Are Indian tribals Hindus?
9.1. “Animism”
Hindu Revivalists, unlike Hindu traditionalists,
agree that the so-called tribals of
Abhas Chatterjee, the Brahmin-born revivalist married to a lady
from the Oraon tribe, writes: “This Sanatana Dharma has any number of branches and
offshoots. Within its fold, we have the Vaidika
and the Tantrika, the Buddhist and the Jain; we have
the Shaiva and the Vaishnava,
the Shakta and the Sikh, the Arya
Samaj and the Kabirpanth;
we have in its fold the worshippers of Ayappa in
Kerala, of Sarna in Chotanagpur
and of Doni-pollo in Arunachal
Pradesh. (…) through all these forms and variations flows
an underlying current of shared spirituality which makes us all Hindus and
gives us an intrinsic sense of harmony.”2
Before
The ambiguity of the tribal position vis-à-vis
Hinduism allows for terminological manipulation. When Hindus say they
feel besieged, this is laughed off with the argument that they are more than
80% of the population; which they are not if tribals are counted
separately. However, when Hindus mention the Muslim right to polygamy as
a case of Muslim privilege, the secularist reply is that polygamy is actually
higher among Hindus; which it is (in absolute though of course not in relative
figures), if tribals are counted as Hindus. Reports
are quoted which “showed that whereas 5.07 per cent of Muslims in the country
were polygamous, 5,08 per cent of Hindus, too, were
polygamous.”4 Of polygynous
marriages contracted in 1961-71, “4.31% of Muslim as compared to 5.06% of Hindu
marriages were found to be polygynous”.5 This
is claimed to show that “Hindus are slightly more polygamous than Muslims in
India” (in absolute though by far not in relative figures), quod
erat demonstrandum.6 However,
the same source clarifies that within the broad Hindu category, “the highest
frequency of polygyny was found among tribals,
followed by Buddhists and Jains”, categories which
are classified as legal Hindus but are otherwise claimed to be non-Hindu.7
So, when convenient, as in this case for
polemical purposes, viz. to increase the incidence of “Hindu” polygamy, tribals
(along with Buddhists and Jains) are counted as
Hindus. Otherwise they are not, and in that case, Hindu discourse
treating tribals as Hindus is decried as “assimilative communalism” or “boa
constrictor”. This illustrates once more how religious categorization in
9.2. Tribal-Hindu kinship: influence
Can the question whether tribals are Hindus be
decided, or is this a matter of arbitrary definitions? A distinction may
first of all be made between:
1. cultural Hindu influence
interiorized by the tribals in recent centuries;
2. typological or formal
similarities setting both Hinduism and the tribal religions apart from the
prophetic-monotheist religions;
3. cultural Hindu-tribal
kinship since hoary antiquity.
To start with the first point: except for the far
North-East, tribals all over India have been profoundly influenced by
literate Hinduism, and a lot of their religious terminology
is borrowed from it, e.g. the Oraons call
their supreme deity Dharmesh or Bhagwan, reportedly replacing the Oraon
term Biri-Belas, “sun-lord”.8 The Santals sometimes call Him Thakur,
Hindi for “landlord”.9 The famous Marxist
scholar S.K. Chatterjee understood that there had
been not only a profound biological mixing between “Aryans” and “Aboriginals”,
but also an “inevitable commingling of the legends and traditions of the two
races united by one language, a commingling which has now become well-nigh
inextricable”.10 Thus, about the Coorg tribals, Harold Gould writes: “What is there among
the Coorgs that in not Hindu? Nothing, because the Coorgs are Hindus.
And they are Hindus essentially because they adhere to Hindu values.”11
Except perhaps in Nagaland, Sanskritic-Hindu (or in
some places Buddhist, equally “Aryan”) influence on tribal culture is in
evidence throughout
9.3. Tribal-Hindu
kinship: formal similarity
The most obvious
similarity between Hinduism and every tribal religion described by observers
(both in
According
to some Christian authors, tribal religion differs radically from Hinduism
because, in the words of George Soares-Prabhu: “All
the tribals are monotheists and therefore they believe in one God.”13
Or: “Despite the inferences of the Niyogi Report, the
Aborigines are capable of recognizing the inner harmony between their beliefs
and the Christian faith. It is their
monotheistic faith, as we have noted, and their belief in reward and punishment
for good and evil deeds, that have prepared them for a, natural assimilation to
the Christian faith.”14 Or: “Sarna
spirituality is marked by a strong belief in one God.”15
This assertion is completely at variance with almost
every first-hand description of tribal religion in
Another NGO worker writes in support of a struggle of
tribals in Karnataka for the right to stay in their traditional habitat, now
part of the
In the face of this well-attested
god-pluralism among the tribals, the thesis of tribal monotheism could be saved
by identifying different gods as one, e.g. the Santal
sun-god Sing Bonga and the mountain-god Marang Buru, all faces of One
God.19 It remains difficult, however, to fuse
this Sun God with his polar opposite, the Earth Mother, whom most tribals
including the Santals worship, and whose cult
pervades popular Hinduism as well.20 At any
rate, the alleged “unity behind the diversity” is not exactly un-Hindu.
