand, the mainstream population of
the plains have extensive food taboos, more rigid cultural practices and
considerable caste-based occupational specialisation. In the Hindu
caste system, the Adivasis have no place. The so-called mainstream
society of India has evolved as an agglomeration of thousands of
small-scale social groups whose identities within the larger society are
preserved by not allowing them to marry outside their social groups.
The subjugated
groups became castes forced to perform less desirable menial jobs like
sweeping, cleaning of excreta, removal of dead bodies, leather works etc
- the untouchables. Some of the earliest small-scale societies
dependent on hunting and gathering, and traditional agriculture seem to
have remained outside this process of agglomeration. These are the
Adivasis of present day. Their autonomous existence outside the
mainstream led to the preservation of their socio-religious and cultural
practices, most of them retaining also their distinctive languages.
Widow burning, enslavement, occupational differentiation, hierarchical
social ordering etc are generally not there. Though there were trade
between the Adivasis and the mainstream society, any form of social
intercourse was discouraged. Caste India did not consciously attempt to
draw them into the orbit of caste society. But in the process of
economic, cultural and ecological change, Adivasis have attached
themselves to caste groups in a peripheral manner, and the process of
de-tribalisation is a continuous one. Many of the Hindu communities have
absorbed the cultural practices of the Adivasis. Although Hinduism
could be seen as one unifying thread running through the country as a
whole, it is not homogenous but in reality a conglomeration of centuries
old traditions and shaped by several religious and social traditions
which are more cultural in their essence (and including elements of
Adivasi socio-religious culture).
Adivasis at the
lowest rung of the ladder Adivasis are not, as a general rule, regarded
as unclean by caste Hindus in the same way as Dalits are. But they
continue to face prejudice (as lesser humans), they are socially
distanced and often face violence from society. They are at the lowest
point in every socioeconomic indicator. Today the majority of the
population regards them as primitive and aims at decimating them as
peoples or at best integrating them with the mainstream at the lowest
rung in the ladder. This is especially so with the rise of the fascist
Hindutva forces. None of the brave Adivasi fights against the British
have been treated as part of the "national" struggle for independence.
From the Malpahariya uprising in 1772 to Lakshman Naik's revolt in
Orissa in 1942, the Adivasis repeatedly rebelled against the British in
the north-eastern, eastern and central Indian belt. In many of the
rebellions, the Adivasis could not be subdued, but terminated the
struggle only because the British acceded to their immediate demands, as
in the case of the Bhil revolt of 1809 and the Naik revolt of 1838 in
Gujarat. Heroes like Birsa Munda, Kanhu Santhal, Khazya Naik, Tantya
Bhil, Lakshman Naik, Kuvar Vasava, Rupa Naik, Thamal Dora, Ambul Reddi,
Thalakkal Chandu etc are remembered in the songs and stories of the
Adivasis but ignored in the official text books.
The British Crown's dominions in India consisted of four political arrangements:
º the Presidency Areas where the Crown was supreme,
º the
Residency Areas where the British Crown was present through the
Resident and the Ruler of the realm was subservient to the Crown,
º the
Agency (Tribal) areas where the Agent governed in the name of the Crown
but left the local self-governing institutions untouched and
º the Excluded Areas (north-east) where the representatives of the Crown were a figure head.
After the
transfer of power, the rulers of the Residency Areas signed the "Deed of
Accession" on behalf of the ruled on exchange they were offered privy
purse. No deed was however signed with most of the independent Adivasi
states. They were assumed to have joined the Union. The government rode
rough shod on independent Adivasi nations and they were merged with the
Indian Union. This happened even by means of state violence as in the
case of Adivasi uprising in the Nizam's State of Hyderabad and Nagalim.
While this aspect did not enter the consciousness of the Adivasis at
large in the central part of India where they were preoccupied with
their own survival, the picture was different in the north-east because
of the historic and material conditions. Historically the north-east was
never a part of mainland India. The colonial incorporation of
north-east took place much later than the rest of the Indian
subcontinent. While Assam ruled by the Ahoms came under the control of
British in 1826, neighbouring Bengal was annexed in 1765. Garo Hills
were annexed in 1873, Naga Hills in 1879 and Mizoram under the
Chin-Lushai Expeditions in 1881-90. Consequently, the struggles for
self-determination took various forms as independence to greater
autonomy.
