Indian Tribes
Indian Tribes
Indian Tribes
Section - 1
Indian Sociology very much. Dube says, the problem of defining a tribe
has become more urgent in the wider national context because solution of
the tribes with reference to some specific cultural traits and who try
to protect these traits atany cost. N.K. Bose calls them philanthro-
that the crux of the problems with regard to the tribes is 1) how to
which the 'tribalsi should' get. is >not, a new one. and -it bothered both the
Congress Party also turned its attention to the problem at that time.
Rcijsn&Ds, Prasad said in the Haripura Congress that while nobody objected
to safeguarding the aboriginals rights, they v/ere not pursuaded that the
provisions of the constitution would really safegard their interests.5
old one and this is carried on even in the most recent literature on the
wards to Ghurye in order to show that, even Ghurye, while writing in 1943,
got at the heart of the problem and tried to judge the question of tribes
undifferentiated.
But Dube says, these are very rough indicators and very few of them can
' . 4
withstand critical scrutiny.
existence of a strong in-group sentiment. But the very fact that Sinha
along this line, some nearer to the segmentary tribal model,' others close
6
to the model of an organic caste society.
Beteille points out -the same difficulty when he says that the
tribes in Indian society are at Various levels of admixture with the neigh
fact, most such tribal groups show in varying degrees elements of continuity
7
with the larger society of India." N.K.Bose maintains that most of the
tribes have lost their identity after contact with the Hindus for a
5 Sura jit Sinha, in Man in India, vol. 45 0965} > PP* 57-85*
6 P.fl.Dailev- Tribe. Caste and Hation ( Manchester i960), pp. 263-66.
7 A. Beteille - "The Definition of Tribes" in R. Thap&r (ed.)-
Tribe, Caste and Religion in India (1977) PR* 7-8*
/2
/
early in Indian history, most of the tribals have adopted Hindu beliefs
and practices. The following table from the 1961 Census shows the
8
tribals1 view of their own religion.
Scheduled Tribes
- 2,98,78,249 ( 6.80# )
Tribal
Hindu Buddhist Muslim Christian Others
Religion
Hindus also show that these castes share many elements of caste society on
the one hand and quite a few of tribal society on the other. Risley and
administrators were of the opinion that the separate identity of the tribes
most of the tribes have been Hinduized after a long period of contact with
the Hindus. He even maintains that originally these people were Hindus who
economy and religious tradition shows that they are not necessarily the
10
autochthones of the regions where they now live. He criticises the use
y
of the word 'Adivasi* todenote them because the Various stories and
This could not have been so if they were the earliest inhabitants of the
land.
the separate identity of the tribal people from religious and linguistic
standpoints. But Ghurye shows that all these attempt's have failed as, in
fact, the tribal people have no such distinctive identity. In the earliest
aborigines in the true sense of the term. In 1952, B*S* Guha made a
existence of the Negritos and the Anstro-Asiatic people among the tribes
for the lost time by energising the local poeple, creating a high culture and
10 Ghurye - The Scheduled Tribes (Popular t 19^3)r pp. 11-12. All the subse
quent references to the book are of this edition,unless otherwise stated.
11 Ghurye - Ibid., pp. 561-65*
12 Quoted by Ghurye - op.cit., p5*
making India their permanent home Thus science and history do not counte
identity of the tribes. They are nothing but the backward Hindus1.
He quotes extensively from various writings and reports to show that the
Katauris, the Bhuiyas, the Oraons, the Khonds, the Gonds, the Korkus,
the Baigas, the Bhils, the Kols, the Halbas, the Rautias etc. have subs-
tantially adopted Hinduism as their religion. ^ And those who have been
co-operation and this has "linked section with section and produced an
15 .
interesting culture-complex". S^mivas has asserted that his concept
16
of Sanskritization is also applicable in relation to the tribes. At)out
the central Indian tribes, S Fuchs writes, "out of the 25 million tribals
recorded in 1941 > six to seven millions have been dropped in 1951. And of
the 19 million left, only one and a half million are officially recorded as
still confessing a tribal religion ... all the others must have-embraced
17
Hindu religion. The San%ls in eastern India, again, have gdopted Hindu
15 G-hurye - Ibid., p. 15*
14 Ghurye - Ibid., pp. 8-19. Shurye1 s The Mahadev Kolis, an ethnographic
study, shows the extent of Hinduisation of this tribe. Vide the dis
cussion in the latter part of this chapter. L.N .Chapekar*s monography
on the Thakur Tribes, done under the guidance of Qhurye, also bears
testimony to this Hinduization process. L.H.r -Chapekar. The Thakurs: of
Sahadra (19 60) .