On the contrary, Hindus have tried to prove Hindu monotheism with the very same
argument of an “underlying” unity, and with good scriptural authority, viz. the
Vedic verse: “The wise call the One Being by many names.”21
Every logic which can make the Santals
monotheistic would make the Hindus monotheistic as well.
The typological similarity of tribal religion and (one
layer of) Hinduism can be summed up thus: no matter how different the names and
mythical personae of the Hindu and the tribal gods, both religions are equally Pagan.
Even if the Oraon deity Biri-belas,
“sun-lord”, is in no way borrowed from Hinduism’s cult of Sûrya,
fact remains that both traditions practise
sun-worship, which the Abrahamic religions prohibit (Athahualpa the Inca was killed by the Spanish because he
remained loyal to the Sun-God). The Santals worship the sun as their supreme deity, Sing-Bonga, but even if he were their only god, his worship
would still be “idolatry”, worshipping a creature instead of the Creator.22
Guru Golwalkar locates the
formulation of the principle underlying the cosmic spirituality of Paganism in
the Gita: “In the Bhagavad Gita, Sri Krishna, while denoting the forms in which the
spirit is more manifest than in others (…) closes the
series of manifestations with the declaration: ‘Every such element as is
endowed with glory, brilliance and power, know that to be a manifestation of a
Spark of My Divine Effulgence.’”23
This text unites polytheism and
monotheism, and instructs the neophyte how to select objects of worship for a
polytheistic pantheon under the aegis of the one All-Pervader.24 For, the distinctive trait of Paganism as
opposed to prophetic monotheism is not that Pagans fail to acknowledge a unique
and unifying principle, but that they fail to see a conflict between this
principle of unity and a principle of multiplicity. In this respect at
least, Hinduism and tribal “animism” are one.
9.4. Tribal-Hindu kinship: common roots
Now for the third possibility of Hindu-tribal
similarity: apart from recent influence (which even exists between Hinduism and
Indian Christianity) and formal similarity (which even exists between Hinduism
and the tribal religions of
Pre-Harappan cave dwellings
contain cultic elements which are still found in Hinduism today, e.g. in a Palaeolithic site in the Siddhi
district of Madhya Pradesh (10,000 to 8,000 BC), a Mother Goddess
shrine was found which contains the same symbols which Shaktic
cults use till today,-squares, circles, swastikas and esp. triangles which are
part of the iconography of Durga even in urban
Hinduism.25 A Flemish expert on tribal culture
told me of a similar finding in the Bastar area; when
the painted triangular stone was dug up, the tribal (Gond) guide at once
started to do puja before it.26 But the
point is that the very same cultic object would fit in a Hindu temple in Varanasi just as well: living Hinduism continues many
practices from hoary tribal antiquity.
Even authors assuming the tribal-separatist viewpoint
admit to the peaceful interaction and intrinsic closeness of Hinduism and the
tribal religion, i.c. of the Santals:
“Unlike Christians the Hindus have made no effort to convert the Santals into Hindus. This may be accounted for as the
proximal similarity between the two religions. On the basis of close
observation on the Santals it has also been found
that in stray cases when Hindu girls are married to Santals
there is a good deal of change and in due course she is also following the Santal religion. (…) The Santals are trying to keep their religion almost
unaltered. This is also possible because there is hardly any conflict and
contradiction between Hindu and Santal religions.”27
Nonetheless, the communis
opinion is this: “The culture of the Adivasi differs strongly from that of
most Indians: they are neither Hindus nor Muslims. Their
gods and ancestral spirits live in the mountains, the rivers and the
trees. Sacrificial places lie hidden in the forest, not in a stone temple
built for the purpose.”28 If the tribals worship in the open air,
this constitutes a practical though not a fundamental difference with modern
mainstream Hinduism, which is largely based in temples; but ancient Vedic
Hindus also worshipped in the open air. As for the worship of ancestors
and nature spirits, this definitely stamps the tribals as non-Muslims and
non-Christians, but is it also non-Hindu?
Guru Golwalkar comments:
“These protagonists of separatism argue that these ‘tribals’ worship things
like trees, stones and serpents. Therefore they are ‘animists’ and cannot
be called ‘Hindus’. Now this is something which only an ignoramus who
does not know the ABC of Hinduism will say. (…) Do not the Hindus all over the
country worship the tree? Tulasi, bilva, ashwattha are all
sacred to the Hindu. (…) The worship of Nâg, the
cobra, is prevalent throughout our country. (…) Then,
should we term all these devotees and worshippers as ‘animists’ and declare
them as non-Hindus?”29
Snake worship, for one, is a major common denominator of
Hindu and tribal culture: “Animal deities have been closely associated with
major Hindu Gods. The Naga
or serpent is an important powerful symbol in the iconography of both Shiva and
Vishnu”.30 On the other hand, the ancient use of the term Nâga (“snake”, but also “naked one”) for “tribal,
forest-dweller” (as in the names of the forest city Nagpur, the forest area Chhotanagpur and the tribal state Nagaland)
indicates that Hindus anciently did see the tribals as a distinctive cultural
entity.