A process of
marginalization today, the total forest cover in India is reported to be
765.21 thousand sq. kms. of which 71% are Adivasi areas. Of these
416.52 and 223.30 thousand sq. kms. are categorised as reserved and
protected forests respectively. About 23% of these are further declared
as Wild Life Sanctuaries and National Parks which alone has displaced
some half a million Adivasis. By the process of colonisation of the
forests that began formally with the Forest Act of 1864 and finally the
Indian Forest Act of 1927, the rights of Adivasis were reduced to mere
privileges conferred by the state. This was in acknowledgement of their
dependence on the forests for survival and it was politically forced
upon the rulers by the glorious struggles that the Adivasis waged
persistently against the British. The Forest Policy of 1952, the Wild
Life Protection Act of 1972 and the Forest Conservation Act of 1980
downgraded these privileges of the peoples to concessions of the state
in the post-colonial period.
With
globalisation, there are now further attempts to change these
paternalistic concessions to being excluded as indicated by the draft
"Conservation of Forests and Natural Ecosystems Act" that is to replace
the forest act and the amendments proposed to the Land Acquisition Act
and Schedule V of the constitution. In 1991, 23.03% of STs were literate
as against 42.83% among the general population. The Government's Eighth
Plan document mentions that nearly 52% of STs live below the poverty
line as against 30% of the general population. In a study on Kerala, a
state considered to be unique for having developed a more egalitarian
society with a high quality of life index comparable to that of only the
'developed' countries, paradoxically shows that for STs the below
poverty line population was 64.5% while for Scheduled Castes it was 47%
and others 41%. About 95% of Adivasis live in rural areas, less than 10%
are itinerant hunter-gatherers but more than half depend upon forest
produce. Very commonly, police, forest guards and officials bully and
intimidate Adivasis and large numbers are routinely arrested and jailed,
often for petty offences.
Only a few
Adivasi communities which are forest dwellers have not been displaced
and continue to live in forests, away from the mainstream development
activities, such as in parts of Bastar in Madhya Pradesh, Koraput,
Phulbani and Mayurbanj in Orissa and of Andaman Islands. Thousands of
Korku children below the age of six died in the 1990s due to
malnutrition and starvation in the Melghat Tiger Reserve of Maharashtra
due to the denial of access to their life sustaining resource base.
Adivasis of Kalahandi-Bolangir in Orissa and of Palamu in south Bihar
have reported severe food shortage. According to the Central Planning
Committee of the Government of India, nearly 41 districts with
significant Adivasi populations are prone to deaths due to starvation,
which are not normally reported as such. Invasion of Adivasi territories
The "Land Acquisition Act" of 1894 concretised the supremacy of the
sovereign to allow for total colonisation of any territory in the name
of 'public interest' which in most cases are not community notions of
common good. This is so especially for the Adivasis. The colonial
juristic concept of res nullius (that which has not been conferred by
the sovereign belongs to the sovereign) and terra nullius (land that
belongs to none) bulldozed traditional political and social entities
beginning the wanton destruction of traditional forms of
self-governance.
The invasion of
Adivasi territories, which for the most part commenced during the
colonial period, intensified in the post-colonial period. Most of the
Adivasi territories were claimed by the state. Over 10 million Adivasis
have been displaced to make way for development projects such as dams,
mining, industries, roads, protected areas etc. Though most of the dams
(over 3000) are located in Adivasi areas, only 19.9% (1980-81) of
Adivasi land holdings are irrigated as compared to 45.9% of all holdings
of the general population. India produces as many as 52 principal, 3
fuel, 11 metallic, 38 non-metallic and a number of minor minerals. Of
these 45 major minerals (coal, iron ore, magnetite, manganese, bauxite,
graphite, limestone, dolomite, uranium etc) are found in Adivasi areas
contributing some 56% of the national total mineral earnings in terms of
value. Of the 4,175 working mines reported by the Indian Bureau of
Mines in 1991-92, approximately 3500 could be assumed to be in Adivasi
areas. Income to the government from forests rose from Rs.5.6 million in
1869-70 to more than Rs.13 billions in the 1970s. The bulk of the
nation's productive wealth lay in the Adivasi territories. Yet the
Adivasi has been driven out, marginalised and robbed of dignity by the
very process of 'national development'.