15 Proceedings of the Indian Science Congress, 1959 9 PP 217-18. But
Majumdar is unwilling to call them backward Hindus' . The Tribal
religions, according to him, represent 'marginal religions'. See,his
Races and Culture of India (1958), P 406.
16 Srinivas - Social Change in Modern India (1966), p7
17 S. Fuchs - 'Central Indian Tribes' in R. Thapar (ed.) -
Tribe, Caste and Religion in India (1977)> P* 52.
religion on' auch a large scale that an AH India Santal Social Assembly
tion of Hinduism is very strong. When the tribals adopt Hindu religion,
\ they can come out of their tribal crafts and adopt a specialized type of
theme. Bose has shown how the method of acculturation of tribal population
ideas acted as a leaven for further studies and research in the field.
been integrated with the Hindu society, finds support in other writings
in India, 20 million live in the plains and are assimilated with the rest
21
of the people. A*R* Desai corroborates this opinion thus, "Studies of
the history of Indian Civilization reveaL-how the growth and the expansion
with Hindu society. There are those tribes who have been perfectly-inte
grated but there are others who are partially Hinduized' ahd there is a
Loss of Uerve. The Central Indian Tribes, Elwin maintains, belong to four
contact, G-hurye ahd Elwin belong to two different poles. Elwin maintains
that the effect of this contact upon .those who are imperfectly integrated
liberates a tribal from the harmful effects of his social customs and
Hinduism has done to improve the social customs and economic situation
leaven.
panacea for these tribes. But Ghurye thinks that the problems which are
thought to be the result of their contact with the Hindus, are the problems
distinction between the tribals and the non-tribals* For example, alienation
and the exploited people, who work on land and carry on cultivation for
some time only to find . sooner or later that their lands are no longer
25
theirs." We can cite here a similar statement of a*R* Desai s "the
vast bulk of the lower strata of tribal society - Hindu, Muslim, Christian
and Buddhist - are exploited and suffer from the same disabilities as the
non-tribals. They have been uprooted from their moorings in the same way
26
as the artisans and peasants were uprooted."
with the other backward classes. Ghurye also says that among the tribals,
27
there is a section which is comparatively better off. The tribals are
stratified among them and the problem of the higher ups are not the same as
those of the lower sections. This approach towards the tribal problem* we
grievance .to the account of Hindu contact, we must ponder over the fact
that the process of breaking up and remaking of groups had been in progress
for many centuries and that internal migration had been causing a good deal
mentioned here that Desai also ho-lds the view that the process of change
which the tribals are undergoing, is the result of the operation of some
Hindus, Ghurye holds that a grand historical process of merger between the
two communities has almost been completed as a result of which the tribes
may now be regarded as 'backward Hindus'. And the' process has been gping
substantiates this point aJid shows that the tribes of the Gangetic plain
were conquered by and assimilated into the kingdom of Kosala and Magadha
have reported the process of caste formation among the tribes. Various
such detailed studies have been made. S-C. Hoy writing earlier than
Ghurye, showed how the process operated among the Oraons of Chotanagpur.*^
also.
Yet there are a fe^ more points which one would have desired to
his book on tribes, when certain trends had already become clear.
the consequent impact of'it upon the process of integration. The economic
34 S.G.Roy - The Qraon Religion and Custom (1920). Also see, IT. Dutta -
Majumdar - The Santal (Calcutta 1956).
35 Grigson - The Maria Gonds of Bastar (London, 1936).
36 S. Sinha - 'State formation and Rajput Myth in Tribal Central India'
in Man in India, vol. 42, no. $ (1962), pp. 35-80.