A pamphlet presenting the work of the RSS tribal front,
the Vanavasi Kalyan Ashram
(VKS), puts it this way: “Foreigners have propagated that Forest-Dwellers are
not Hindus, that they are ‘Animists’. In that
case, all Hindus are ‘Animists’. Trees, rivers, mountains: Hindus offer
worship to them or circumambulate them. in the Vedas,
there is Dawn-goddess, Storm-god, Sky-god, Wind-god and such
deities. If someone lives among the tribals, he will
experience at once that they are good Hindus.”31
The logo of the Vanavasi Kalyan Ashram shows a tribal with bow and arrow, which is
indeed reminiscent of Rama, Drona
and other heroes of the Vedic Age. Vedic and Puranic
Hinduism started as a form of tribal animism, and have never repudiated these
roots altogether.
9.5. Hindu and Christian vs. tribal culture
Against the attempt to put tribal animism and
Christianity in one camp (viz. monotheism) and Hindu polytheism in the other,
Hindus have proposed ways of counting Hindus and animists as one camp (e.g.
polytheism, or native) and Christianity (monotheism c.q.
foreign) as the other. It may be pointed out that in some respects, a
third scheme applies: Christians and Hindus in one camp, tribal animists in the
other. Out of love for the tribals, Verrier
Elwin, an ex-missionary who became Jawaharlal Nehru’s adviser on tribal
affairs, opposed the encroachment on the tribal world by Christians and Hindus
alike.
It is simply a fact that Hindus and Christians have a
lot in common which separates them jointly from the tribals. Among other things, both value sobriety and self-restraint. So, urban upper-caste Hindus as well as Christian missionaries
were simply appalled when they got to know the free sexual morality of the
tribals, as exemplified by the youth dormitories, where teenagers of both sexes
were lodged together to get to know the facts of life.32 While upsetting the Christian notion that
tribals are almost-Christians, this cultural gap between tribal society and
“civilization”, both Hindu and Christian, also emphasizes the separate identity
of tribals as compared to the dominant classes of Hindu society who have
interiorized Christian morbidity. Indeed, many Hindus would not accept
the tribals as good Hindus precisely for the same reasons why colonial
Christians considered certain native populations as “savages”.
The Pagan character of tribal religion gives it a common
basis with Hinduism and even makes it part of Hinduism if the latter is defined
as “Indian Paganism”. But this cannot explain away the really existing
cleavage between mainstream Hindu society and tribal society. The latter
is a lot more “Pagan” in the stereotypical sense, more “natural” than both Sanskritic Hinduism and Christianity, as exemplified by Verrier Elwin’s “conversion” to tribal culture coinciding
with his embarking on a life of sexual experimentation and improvisation.
This is of course why Western neo-Pagans, tired of Christian morality, would
generally prefer tribal culture to the formalized and asceticism-minded
Hinduism of medieval times. Hinduism has grown away from those elements
in its own history which resemble the wilder aspects of tribal culture.
9.6. “Adivasi”
Discussion of the religious status and political rights
of the tribals is rendered more difficult by the term commonly used to
designate them: âdivâsî. Christian
missionaries and secularists have popularized the belief that this is a hoary
self-designation of the tribals (unmindful that this would prove their intimate
familiarity with Sanskritic culture, as the term is a
pure Sanskrit coinage), e.g.: “These peoples are called adivasis, which means ‘first inhabitants’. Like the
American continent,
Contrary to a widespread belief, this term is not
indigenous. It is not listed in the 19th-century Sanskrit dictionary of
M. Monier-Williams, a zealous Christian who would
gladly have obliged the missionaries if only he had been aware of the
term. The Sanskrit classics attest the awareness of a separate category
of forest-dwellers, but used descriptive terms for them, e.g. âtavika, from atavî,
“forest”.
Christian authors feign indignation when such
descriptive terms are preferred. Thus, A.J. Philip: “In the lexicon of
Hindutva, the word adivasi has disappeared. The
Sangh Parivar prefers to call them vanvasis (dwellers of forests or jungles). It is just a
step away from calling them junglis (illiterate,
uncouth and uncivilised). Thus
the fall in the status of a people who take pride in calling themselves the adi (original) people of the land is at once apparent. (.)
It is all part of a grand project of rewriting history which the Parivar and its affiliates have ventured into.”34
No, the imposition of the term adivasi during the
colonial period was itself an instance of replacing facts of history with an
imaginative theory.
The history-rewriting, in A.J.