The systematic
opening up of Adivasi territories, the development projects and the
'tribal development projects' make them conducive for waves of
immigrants. In the rich mineral belt of Jharkhand, the Adivasi
population has dropped from around 60% in 1911 to 27.67% in 1991. These
developments have in turn driven out vast numbers of Adivasis to eke out
a living in the urban areas and in far-flung places in slums. According
to a rough estimate, there are more than 40,000 tribal domestic working
women in Delhi alone! In some places, development induced migration of
Adivasis to other Adivasi areas has also led to fierce conflicts as
between the Santhali and the Bodo in Assam. Internal colonialism
Constitutional privileges and welfare measures benefit only a small
minority of the Adivasis. These privileges and welfare measures are
denied to the majority of the Adivasis and they are appropriated by more
powerful groups in the caste order. The steep increase of STs in
Maharashtra in real terms by 148% in the two decades since 1971 is
mainly due to questionable inclusion, for political gains, of a number
of economically advanced groups among the backwards in the list of STs.
The increase in
numbers, while it distorts the demographic picture, has more disastrous
effects. The real tribes are irretrievably pushed down in the 'access or
claim ladder' with these new entrants cornering the lion's share of
both resources and opportunities for education, social and economic
advancement. Despite the Bonded Labour Abolition Act of 1976, Adivasis
still form a substantial percentage of bonded labour in the country.
Despite positive political, institutional and financial commitment to
tribal development, there is presently a large scale displacement and
biological decline of Adivasi communities, a growing loss of genetic and
cultural diversity and destruction of a rich resource base leading to
rising trends of shrinking forests, crumbling fisheries, increasing
unemployment, hunger and conflicts. The Adivasis have preserved 90% of
the country's bio-cultural diversity protecting the polyvalent,
precolonial, biodiversity friendly Indian identity from bio-cultural
pathogens. Excessive and indiscriminate demands of the urban market have
reduced Adivasis to raw material collectors and providers.
It is a cruel
joke that people who can produce some of India's most exquisite
handicrafts, who can distinguish hundreds of species of plants and
animals, who can survive off the forests, the lands and the streams
sustainably with no need to go to the market to buy food, are labeled as
'unskilled'. Equally critical are the paths of resistance that many
Adivasi areas are displaying: Koel Karo, Bodh Ghat, Inchampalli,
Bhopalpatnam, Rathong Chu ... big dams that were proposed by the
enlightened planners and which were halted by the mass movements. Such a
situation has risen because of the discriminatory and predatory
approach of the mainstream society on Adivasis and their territories.
The moral legitimacy for the process of internal colonisation of Adivasi
territories and the deliberate disregard and violations of
constitutional protection of STs has its basis in the culturally
ingrained hierarchical caste social order and consciousness that
pervades the entire politico-administrative and judicial system. This
pervasive mindset is also a historical construct that got reinforced
during colonial and post-colonial India.
The term
'Criminal Tribe' was concocted by the British rulers and entered into
the public vocabulary through the Criminal Tribes Act of 1871 under
which a list of some 150 communities including Adivasis, were
mischievously declared as (naturally) 'criminal'. Though this shameful
act itself was repealed in 1952, the specter of the so-called 'criminal
tribes' continue to haunt these 'denotified tribes' - the Sansi, Pardhi,
Kanjar, Gujjar, Bawaria, Banjara and others. They are considered as the
first natural suspects of all petty and sundry crimes except that they
are now hauled up under the Habitual Offenders Act that replaced the
British Act! Stereotyping of numerous communities has reinforced past
discriminatory attitudes of the dominant mainstream in an
institutionalised form. There is a whole history of legislation, both
during the pre-independence as well as post-independence period, which
was supposed to protect the rights of the Adivasis.
As early as 1879,
the "Bombay Province Land Revenue Code" prohibited transfer of land
from a tribal to a non-tribal without the permission of the authorities.