37 S.K. Srivastava - 1) 'Problems of Culture-Contact, and Culture
Dynamics' in The Tharus, a Study in Cultural Dynamics (Agra, 1958) 5
2) 'The Process of De-Sanskritization in Tillage India' in Bala
Ratnam(ed.)~Anthropology on theMarch (Madras, 1963), Pp* 263-67
Also see, D.3T.Ka.iuidar - Himalayan Polyandry : Structure, Function
and Culture Change (Bombay, 19f>2) j K*N.Sahay - 'Trends of'Sanskriti-
zation Among the Oraons* in Bulletin in Bihar Studies Research Institute,
vol. 4s no. 2 (1962) ; .
L.P. Yidyarthi - i) Ghagra, A Tillage of Chotanagpur (Delhi,1961) }
2) 'Studies on Social Change in Tribal India t A Methodological
Review1 in L-P. yidyarthi - Conflict, Tension and Cultural Trend in
India ( Calcutta s 1969 ) 5 D* Mandelbaum - Society in India
(Popular t 1970 ), pp 576-95*
38 D.N.Majumglar_- 'India's Rural Profiles' in A.R.Desai - Rural Sociology
(1959) , PP* 393-95* ---------------------- M
assigned to a tribe when io becomes a caste. Hut today nothing of that
kind .is possible. A whole tribe may be transplanted from its forest home
and lowly economy into the whirlpool of war, where some of its members
working- today.
and the 'privileged* minority will initiate programmes in the name of the
tribes which, in reality, would serve their own interests only. This will
also prevent, the general process of unification bet?/een the tribes and the
41
non-tribes. While trying, to explain contemporary tribal unrest,
Sachchidananda has hinted at the agrarian factors and the urge for main
taining a cultural identity as the root causes c tribal unrest. With the
that "the prodigals would be welcome. The process would strengthen the
43
reintegration of the community". Anthropologists in recent times
economic and political factors which have initiated this process. This
Ghurye's basic conclusions are right and these helped subsequent writers
of tribal policy of the British rulers and their interests and motivations
behind these policies. The British rulers tried to put the clock back by
society. This was evident in Sisley*s lament that "all over India at the
the tribes and the non-tribes so that they remain separate. The creation
the Backward Tracts, the Excluded Areas or the partially Excluded Areas,
The moot question is, what was the interest of the British rulers
nothing but the commercial and business interests of the rulers to exploit
the natural resources of the region with the help of cheap labour provided
separate so that they could! act as a human reservoir to meet the demands
created a feeling of suspicion and hostility between the tribals and the
their goodwill and cooperation ' are the most essential factors for the
47
present welfare and future development* of the tribal population. This
keep India divided within herself. The seeds- of distrust that were sown
preface to the book 'The Scheduled Tribes', it is this fact which prompted
him to discuss uhreadbare the issues raised by these writers. Thus Hutton
from disintegration. 0-f course, the ablest support of this position came
from Dr. Elwin who became extremely popular with the administration in
British India and also in independent India* In two separate books, viz.
The Baigas (1939) and the Loss of Nerve (1942), Elwin graphically presents
described the position thus : "Lxy new book, Aborigines - so called - and
.li-dQir Puture is one of the four hooks of mine which were written in
since the Hutton Census of India of 1931 to 1941, three or four brochures
ness of the many jungle and hill preliterate .0 groups of people of India".
The aim was to booster forces of disorganization "so that independent India
tribal people to the forces .of change - adapting their habits, customs or
the condition of the peasants that the poverty and ignorance of the debtor,
of an organized system of law and justice - all these account for much of
the impoverishment of the Indian peasantry.49 And fihuxye says, "the bare
and middle men. All the people who are thus being exploited are really
backward."9^
there is the question of the strategy for ,tribal development and in this
respect, the tribal and the non-tribal problems are the same. Second,
this second aspect. He explains, "As for the subject-matter, the view
novel one when the book was published in 1943* I had then not designated
the trend has all along been integrational and he feels that a sociologist's
period.