Philip’s case, is also in the eye of the
beholder. While insisting on the use of the colonial-imposed term adivasi, he manages to give an anti-colonial twist to his
story: “The adivasis, whom the
anthropologist call the Fourth World or the indigenous people, suffered the
first lexical assault when they were brought under the official term Scheduled
Tribes”.35 But it was the British themselves, with their race
theories, who had redefined the tribals as the “indigenous races”, and who had
even introduced the concept of “tribe” as distinct from “caste” (after an
initial period when they had used the term interchangealy,
e.g. “the Brahmin tribe”).
The colonial term aboriginal, “pre-colonial
native”, has been indigenized in
The excluded ones, the non-Adivasis, all the urban and
advanced agricultural communities, suddenly found themselves labelled as immigrants who had colonized
This racial view of history was nothing but a
projection of 19th-century racist colonial perceptions onto ancient Indian
history, but it was well-entrenched and put to good colonial use. Thus,
during the 1935 Parliament debates on the Government of India Act, Sir Winston
Churchill opposed any policy tending towards decolonization on the following
ground: “We have as much right to be in India as anyone
there, except perhaps for the Depressed Classes [= the SC/ STs],
who are the native stock.”36
Many NGO activists and other well-intentioned people in
the West believe that their support to separatism and other political movements
of the Indian “Aboriginals” is a bold move against oppressive intruders.
In fact, most so-called liberation movements in
It may be recalled that when Hernan
Cortes conquered
Many people use the term “Adivasi” quite innocently, but
the term is political through and through. Its great achievement is that
it has firmly fixed the division of the Indians in “natives” and “invaders” in
the collective consciousness, on a par with the division in natives or
aboriginals and the immigrant population in
Anglicized Hindus, too, have
interiorized the parallel White/Amerindian = Hindu/Adivasi.39
However, no conscious Hindu now accepts the ideologically weighted term
Adivasi, much to the dismay of those who espouse the ideological agenda implied
in the term, viz. the detachment of the tribals from Hindu society and the delegitimation of Hinduism as
The assumption that the term
“forest-dweller” is condescending is simply not correct from the viewpoint of
the forest-dwellers themselves, who hold their forests and the concomitant
life-style in high esteem, just as the Vedic people did.41 Likewise,
Mahatma Gandhi’s indigenous term for the tribals, Girijan
or “hill people”, far from being a condescending exonym,
is actually the self-designation of many communities in India. Many
Dravidian-speaking tribes have names derived from ku-
or malai-, meaning “hill, mountain”, e.g. Kurukh, Malto, and of course the
non-tribal Malayali.
Historian and anti-Hindutva activist Gyanendra
Pandey writes: “A special number of the RSS journal Panchjanya, devoted to the ‘tribal’ peoples of India
and published in, March 1982, is significantly titled ‘Veer vanvasi ank’. The use
of the term ‘vanvasi’ (forest- or jungle-dwellers)
in place of the designation ‘adivasi’, which
had come to be the most commonly used term among social scientists and
political activists talking about tribal groups in India, is not an
accident Adivasi means original inhabitants, a status that
the Hindu spokespersons of today are loath to accord to the tribal population
of India.”42
Gyanendra Pandey
builds on the accomplished fact of the widespread use of the ideological term
Adivasi,-which is “not an accident” either, witness
its “common use” by “political activists”. In fact, not just “Hindu
spokespersons” but everyone who cultivates the scientific temper would reject a
term which carries the load of an entirely unproven, politically motivated
theory, viz. that the tribals are “the” (i.e. the only) original inhabitants of
9.7 International voices on tribal aboriginality
In this debate, the Indian Government (any
Indian Government) has always upheld the oneness of the Indian population, and
rejected divisive concepts like “Aboriginal” as opposed to “Invader”. The
UN Working Group on Indigenous Populations in
Both the Indian Government and the Hindu nationalist
movement consequently watch any assertion of tribal separateness with some
concern, because the road from cultural to political and territorial separatism
may be a short one; and also because they know that the outside world tends to
sympathize with the demands of “aboriginals”. Of course, since states and
not communities are the units constituting the UNO,
However, when we look into Prof. Kisku’s
argumentation, we find that he is not even trying to prove his crucial point,
viz. that the tribals are indigenous while the rest are not. The claim is made that “the Tribals are the autochtonous
people of the land”, but no argument is given except that they “are believed to
be the earliest settlers in the Indian peninsula” and that they “are generally
called the adivasis, implying original inhabitants”.46
He fails to prove that all non-tribals are non-aboriginals, but uses the term
which encapsulates that theory as proof of the selfsame theory. All by
itself, the neologism âdivâsî constitutes one
of the most successful disinformation campaigns in modern history.
