Friday, October 22, 2010

A Tribal Boy's Struggles For Primary Education

Tribal India is struggling today to aquire their basic needs in which the the education of the promary school going tribal chidren suffer most. In fact Govt. of India under Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (right to education / education for all) provides some minimum facilities and incentives for these primary school going children but of not much facilitating. But, on the other hazards are much more binding and powerful than the support provided to the chidren by the Governent, which does not help the children to avail these public facilities. Most of the parents of the tribal India are either agriculturists or involved in some other occupations. But when the whole family is collectively involved or engaged in common endeavour for earning their daily food, no matter how serious the other matters are. daily bread or right to livelihood is of highest concern of the day, or else they have no right for food even at home. Here is a beautiful description of a tribal boy who needs to go to school but is unable to find time due to the pressures of work at home:

Tan tan rings school bell, but my teacher
How should I come to study ?
My sick and old father forces me to graze cattle
And then how can I come to study, my teacher..?
My mother frail one forces me to fetch water from the village well
How then I can come to school...?
Tan tan rings the bell of the school my teacher
My elder brother forces me to take care of the small children.
Then how can I come to school to study, my teacher.
My elder brother's wife compulses me to prepare food.
How to come then to school my techer...?
Tan tan rings bell my techer,
My elder sister makes me lift cow dung
from cow shade my teacher
Then how can I come to study my master....?
This folk song is creation of the school going tribal boys and girls og Jhabua district in Madhya Pradesh and is appropriately sung in the public places for music competion, marraiges, pleasure hearing and other occasons.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

TRIBAL IDENTITY: AN URGENT HUMAN RIGHT OF INDIA

According to prehistorians and cultural anthropologists ancient India was the homeland of tribals and other indigenous (Mulnivasis). Later more dominant and invading people in their land subjugated and suppresed them in the past 20-30 centuries. Years back these Mulnivasi groups were inhumanly assimilated leaving no traces of thier social identity axcept rendering them Shudras reserved for various menials tasks, whose self sacrifising valuable services rendered in past centuries either for no money or little compensation. Today no one wants to gratefully acknoweledge these services with sufficient justice to give them opportunities for socal and economic emancipation in the light of Indian Constitution. What is achieved in the last 60 years is but a straw in camel's mouth. On the contrary some reversing movements are under current to fail this newly achieved social dignity with the help of Constitutional safeguards for the indigenous population, for their identity, culture, art, languages, mytholog, folk-education, values, folklore, folk wisdom, etc.

Today tribal/adivasi India is with much dificulty able to save their cultural heritage and protect their social identity against the damages being done to them . Hence it is an urgent need of the time to protect their over all tribal human rights with the help of techniques like social ingineering against assimilation and in favour of their social or tribal identity. Tribals should retain or maintain their hstorical identity at any cost otherwise they shall fall in the category of Shudras like other ethnic groups who socially and culturally got even degenerated.

Keeping these social and cultural concerns in mind the Centre for Tribal Culture & Art (CTCA) at Meghnagar, District Jhabua (M.P.). India conducted a three day long national conference where from Sept. 17-19 2010, where 31 scholars, social workers of national reputation attended it. Its innaugural address was given by an octogenerian cultural anthopologist of India no other than Prof. Dr. B.K.Roy Burman of New Delhi in which he expressed a grave concern for the protection and promotion of tribal identity and their human rights on Sept. 17,2010. Dr. Marianus Kujur of Indian Social Institute New Delhi articulated strongly ‘ identity crisis of tribes in India'. Prof. Dr.J.J. Roy Burman spoke on ‘Sacred Grove: cultural symbol for tribal self-assertion’. Pratap Baria spoke about ‘contribution of Central and State Governments of India for the promotion of tribal art.’ Dr. Rita Malache of Mumbai University spoke very strongly on the preservation and promotion of tribal culture through museum in the country. Malhingh Katara a Bhil social worker spoke on the Bhil Pithora art: motifs, depiction and popularisation in the post modern India through images and its content explanation. Mahipal ( Mathias) Bhuriya spoke on ‘ADIVASIKARAN: a tribal vision of India, Prof. Dr. P.S. Vivek of Mumbai University expressed his views on development and tribals in urban context in India. Dr. P.C. Hembram spoke on tribal culture and its identity. The seminar on tribal identity was jointly organised by ActionAid ( Bhopal), Centre for Tribal Culture & Art (CTCA) and other organization.

It was strongly felt by the paticipants that seminars, consultations, workshops, on tribal identity should frequently organised CTCA net working with other like minded institutions, assoiatons and individual scholars.

FLAMES CONSUME A TRIBAL HERO

When asked to Vijay Ganawa (40) a Bhil if Jhabua(M.P) ‘Do you burn Ravana the great Bhil...? He promptly replied, 'No, we don’t burn Ravana. He is our Bhil hero. We honour him as our god, hero and fellowmen.’ And then Vijay narrated a long story in which the Bhils of Jhabua untimely associate with Ravana as revered person of great importance. Alas, I said in my mind all through the centuries how many tribal heroes must have been killed, despiced, socially murdered together with their reputations, damaging totally their human rights from pre-historic times untill today. Some are burried even from memories of their tribal folks some are called Asuras yet others are criminals and remmaining had to indulge in ‘vagar’(forced labour) building their palaces, cultivate fields and fodder for them, build roads and bridges all through not for one generation but for many centuries for centuries.