Section - 3
India has been the converging point of many ethnic stocks and.
groups of different cultures into larger ones started very early in our
were very hopeful." But the arrival ox the British changed the situation
in its tribal policy, is largely carrying the legacy of the past. In this
respect, they are even going against the spirit of the constitution. The
the nation and not' as members of some castes or tribes or sects or religious
wer& granted to some backward sections for a temporary period so that they
these facilities and special measures were purely temporary and functional
in nature. Ghurye thinks. that all the subsequent problems with regard i>o
teaojfe.
oeen the only criterion in scheduling the nanes of some tribes in the
(1) the words parts of or groups within castes, races or tribes" show
that tribes or castes are not to be regarded as units but even parts of
type of special treatment which the tribals should receive, leads Ghurye
tribes in mainland India have been viewed as parts of the weaker sections
of the community with whom they enjoy parity of treatment. Second, there
are Scheduled Areas which are specially treated but not as specially
be made because the condition of many of them, being in the hilly region,
"It is no use creating a sort of state within a state and it is not desirable
that this kind of special provision .... should be stereotyped for all time
favour of uhe hill trikes of Assam, Ghurye does not commit himself much
as he says, "the whole problem of that part of our country had appeared
been living with other Indians for more than 3000 years, these lorth-East
Indian tribes "were not with India or with Indians for more than about a
autonomy was granted to these tribes on this ground. But whatever might
be the amount of autonomy, it was made very clear that they would exercise
their privileges within the framework of the "Unity of the nation". Ghurye
politicians who have supported move for tribal separatism have thus gone
against the manifest intentions of the framers of the constitution and they
have gone against national interests too. Ghurye makes a scathing attack
58
government1 e policies towards the North-East Indian tribes* Mr. Elwin,
declared, in his A Philosophy for NEFA' that "the keynote of the adminis
trationss policy indeed is this s the tribesmen first, the tribesmen last,
the tribesmen all the time". Ghurye maintains that such attitudes are
59
positively dangerous for the cause of national integrity.
laments that the Regional Councils and the District Councils, the
ourselves .... you will, thus be creating a Trihalstan just as you have
will, sooner or later, create fifty to sixty tiny ulstars and half-a-dozen
fairly big ones.... "^ Prom the standpoint of national integrity, this is
disturbances occurring among the Magas, the Mizos ana in the UEFA region
of North East India. Let us present here Ghurye*s views on the Naga and
regard to the relation between the tribes and the Hindus acannot be applied
of habits and practices but also from almost all the so-called Animist
61
tribes." The recent disturbances occurring in this region have dangerous
implications for India,. Ghurye says that their aim is "to create a hostile
independent bloc on the Vulnerable north-east, where the far larger and
with ease ahd thus isolate India so that she will have to fight with her
Co
back to the wall, stopping all cultural development 'in the process."
The Naga National Council, the Assam Hill Tribal Union, the Eastern Indian
Tribal Union, the APHLC and lastly the AASU - all have been striving for
Manipur, Meghalaya and Mizoram were created. But recent developments show
that the situation has only been aggravated with the ,:passage of time.^
admits that there was a strong desire for independence among the Nagas from
the very beginning." The Hydari Agreement between the Nagas and the Indian
- ... - - - !
Ghurye thinks that the government should have been firm at that stage. He
neither their language, nor religion, neither history nor culture are
Indian.
The movement for separation was not confined among the Nag as
only. Movement for autonomy or even independence began in the Lushai Hills
region in the early sixties. By that time, the Mizo Hills and the Mizo
National Front too had moved very far in their demand for autonomy. Ghurye
from ethnic standpoints and conceding their demands would amount to the
65
creation of "fifty to sixty tiny ulstars and half-a-dozen big ones." J
So, regarding this region, Ghurye concludes, "Assam stands pgised for a
break-up on the score of the Scheduled A^eas and the Scheduled Tribes much
and which is also important for emphasizing the sociological aspects of his
the use of the term IEFA, for example, because of the great "potentialities
of such a short and convenient name for being used as a fo-cus of further
short, easily uttered word is a great asset. Sooner or later-, such a word
Ghurye notes with concern that even after independence, tha-se tribes
continue to use their own flag along with the national flag. This should
tribes must learn the language of their neighbours wfauich will increase
their contact with neighbours and will teach them to adopt their superior
cultural traits.-- The motto in this respect is "Give them the words so
, , ., ..67
-chat ideas may come."