Against Kisku’s claim,
Government spokesman Mr. Dayal argued that the term
“indigenous peoples” cannot be equated with Scheduled Tribes and Scheduled
Castes. He concentrated on showing that today there is no clear-cut
separation between tribal and non-tribal segments of the population, quoting
the eminent sociologist Prof. André Béteille: “In
this country, groups which correspond closely to the anthropologists’ conception
of tribes have lived in long association with communities of an entirely
different type. Except in a few areas, it is very difficult to come
across communities which retain all their pristine tribal character. In
fact, most such tribal groups show in varying degrees elements of continuity
with the larger society of India (…) In India hardly any
of the tribes exists as a separate society and they have all been absorbed, in
varying degrees, into the wider society of India. The on-going process of
absorption is not recent but dates back to the most ancient times”47
Prof. Béteille had found that
“ethnically speaking, most of the tribes in present-day
Concluding his argumentation, Mr. Dayal
said: “In case the various criteria of indigenous populations were to be
selectively applied to the Indian context, at least 300 or 400 million people
could come within its ambit. I would therefore reiterate
my government’s view that tribals in
In my opinion, the issue is clinched by Prof. Béteille in another article. He contrasts the
category of caste, slightly reinforced and rigidified under colonial rule but
otherwise thoroughly familiar to the Indian population since millennia, with
the very new concept of tribe: “Every Hindu knew not only that he belonged to a
particular caste but also that others belonged to other castes of whose
respective places in a broader scheme of things he had some idea, whether vague
or stereotyped. Hardly anything corresponding to this exited in the case
of those we know today as tribes. The consciousness
of the distinct and separate identity of all the tribes of
To traditional Hinduism, tribes are simply forest-based
castes or communities (with both “caste” and “tribe” rendering the same
Sanskrit term jâti), in closer or more tenuous
contact with the Great Tradition. There never was a clear cleavage
between Hindu castes and animist tribes, there only were communities
geographically and culturally closer or less close to the Vedic backbone of
Hindu civilization. Some were less Vedic yet socially integrated, viz.
the low castes, others were less Vedic and socially more isolated, viz. the
castes now labelled “tribes”.
But even the latter never had the consciousness of
belonging to a separate “tribal” type of population. just
as the Ahir caste or the Kayasth
caste or the Chamar caste was aware of it distinctive
caste identity, “the Santhal had
a sense their own identity as Santhals; the Garos of theirs as Garos; and the
Todas of their as Todas”,-but
none was aware of a collective “tribal” identity, much less of an “aboriginal”
identity.51
Not one of the Indian tribes was entirely untouched by
the influence of the Vedic-Puranic Great
Tradition. This is one of the reasons why the relationship between
Hinduism and any Indian “tribe” is different from the relationship between
Hinduism and tribal cultures in other continents. Even the tribal
cultures genetically unrelated to Vedic civilization were dimly integrated in
the Hindu world which spanned the whole of
Tribes from the Kafirs of
Afghanistan to the Gonds of South-Central India have
taken starring roles in the resistance of the native society against the Muslim
onslaught. If the Bhil boy Ekalavya
of Mahabharata (I.31-54) fame could seek out the princely martial arts trainer Drona as his archery teacher, even the terrible treatment
he received from Drona (for reasons unrelated to Ekalavya’s social origins) cannot nullify the implication
that the Bhil tribe habitually interacted with the
Vedic Bharata clan. Those who use the Eklavya story against Hinduism do not know or ignore the
fact that Eklavya is mentioned twice (II.37.47;
II.44.21) as one of the great kings who was invited and
given great hospitality in Yudhisthara’s Rajasusya Yajna at Indraprastha. Kautilya
mentions tribal (atvî) battalions in Hindu
royal armies.52 Rama,
of course, relied on his Vânara
(forest-dweller) allies to fight Ravana. The
tribals may have lived on the periphery, but it was still within the horizon of
Hindu society.
9.8. But are they really aboriginal?
Given the Hindutva priority of uniting all “Hindus” and
not offending the sensibilities of any of the targeted groups, a hard question
which the above controversy ought to raise, is never asked: but are the
“Adivasis” really aboriginal? Given the racial mixing, they would be as
indigenous as anyone, at least biologically (and the same is true for the
speakers of Indo-Aryan), but what about their distinctive identities, starting
with their languages? Tribal activism and separatism is strongest in
Jharkhand and the North-East, but about the origins of the tribals predominant
in these two areas, leading anthropologists have a sobering message:
“Whereas the now Dravidian-speaking tribals of Central
and
The Oraons of Chhotanagpur have a tradition describing their wanderings
from the western coast along the
As for the Austro-Asiatic tribes themselves (Ho, Santal, Munda), pushed out from
some areas by Dravidian-speaking Gonds and Oraons, they too have a history of immigration. Their
languages, along with Nicobarese, belong to the
Austro-Asiatic language family, of which the dominant members are Khmer and
Vietnamese. Its original heartland was probably the
Bronze age culture of the 3rd millennium BC in
André Béteille confirms this:
“Taking
By all accounts, the Tibeto-Burmese
“Adivasis” in the North-East are among
9.9. Hinduism, a “pre-Aryan” religion
There is one Hindu Revivalist author who has
methodically argued against the view (implied in the term âdivâsî)
that the tribals have one religion, which is indigenous, and non-tribals
another, the Vedic religion, which was imported. Shrikant Talageri puts it in the
context of the Aryan Invasion Theory, the cornerstone of the division of
Indians into “natives” and “invaders”.62 A discussion of the rightness or wrongness of
this theory (rejected by many Hindu nationalists) would take us too far here,
but Talageri’s point is precisely that even if we
accept the theory, most elements in Hinduism are commonly assumed (by scholars
accepting the theory) to have been borrowed from the natives.