The 1908 "Chotanagpur Tenancy Act" in Bihar, the 1949 "Santhal Pargana
Tenancy (Supplementary) Act", the 1969 "Bihar Scheduled Areas
Regulations", the 1955 "Rajasthan Tenancy Act" as amended in 1956, the
1959 "MPLP Code of Madhya Pradesh", the 1959 "Andhra Pradesh Scheduled
Areas Land Transfer Regulation" and amendment of 1970, the 1960 "Tripura
Land Revenue Regulation Act", the 1970 "Assam Land and Revenue Act",
the 1975 "Kerala Scheduled Tribes (Restriction of Transfer of Lands and
Restoration of Alienated Lands) Act" etc. are state legislations to
protect Adivasi land rights. In Andhra for example, enquiries on land
transfer violations were made in 57,150 cases involving 245,581 acres of
land, but only about 28% of lands were restored despite persistent
militant struggles. While in the case of Kerala, out of a total claim
for 9909.4522 hectares made by 8754 applicants, only 5.5% of the claims
have been restored. And this is happening in spite of favourable
judicial orders - orders which the state governments are circumventing
by attempting to dismantle the very protective legislation itself.
The callous and
casual manner with which mainstream India approaches the fulfillment of
the constitutional obligations with reference to the tribes, and the
persistent attempts by the politico-administrative system to subvert the
constitution by deliberate acts of omission and commission, and the
enormous judicial tolerance towards this speak volumes on the
discriminatory approach that permeates the society with regard to the
legal rights of the Adivasis.
Race, religion and language
The absence of
neat classifications of Adivasis as a homogenous social-cultural
category and the intensely fluid nature of non-Adivasis are evident in
the insuperable difficulty in arriving at a clear anthropological
definition of a tribal in India, be it in terms of ethnicity, race,
language, social forms or modes of livelihood. The major waves of
ingress into India divide the tribal communities into Veddids, similar
to the Australian aborigines, and the Paleamongoloid Austro-Asiatic from
the north-east. The third were the Greco-Indians who spread across
Gujarat, Rajasthan and Pakistan from Central Asia. The fourth is the
Negrito group of the Andaman Islands - the Great Andamanese, the Onge,
the Jarawa and the Sentinelese who flourished in these parts for some
20,000 years but who could well become extinct soon. The Great
Andamanese have been wiped out as a viable community with about only 30
persons alive as are the Onges who are less than a 100.
In the mid-Indian
region, the Gond who number over 5 million, are the descendants of the
dark skinned Kolarian or Dravidian tribes and speak dialects of Austric
language family as are the Santhal who number 4 million. The Negrito and
Austroloid people belong to the Mundari family of Munda, Santhal, Ho,
Ashur, Kharia, Paniya, Saora etc. The Dravidian groups include the Gond,
Oraon, Khond, Malto, Bhil, Mina, Garasia, Pradhan etc. and speak
Austric or Dravidian family of languages. The Gujjar and Bakarwal
descend from the Greco Indians and are interrelated with the Gujjar of
Gujarat and the tribes settled around Gujranwala in Pakistan. There are
some 200 indigenous peoples in the north-east. The Boro, Khasi, Jantia,
Naga, Garo and Tripiri belong to the Mongoloid stock like the Naga,
Mikir, Apatani, Boro, Khasi, Garo, Kuki, Karbi etc. and speak languages
of the Tibeto-Burman language groups and the Mon Khmer. The Adi, Aka,
Apatani, Dafla, Gallong, Khamti, Monpa, Nocte, Sherdukpen, Singpho,
Tangsa, Wancho etc of Arunachal Pradesh and the Garo of Meghalaya are of
Tibeto-Burman stock while the Khasi of Meghalaya belong to the Mon
Khmer group. In the southern region, the Malayali, Irula, Paniya, Adiya,
Sholaga, Kurumba etc belong to the proto-Australoid racial stock
speaking dialects of the Dravidian family.
The Census of
India 1991 records 63 different denominations as "other" of over 5.7
million people of which most are Adivasi religions. Though the
Constitution recognises them as a distinct cultural group, yet when it
comes to religion those who do not identify as Christians, Muslims or
Buddhists are compelled to register themselves as Hindus. Hindus and
Christians have interacted with Adivasis to civilize them, which has
been defined as sanscritisation and westernisation. However, as
reflected during the 1981 census it is significant that about 5% of the
Adivasis registered their religion by the names of their respective
tribes or the names adopted by them. In 1991 the corresponding figure
rose to about 10% indicating the rising consciousness and assertion of
identity! Though Article 350A of the Constitution requires primary
education to be imparted in mother tongue, in general this has not been
imparted except in areas where the Adivasis have been assertive. NCERT,
the state owned premier education research centre has not shown any
interest. With the neglect of Adivasi languages, the State and the
dominant social order aspire to culturally and socially emasculate the
Adivasis subdued by the dominant cultures. The Anthropological Survey of
India reported a loss of more than two-thirds of the spoken languages,
most of them tribal.