The Bhils traditionally celebrate Dusshera in their own Bhil way. Ravana is their god and much revered hero. In past years the Bhil way of celebrating Dusshera was by killing a big buffalo and here one can say that in their folk memories, the meat is a holy food and was shared by all the families residing in the boundry of the village. In some places even Rajput who annexed Bhil territories participated in their sacred ceremony like in Jhabua there is still a mountain where Jhabua kings of Rathore family of Rajputs used to hold this ceremony for Bhil community with joy and even the ‘kalals’(liquor merchants) supplied ‘ganzo’(country liquor) who marketed it among the Bhils and other communities of present day Scheduled Castes (SC) and Other Backward Communities (OBC), as sared drink to all male elders residents talking in their liquor shoping areas. Today among many customs and festivals of the Bhils, suffering breach of human rights, linguistic rights, religious rights this too under strict vigilence and prevention. But on Arch Bhil Badwo Mano of Ranapur area in Jhabua district of MP is said to continue Buffalo Ceremony during this festival on a mountain top of Vagai village some 20 km west of the town of Ranapur resisting the breach of their human and cultural rights by non-tribal communities or even government as people report. Why should we not maintain our rights and festival people say.

Vijay Ganawa says that the Bhils of Jhabua District gather in Jhabua district headquater and Thandla town not to burn Ravana but to honour him and to see the direction in which the skeleton of the symbolic body collapse when he is shot by firy arrows in the Dusshera festival of the non-tribal Hindus. Each direction of Ravana fall has a symbolic and auspicious meaning. And when Ravana holy body collapses on the ground, while inflamed by fire, the rush to take burning wood back home, believing that if placed in ther homes will cast off many sickness and bring home various blessing for family members, cattles, agriculture and other occupation.

Should not be tribals religious' feeling be respected not burning Ravana….? Or, should the image of Ravana not be enhanced for social, cultural and other ethoes…? In this we need to enter into history, culture and folklore of tribal India if at all we protect their overall human rights.....!

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

BHILI : SERIOUS THREATS TO ITS LINGUISTIC RIGHTS TODAY

Bhili had been the rich and ancient of Bhil kings, princes, tribal chiefs of the past who in the course of time lost their rich and glorious cultural and linguistic heritage when they came in contact with more powerful invaders who in turn reduced them to lowest status today in the country depriving them almost of everything. The ancient tribal communities of India like Gonds, Bhils, Santhals, Jesukurumbas in the South and others had reached once upon a time a certain level of cultural progression as we get their stray, sporadic and a times solid records in prehistory, ancient Sanskrit literatures, history of the medieval age, records of so called royal families, Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan of Todd, Muslim and Mogul records, British history and clearly pointing that even how brutally were treated by more powerful invading people in the past and also we can see these accounts in their oral history or oral tradition of the Bhilsand other tribes. In the collective or folk memory of the tribe it goes without saying that they once upon a time were rulers of many princely states or parts of the vast regions which once they occupied and more powerful invading people annexed from them by invading and torturing them . Coat of Arts, siezeliography, numismatic, cultural symbols and other records too depict that the present Bhils had their monopoly over vast regions of North India which is annexed from them systematically regressing them to the annihilative situation. This goes without saying in the case of Gonds, Jesukurumbas, Bhilalas, Mahadev Kolis and few their tribes in india.
When we place Bhili the mother tongue of millions of Bhils uncared and and given no importence for its survival, development, formation of script, promotion of their mother tongue, education, festival, historical and other rights, it goes without saying that it shall meet similar fate as its speakers were dealt badly in the past 20-30 centuries. But if the policy makers are honest it can change it fate of Bhili the mother tongue of the bhils
Around 1828 Rev Thompson of Kherwara in Rajasthan had made a survey of this tribal language of the ancient Bhil tribal community, followed by Linguistic Survey of India conducted by George Grierson, and later a dozens of writers paying keen attention to its grammar but with no support of the Free India's responsible people who in turn divided this great linguistic BHILI speaking zone in their favor. And now Dr. J.C. Sharma is seriously engaged in preparing Bhili Grammars with a team of experts and Bhili writers and respondents from Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Maharashtra. In this connection one should know what the background of Bhils and Bhili is.
The Bhils re the Great people of the ancient days from whom the present invading people have annexed their territories in these four states. They are they indigenous or autochthoms of the place . Once upon a time the prehistorians and scholars say that their culture had reached a certain level of development and they did have their kings, rulers, chiefs, religion, language, art, philosophy, law, justice of their owl which the more powerful invading people suppressed and oppressed them over the 20-30 centuries and deprived them of everything and brought them today to a situation to starve and die. Now all over Bhili speaking regions specially n these four states, a sow but steady awakening is coming for the revival of their past glory, culture, language, art, music, region, solidarity, values, food, culture, etc in keeping with the 5th & 6th Schedule of the country. And now in the light of the 8th Schedule they feel that Bhili can be the language listed in the 8th Schedule of the constitution of India. Thanks of the sympathetic attitude of the Central Institute of Indian Languages(CIIL) Mysore, India that they have developed a scientific system to render Bhili which was so far in the oral tradition to give a written form.