Talageri proposes: “Let us
examine whether, as per the Aryan Invasion Theory itself, Hinduism is an
‘Aryan’ religion. (…) Suniti Kumar Chatterji has listed some of the features of Hinduism,
which are supposed to be of ‘pre-Aryan’ origin (…) As a study of the material presented therein will show,
almost every aspect of Hinduism as we know it today, certainly every feature
central to the religion, is supposed to be of ‘pre-Aryan’ origin.”63 The criterion applied, not by Talageri but by established scholars like S.K. Chatterji, whom he quotes, is mostly whether a motif or
practice is attested in the Rigveda and in related
Indo-European traditions, esp. the Avesta, the
Germanic, Celtic and Slavic cultures, pre-Classical Rome and
Greece, and even the reviving Paganism of the Baltic peoples (the Latvian Dievturiba and the Lithuanian Romuva
religion).64 Anything not attested in
these Indo-European traditions is supposed to be “pre-Aryan”, or to summarize Talageri’s detailed enumeration:
1. The entire system of idol-worship, whether of the
lingam, of ‘rude blocks of stone’ with eyes painted on them, or of sculptured
images of stone, metal or wood; including the procedure of worship, viz.
treating the idols as living beings (washing them, feeding them etc.), offering
them flowers and fruits, waving lamps and incense before them, performing music
and dance before them; and the construction of permanent houses for them, temples
with sacred tanks, chariots for annual processions, pilgrimages etc.
2. The application of coloured
pastes on the idols and on the skin of the worshipper, including the saffron colour and the forehead-mark (tilak),
two of the most basic symbols of Hinduism.
3. The concept of transmigration of souls.
4. The enumeration of the days by moon phases (tithi), on which the ritualistic calendar (Panchâga) is based.
5. Zoomorphic aspects of Hinduism: sacredness of
animals, worship of elephant-God Ganesha and monkey-God
Hanuman, concept of Lord Vishnu incarnating in the form of a fish, tortoise,
boar, lion; the animal vehicles of the gods (Shiva’s bull, Vishnu’s eagle, Durga’s lion etc.).
6. Most Gods actually worshipped are
considered ‘pre-Aryan’ (certified Aryan Gods like Indra,
corresponding to Zeus/Jupiter/Thor/Perkunas, are hardly worshipped).65
7. Many Puranic myths are
considered Sanskrit adaptations of “indigenous” myths.
8. It is obvious that all the sacred places of
9. All the typically Indian materials used in Hindu
rituals have obviously been employed in emulation of native usage.
Talageri
concludes: “After all this, how much remains of Hinduism which can be
classified as ‘Aryan’? According to the Aryan invasion theory itself,
Hinduism is practically a ‘pre-Aryan’ (…) religion adopted by the ‘Aryans’.”66 This point is also conceded
by the more enlightened among the Aryan invasion theorists, e.g.: “Hinduism has
not been ‘imported’ by the Aryans”, in the sense that the latter’s religion
differed considerably from what is now known as Hinduism.67
In general outline, this is hard to refute. But
of course, the established proponents of the Aryan Invasion Theory may be wrong
in their tracing of cultural motifs to Aryan or non-Aryan sources. Many
religious themes assumed to have been borrowed from the “pre-Aryan natives” are
now recognized by a new generation of Indo-Europeanists as part of the common
“Aryan” heritage. Thus, Bernard Sergent
presents fresh evidence to equate Vishnu with the Germanic god Vîdharr and Shiva with the Greek god Dionysos.68 Even so, that still leaves a large part of
Hindu lore to be traced to aboriginal sources.
9.10. Tribal belief in reincarnation
For an instance of a Hindu doctrine claimed as
indigenous, consider the belief in reincarnation. Though apparently
attested among the ancient Celts, among the Pythagoreans (who acknowledged
Oriental influence) and in Virgil’s Aeneis, it
is not in evidence in the Vedas (thought it may be implied in some episodes or
mantras), and is therefore considered a pre-Aryan import into Hinduism.