Fragmentation
Some of the ST peoples of Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, W. Bengal,
Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur and Mizoram have their
counterparts across the border in China (including Tibet), Bhutan,
Myanmar and Bangladesh. The political aspirations of these trans-border
tribes who find themselves living in different countries as a result of
artificial demarcation of boundaries by erstwhile colonial rulers
continue to be ignored despite the spread and proliferation of
militancy, especially in the north east, making it into a conflict zone.
The Adivasi territories have been divided amongst the states formed on
the basis of primarily the languages of the mainstream caste society,
ignoring the validity of applying the same principle of language for the
Adivasis in the formation of states. Jharkhand has been divided amongst
Bihar, West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh and Orissa though the Bihar part of
Jharkhand has now become a separate state after decades of struggle. The
Gond region has been divided amongst Orissa, Andhra, Maharashtra and
Madhya Pradesh. Similarly the Bhil region has been divided amongst
Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Rajasthan.
In the
north-east, for example, the Naga in addition are divided into Nagaland,
Manipur, Assam and Arunachal Pradesh. Further administrative
sub-divisions within the states into districts, talukas and panchayats
have been organised in such a way that the tribal concentration is
broken up which furthers their marginalisation both physically and
politically. The 1874 "Scheduled District Act", the 1919 "Government of
India Act" and later the "Government of India Act" of 1935 classified
the hill areas as excluded and partially excluded areas where the
provincial legislature had no jurisdiction. These formed the basis for
the Article 244 under which two separate schedules viz. the V Schedule
and the VI Schedule were incorporated for provision of a certain degree
of self-governance in designated tribal majority areas. However, in
effect this remained a non-starter. However, the recent legislation of
the Panchayat Raj (Extension to the Scheduled Areas) Act of 1996 has
raised hope of a radical redefinition of self-governance.
By not applying
the same yard stick and norms for Adivasis as for the upper caste
dominated mainstream, by not genuinely recognizing the Adivasis'
traditional self-governing systems and by not being serious about
devolving autonomy, the Indian State and society indicates a racist and
imperialist attitude. The call for a socially homogenous country,
particularly in the Hindi Hindu paradigm have suppressed tribal
languages, defiled cultures and destroyed civilisations. The creation of
a unified albeit centralised polity and the extension of the formal
system of governance have emasculated the self-governing institutions of
the Adivasis and with it their internal cohesiveness.The struggle for
the future, the conceptual vocabulary used to understand the place of
Adivasis in the modern world has been constructed on the feudal,
colonial and imperialistic notions which combines traditional and
historical constructs with the modern construct based on notions of
linear scientific and technological progress.
Historically the
Adivasis, as explained earlier, are at best perceived as sub-humans to
be kept in isolation, or as 'primitives' living in remote and backward
regions who should be "civilized". None of them have a rational basis.
Consequently, the official and popular perception of Adivasis is merely
that of isolation in forest, tribal dialect, animism, primitive
occupation, carnivorous diet, naked or semi-naked, nomadic habits, love,
drink and dance. Contrast this with the self-perception of Adivasis as
casteless, classless and egalitarian in nature, community-based economic
systems, symbiotic with nature, democratic according to the demands of
the times, accommodative history and people-oriented art and
literature. The significance of their sustainable subsistence economy in
the midst of a profit oriented economy is not recognised in the
political discourse, and the negative stereotyping of the sustainable
subsistence economy of Adivasi societies is based on the wrong premise
that the production of surplus is more progressive than the process of
social reproduction in co-existence with nature.
The source of the
conflicts arises from these unresolved contradictions. With
globalisation, the hitherto expropriation of rights as an outcome of
development has developed into expropriation of rights as a precondition
for development. In response, the struggles for the rights of the
Adivasis have moved towards the struggles for power and a redefinition
of the contours of state, governance and progress. Culture
is the shorthand version of the rules which guide the way of life of
the people. The tribal culture is very simple and portrays a subtle
side. More specifically culture can be thought of as the common learned
way of life shared by the members of a society.