discussion stems from the proposition that the process of fusion of the
tribes and the non-tribes is an automatic one. The tribes, having come
organization ire bound to adjust their own culture and way of life with the
superior ones Many of the problems which are said to he peculiar to the
ties of the tribals with the other backward classes through their integra
tion. How such integration may be brought about is a matter for practical
69
administration." It is m this sphere of administration that the
The important question is, what should have been the policy
of the government when the usual process of merger had been upset ? Ghurye
does not clearly answer this question hut some of his passages unmistakably
reflect his opinion on the matter. He says that as the tribal problem is
he quotes the 13th Rock-rEdict of Emperor Ashoka* The Emperor's policy toward
the tribals was to make these people fully aware of the Imperial prowess
the opposite end there is the policy of isolation which has been advocated
72
by Elwin and others. But these two are not the only approaches with
tfcxir other approaches to. the problem,of tribal integration. These are
among the tribes, the spread of national political parties etc. and their
logical approach regards the ultimate integration of the tribes into the
on ease and caution in planning for the tribes. The fact is that, for
the analysis of the tribal movements in modern India, one has to take
in Ghuryes case.
field-studies show that even among those tribes whiclk have adopted Hinduism,
there are elements of their own tribal life and culture. Bailey has shown
that the Konds of Orissa, even after adopting Hinduism, maintain their
traditional language, dress and housing pattern.^ 3. Fuchs, about whom
Bharadwaj says that his is the only other attempt along with Qhurye to
similarly said about the Graons that the infusion of Hindu elements into
the traditional ;0>raon religion and culture has increased their self-
75
respect and has intensified their conservatism. S& admitting that the
that the contact is placed in the right direction. D.1T. Majumdar says,
Ghurye1 s views thus, Ghurye perhaps overstated his case. The tribal folk
75 S.C.Dube - op.cit., p. 6.
74 Bailey - Thibe, Caste and Nation (i960), pp* 3-4
A Iso, Mandelbaum - Society inIndia (1972), p. 598*
75 S. Fuchs - The Rebellious Prophets (1965) P 45*
76 D.N.Majumdar - Role of the Sociologist in India in
R.N.Saksena (ed.) - Sociology, Social Research and Social
Problems in India (1961), P 41*
have a distinct culture and complete assimilation may not be possible without
yet lost its cultural identity and im^ge, should accept a lowly status under
Hinduism.
tribal leaders have introduced a new consciousness among the tribals about
literacy and communication facilities have united tribes living over a wide
awareness has projected a .wider adivasi image and created a new tribal
solidarity as distinct from individual tribal identifies.80 Mandelbaum
says that Santal mobility efforts are aimed directly toward new political
power and status. Their leaders advocate new standards of conduct but
these are Santal virtues, sanctioned by Santal tradition and deities rather
than as a return to Kshatriya or Brahmanic models.81 R.K. Base says that
have begun to feel more deeply than ever before that they ere less educated,
OQ
less economically advanced and less equal than others. Roy Burman turns
our attention to the growth of nationalism among the tribes which leads
loyalties to inter tribal loyalties. In its search for ethnic and regional
spent on tribal welfare, this must have resulted in improving their condition
of life. But spending a huge sum does not guarantee any spectacular
field work in 1962-63 and again in 1971-72 in the same area, is that the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and the Report of the Study Team on
system and one cannot have a piecefealf solution. But. if one supports the
G'hurye does, there is no reason why one should not support its logical
Yidyarthi, for example, talks about the need of concerted effort being
these tribes have proved to he most turbulant ones. Regarding the Nagas,
1929, the Naga Club had submitted a memorandum to the Simon Commission
hating, "You ( the British ) are the only people who- have ever conquered
the Naga tribal organization has been distinctive from other tribal
to which the majority of the tribes conform to are Iroquois 'and Hawaiin
respectively which have spread all over iudia except Nagaland where the
tribes belong to Omaha type of Kinship Organization.8^ Subsequently,
the Peace Mission which was formed by the Government to solve the problem
also admitted that "the Nagas never formed part of the Indian mainstream".
J.P. Narayan, a member of the Peace Commission, observed, "the Naga people
are unquestionably a nation............( and ) the Naga Freedom Movement may take
had the Union Government acted wisely and diplomatically at that time.