Monday, October 18, 2010

TRIBAL - ADIVASI - INDIGENOUS : COMMUNITY OF INDA DENIED THEIR LINGUSTIC AND CULTURAL RIGHTS

A National level Bhili Workshop was organised to safe guard the educational lingustic and cultural rights of the third largest tribal ethnic COMMUNITY of India, in Udaipur (Raj.) from Oct 1-8 2010 under the leadership of Dr. Rakesh Sachdeva, Director of Central Institute of Languages(CIIL) of Mysore, Karnataka(India). First two days sessions of the Bhili workshop a wider consultation was held with the Bhili speaking delegates, teachers, language experts and others coming from various places in Rajasthan, Gujarat, Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh. including other experts from NCERT(Delhi) and CIIL. In all some 80 participants were present in the first two days workshop and the rest of the days were spent in finalisation of The Bhili Grammar and The Bhili Dictionary being worked out under and eminent Linguist Dr. J.C. Sharma a retired Profssor of CIIL, at Mysore.
First day Dr. Rakesh Sachdeva director of CIIL, Prof. Ravindra Director of NCERT (Delhi), Dr.Sastry Director of engangered anguages of India, Dr. J.C. Sharma in-charge of Bhili Project and others addressed the innaugural session utmost pride and great enthusiasm. Dr. Sachdeva stressed the need of promoting Bhili initially as a means for encouraging Bhili speaking into primary schools education while Dr Sastry upheld the tribal or human rights of vanishing tribal languages even though some of them are being spoken by less than 10 thousands persons.
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Dr. J.C. Sharma an expert of Bhili spoke very convincngly and generously in favour of Bhili the language of the Bhils of Rajasthan, Gujarat, Maharshtra and of Madhya Pradesh that among all the 22 major and schduled languages spoken in India Bhili ranks 14th s the speakers of Bhili as their own mother tongue and hence Bhili has all the rights to be listed in the 8th Schedule of the Constitution of India. He further mentioned that there are over all 17 variety of Bhili dialects spoken in the four states according to the Census of India 2001 and total number of Bhili speakers are 95,82,957. Actually some people in these four states by mistake returned in the Census their mother tongues as the speakers of regional languages such as Gujarati, Marathi, Rajasthani, Marwari, Malavi, Nimari, Hindi etc. So we can convenienty add to the list of speakers another 95 lacs of Bhils whose mother tongue is Bhili and the Bhils who are on the fringe of these linguistic regions of the regional languages whose mother tongue is Bhili some 50 lacs if not more. These faulty enumerations are due to some unexpressd personal problems of Bhili speakers and other internal strategies of the returning persons of the Census apparent in some places like Chhatisgragh tribal regions, also appearing in other places in the Census 1991 and 2001. This fact is of no exception to Bhili speakers and Bhils eitheir wose mother tongue is Bhili . Actually one can say boldly that Bhili is the language of neanly 300 lacs of Bhils homogeniously scattered in these four states. They are either erroniously and discriminately denied their Human Rights ,or for the convenience of major ethnic groups such as Marathi, Gujarati and Rajasthani speakingpeople. the Bhili speakers or the Bhils divided unjustly in four states deniayng their linguistic, cultural and other human rights. The cultural and inguistic rights of the Bhils should be restored sooner and human rights of this vast majority of the ethnic community of the Bhils so far denied and ignored be respected
Dr. Ganesh Devy of Gujarat strongly feels and is of the opinion that that Bhili language can easly be a convenient language of instruction in schools beginnng from primary to higher Secondary schools and even up to collegesand universities where many subjects can be easily taught in Bhili and this language is capable of. It is only this wayDr. Devy feels that the education in all the Adivas ares will be a success. Otherwise we are denying them of the education. It is very true and actually n the grass root levels only denial for their basic rights for education, language and culture is on rampage. If the language is denied, culture is denied and their social existence as a community is denied, be sure their annihilation and assimilation as shudra is socially and biologically geared. Can the denial of their human existence and human rights be egitimaley accepted....?
A week long Bhili language consultation ended with immediately hope for the development of Bhili as an mportant language of India capable to entr into 8th Schedule of the Constitution of India.
After Oct 2 the Gandhi Jayanti, few days were spent by Dr. Sharma to revise Bhili Grammar and Bhili dictionary with a team of Bhili experts where Mahipal Bhuriya Director of Centr for Tribal Culture and Art Society and Bhili Resource Center was a resource person for Bhili, the great language of India.