Among the Indo-Europeans including the Vedic Aryans, different beliefs about
the afterlife may have co-existed, but the communis
opinio is that the Vedic Aryans adopted the
belief in reincarnation from Indian “natives”. According
to anti-Brahmin authors, the wily Aryan Brahmins then forged this borrowed
belief into a weapon to suppress the natives by means of the caste system.69 It is, at any rate,
widely believed that “the caste system in
Fact is that the belief in reincarnation, considered by
some as a defining characteristic of Hinduism, is also found among Indian
tribals, though with philosophical variations and coexisting with other
beliefs. Thus, Robert Parkin
writes that the Munda tribals believe in
reincarnation, but with an “absence of an ethical component”, so that “it is
the manner of one’s death, not the worth of one’s life, that
is the qualification for rebirth”.71 For the Mundas, “reincarnation is of course an object of desire
here, not of dread”.72 Clearly, then, they did not borrow it from
Buddhism or Puranic Hinduism, which impose a
moralistic and negative view of rebirth on this basic belief.
There is no reason to attribute the belief in
reincarnation among tribals to Brahminical
influence. In his survey of reincarnation beliefs around
the world, the Dutch scholar Hans Ten Dam reports that in all continents,
people have believed in reincarnation, e.g. more than a hundred Black African
nations.73 Many of these
peoples were unrelated, and stumbled upon the notion
of reincarnation independently, without needing the pre-Aryan Indians to tell
them about it. As Ram Swarup argues, the belief
in reincarnation “is found among people who are called ‘primitive’ as well as
those who are called ‘civilized’ (…) among the Eskimos, Australians,
Melanesians, the Poso Alfur
of Celebes in Indonesia, among Algonquians, Bantus, (…) the
Pythagoreans and the teachers of Orphic mystery (…) In short, the doctrine has
the support of the spiritual intuition of most mankind, ancient or modern.”74
Conversely, some scholars claim that the notion of karma
and of reincarnation has not been attested among the early Dravidian populations
of
So, both in Hindu and in tribal cultures, we have a
variety of opinions about the afterlife, including several versions of the
doctrine of reincarnation. Certain ideas are so general that trying to
identify them with ethnic groups is unconvincing when not downright
funny. Thus, I once heard an Indologist of
feminist persuasion argue that Samkhya philosophy,
which divides the universe into a multiplicity of spirits (Purusha,
masculine) and a single “nature” or material world (Prakriti,
feminine), must have been thought up by a “pre-Aryan” culture because it
betrays a matriarchal polyandrous viewpoint.
Likewise, Heinrich Zimmer, an exponent of this ethnic
division of Indian thought, is described by Frits Staal
as “the author of an original but one-sided description of Indian
philosophies-based on an interpretation not free of racial prejudice: according
to Zimmer, there is in Indian thought an opposition
between the monist Vedanta philosophy which stems from the Vedic Aryans and the
realistic dualism of Jainism and Buddhism which he links with the ‘original’
Dravidian India.”78 Staal
dismisses this as “romantic ideas not verified in reality”.
Within the ethnically fairly homogeneous Greek world,
we see a wealth of different philosophies spring up in just a matter of
centuries, from Anaximander to Zeno; it stands to
reason that the much larger Hindu society also produced different world-views
and different religious practices without having to borrow them from non-Hindu
cultures. Both in Hindu and in tribal culture, several views of afterlife
and reincarnation coexist, and the two sets partially overlap. So far,
the distribution of different views of reincarnation in Hindu society and in
tribal-animist society is not such as to indicate a clean religious cleavage
between those two.
9.11. Do tribals have caste?
As we have seen, numerous observers take caste division
to be a defining trait of Hinduism. Shrikant Talageri accepts the historical (i.e. non-essentialist)
entanglement of Hinduism in the caste system: “The caste system (…) is, in its
nastier aspects, the bane of Hinduism and Indian society. This system, however, is a social system, and is not really a
central aspect of Hinduism, although vested interests down the centuries have
strived, with great success, to identify it with Hinduism.”79
Until recently, Hindu upper-caste interests were most
insistent on justifying caste observance as a Hindu religious duty. But
now, the situation is just the reverse: “It is a feature of Hindu society which
every genuine Hindu and Hindu nationalist organisation (like the RSS) has sought to wipe out or at least to neutralise;
and which every Leftist and secularist politician and intellectual, and Muslim
and Christian force, has tried to strengthen and perpetuate”.80 Now, every anti-Hindu author tries his utmost
best to pin Hinduism down on the caste system, and conversely, every other
religion competing with Hinduism for prestige and for souls describes itself as
anti-caste and egalitarian.
To maximize the difference between Hindus and tribals,
it is routinely said that “the tribals, unlike the Hindus, have equality and no
caste system”. This fits in with the trend that Aboriginals all over the
world are redefining their own cultural heritage in terms of the “noble
savage”, the idealized views which Romantic Westerners had projected onto
them. Thus, the Gaia Atlas of First Peoples quotes one “Pat
Dodson, aborigine”, as saying: “In traditional Aboriginal society, no one
person was more important than another-all were parts of a whole. Growth and stature were measured by contribution, participation
and accountability.”81 This may, in his case, be the truth, but the
apologetic element in this trend is hard to miss.