The Secretary of the NNC stated at that time ( Dec. 1946 ), "Our country is
according! y to our own genius and tests." J The Naga problem has not
yet been solved. Even in 1978) the then Chief Minister Yizol admitted that
Mr. Phizo's name was a household word in Nagaland and his participation was
'With regani to the Misos also, the Miao National Front, led
against ohe Indian Government for a long time* The situation was improved
in 1976 when the MEET admitted that Mizoram was an integral part of India
tactics for solving tribal insurgency. Is it not a fact that most cruel
methods have been applied by the Government to solve these problems ? The
Armed Forces ( Special Powers ) Act, 1958 as amended by the Armed Forces
( Assam and Manipur ) Special Powers Act 1972 are in continuous operation
in all the five states and two union territories in North-Fast India.
By this the right of life and personal liberty of the citizens can be
military level, but unless it is cushioned by more stable and sound bases,
Again, as Mr. Jafa rightly observes "Backward tribal peasantry does not
take up arms lightly against overwhelmingly superior forces unless they have
The fact that we are raising these points does not mean that
we support the tribal policies of the government. We can not join with
5.C. Dube when he says "With some lapses, its ( the government's ) policy
tion have been its watchwords ......... it has shown rare flexibility of
96
approach in meeting legitimate ethnic aspirations". After all, Ghurye
\
has raised certain basic questions relating to the sociology of integration -
'-i
that the difficulties in the path of solving this problem are formidable.
On the tribal phenomenon, Ghurye has not been contented, with the
theoretical analysis of the nature ox tribal movement and its possible impact
"In this book, based on both field and library work, Ghurye has set a
of the Government of Bombay. The Kolis are a very well-known and large
tribal community spread over a wide part of Western India* Though the
status among them also. The Mahadev Kolis, for example, v/ould have no
99
matrimonial alliance with other categories of Kolis.
The life and activities of the Mahadev Kolis, the most pro
gressive and! numerous section among the Kolis, attracted the attention of
historians and politicians in the past. They had established their kingdom
in the Konkan district in the middle of the 14th century. They enjoyed
much prominence during the Maratha and subsequently, the British regimes.
though Ghurye does not find, much evidence of their criminal activities
their living pattern, their rituals and practices with xegard to birth,
here, several interesting things which come out of Ghurye's study may he
noted here.
tribe, they have been so thoroughly Hinduized that one cannot differen
tiate them from the large body of Hindus. The Gods and goddesses they
worship are the Hindu >;ones. The influence of this Hinduization process
is evident from the day to day life of the Kolis, from their rites,
making a review of this book of G'hurye. The Kolis cremate their dead,
elements of tribal culture are also to be found among them. Ghurye says,
Mahadev Kolis with the Kurihis, the Marathas and other high castes of
Maharashtra, their faith in Yagbdgva and Hirava and the annual celebration
of the former reveals their..affinity not only with the other Scheduled
102
Tribes of Maharashtra but also with others far east like the Gonds".
The Mahadev Kolis today are taking a leading role in integrating the
different sections of Kolis into one community. The educated Kolis &re also
forming welfare organizations exclusively for the Kolis. Ghurye does not
explain the phenomenon but these are indications that a long historical
is the nature of change which is occurring among the Mahadev Kolia today
factors account for this change. These are, first, education, second,
urban life and occupation,-1 and third, in the rural areas, the Community
103
Development Projects.
urban occupations, the impact of caste and community on them has not been
lessened. The urban Kolis try to secure jobs for their caste fellows and
the philanthropic activities of then are centred around caste. This fact
sociology. 0-. M. Lynch has found that caste panchayats do exist in cities
though urban living induced changes in their-life pattern, their over all
position in the urban area remains low. This is particularly true about
the first generation migrants. They are engaged in manual work, are
lowly paid and there is some type of continuity of their 'manual labour
heritage1 . This shows that urbanization as snch does not result in social
regain their connection with the native village and cherish a fond hone
of going hack to the village after retirement. This shows that the urban
acculturation process has not been complete and that the push factor
rather than the pull factor is responsible behind the urban migration
107
of these people* Obviously it creates its impact upon the process
of urbanization.
schemes have also- introduced changes in the rural side which are affecting
, /
the life style of the ruralite Mahadev Kolis. For example, many Mahadev
Koli people have been engaged in the trade of superior breeds of cattle
is how Ghurye shows that the traditional social structure of the Mahadev
Kolis is changing in order to cope with the demands of the new situation.
j I