The tribal people
of India are strong, industrious and very hospitable in nature. They
usually don’t intermingle with outsiders, since they are
not too advanced and are quite shy. This people express their cultural
identity and distinctiveness in their social organization, language,
rituals and festivals and also in their dress, ornamentation, art and
craft. The men folk are engaged in activities like agriculture, hunting
and fishing to earn a living. They have retained their own way of
managing internal affairs of the village mainly through two institutions
namely, the village council and the youth dormitory. The dormitory is
the core of tribal culture and it reinforces the age-old traditions. In
Orissa this institution occurs among many tribal communities in some
form or other. It is variously called by different tribal groups. The
tribal people live a life without any luxuries that the urban city
provides and yet are content with it.
The tribal
culture of India is also abundant is the celebration of festivals. Being
God-fearing people, they worship numerous deities for their well-being.
The festivals are celebrated with much excitement and happiness and the
traditional rituals are closely followed in order to please the Gods.
The most important festivals are Chaita Parab and Push Parab when the
men folk go on hunting expeditions. The different customs and lifestyle
is what makes the tribal culture truly distinctive and fascinating.
The festivals of
the tribals constitute an integral part of their social life and relate
to their strong beliefs in the power of supernatural elements and
community togetherness. Parab Festival is highly significant to the
tribal groups of Orissa as it gives a platform to even the small tribal
groups existing in the state Their traditions can best be captured at
these fairs and festivals. These tribal groups are able to remain in
forefront due to the festival and preserve their culture to the fullest.
Most festivals are occasions that mark the change of season relating to
harvest of crops and some are religious events commemorating a local
deity. Innumerable folk traditions and spirits are manifested by way of
observing vratas and oshas (fasts) by Tribal people of India.
Among the
tribesmen, festivities connected with sowing, harvesting and consumption
of first fruits, and among shifting cultivations, the feeling of the
jungle and burning it down for reduction to ash manure, are important
ones. Interestingly, enough, success in ceremonial collective hunting in
April-May often is believed to contribute to the success of their
agricultural efforts . The Santhals have a special spring festival of
rejoicing with sprinkling of water, special songs and dances. When the
roles of the deities are acted out by men, and thereby many traditional
social barriers fall. Usually, the supreme god is not offered any
specific worship among tribals. But among the Santhals of Mayurbhanj
,one may perform the worship every fifth year or at least one in a
life-time. Bondo festivities have a great relevance for the tribal
communities of Orissa. The Bondos spend a great deal of time on their
religion, and the feasts and holidays are an important part of Bondo
life. Moreover, the collective festivities foster a sense of solidarity
of the village and fortify one's confidence in undertaking major
activities in economic and social life as possible. Thus proving herself
to be virtuous and devoted. The wife presents a number of delicacies to
her husband at the end of her fast.
The tribal
communities of India are not belongs to Hinduism. The religion of the
tribal India is a nature-worship, fetishism, shamanism, anthropomorphism
and ancestor worship. The annual cycle of rituals commence right from
the initiation of agricultural operation, for instance, among the Juang,
Bhuyan, Kondh, Saora, Gadaba, Jharia, Didayee, Meena, Grasia, Bhil,
Saharia, Garo, Mer, Koya and Bondo, who practise shifting cultivation.
Religious beliefs and practices aim at ensuring personal security and
happiness as well as community well-being and group solidarity. Their
religious performances include life-crisis rites, cyclic community
rites, ancestor and totemic rites and observance of taboos. Besides
these, the tribals also resort to various types of occult practices. In
order to tide over either a personal or a group crisis the tribals begin
with occult practices, and if it does not yield any result the next
recourse is supplication of the supernatural force.
Among all the
tribes conformity to customs and norms and social integration continue
to be achieved through their traditional political organizations. The
tributary institutions of social control, such as family, kinship and
public opinion continue to fulfill central social control functions. All
the rituals centering agricultural operation, first-fruit eating,
human, live-stock and crop welfare are observed by the members of a
village on a common date which is fixed by the village head-man in
consultation with the village priest.
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