Some tribes (especially the most primitive ones, with
little functional differentiation) may have come closer to this egalitarian
ideal than others, but in general, we can question this assertion on several
counts. Equality is a very modem concept, and we may doubt that there
exists a norm of “equality” even within a tribe, within a clan, within a
family. Moreover, even without hierarchical ranking there can be a
division in endogamous groups, i.e. castes; or in Indian terms, endogamous jâtis though without
The world over, tribal populations observe various kinds
of caste distinctions. Thus, concerning tribals on the
Pacific islands: “In the Mariami group it was the
common belief that only the nobles were endowed with an immortal soul, and a
nobleman who married a girl of the people was punished with death.
In
For another example, we may turn to
Endogamy was once a world-wide practice, and there is
no reason to assume that Indian tribes are an exception. Yet, people
ignore the caste nature of certain social structures even when describing them,
simply because the idea that the tribals are caste-free egalitarians has become
so entrenched. Witness the following authentic
juxtaposition: among Indian tribals, “marriages take place strictly within the
tribe and any form of caste system is unknown”, according to Dick Kooiman.85 What this says is effectively: “the tribe is
strictly endogamous and endogamous groups are unknown”. Yes, the tribe
knows no subdivisions in endogamous groups, but that is because the tribe
itself is the endogamous unit.
Hindutva authors have done little to correct this view
by showing that a kind of caste consciousness is equally pervasive in tribal
and in Hindu society, probably because of their eagerness to de-emphasize caste
as a defining aspect of Hinduism. All the same, the job has been done,
and well done, by anthropologists and Christian missionaries. We quote a
brief sample. Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf
writes about the Khova tribe in the North-East: “Their social organization is based on a system of exogamous clans
distributed over all the ten villages. The tribe is strictly endogamous,
and there is no intermarriage with any neighbouring
tribe”.86 Likewise
in
The Munda
tribals not only practise tribal endogamy and
commensality, but also observe a jâti division
within the tribe, buttressed by notions of social pollution, a mythological
explanation and harsh punishments.88 A Munda
Catholic theologian testifies: “The tribals of Chhotanagpur
are an endogamous tribe. They usually do not marry outside the tribal
community, because to them the tribe is sacred. The way to salvation is
the tribe.”89 Among
the Santals, “it is tabooed to marry outside the
tribe or inside one’s clan”90, just as Hindus marry inside their caste and
outside their gotra. More precisely: “To
protect their tribal solidarity, the Santals have
very stringent marriage laws. (…) a Santal
cannot marry a non-Santal or a member of his own
clan. The former is considered as a threat to the tribe’s integrity,
while the latter is considered incestuous.”91 Among the Ho of Chhotanagpur, “the trespasses which occasion the exclusion
from the tribe without chance of appeal, are
essentially those concerning endogamy and exogamy”.92
A missionary notes: “The
observance of the taboo [of marrying outside the tribe] is therefore far more
fundamental than the offering of sacrifices to the spirits. If one seeks
in another religion an alternative means of effectively dealing with them and
of venerating God, this does not affect one’s tribal status in the
least. On the other hand, renouncing the tribe is
normally felt by Sarna people to be nearly as
dreadful as abandoning God himself.”93 In other words, the tribals display the same
combination of doctrinal tolerance and caste strictness that is deemed typical
of Hinduism. Possibly this combination exists in mainstream Hinduism as a
tradition that dates back to tribal antiquity.
Christian missionaries have had to accommodate the
attachment of tribals to their caste rules. In December 1891, Father
Constant Lievens allowed one of his more zealous
assistants, Father Walrave, to test the sincerity of
150 Munda converts and conversion candidates by
asking them to inter-dine with other Christians who did not belong to the group
with which they were allowed by tradition to share a meal. Only 20 people
agreed to do so; the others walked out, and 7,000 converts in the area
defected. This test is known among Chhotanagpur
Jesuits as “the Mistake”. And so, in 1892, Father Haghenbeek
wrote that the taboo on commensality was not strictly a “pagan” practice, but
merely an expression of “national sentiment and pride”, not at all harmful even
to Christians:
“On the contrary, while proclaiming the equality of all
men before God, we now tell them: preserve your race pure, keep your customs, refrain from eating with Lohars
(blacksmiths), Turis (bamboo
workers) and other people of lower rank. To become good Christians, it
(inter-dining) is not required.”94
Summing up, we find that the notion that
the tribals have no caste distinctions is mistaken.95 The Hindu caste society is not antagonistic
to tribal society, on the contrary, it is nothing but tribal society at a more
advanced and integrated stage, where tribes are no longer self-contained
societies but building-blocks of a much larger and more complex society.
This is how Brahmins integrated tribes into a larger
Hindu society, according to the Marxist historian D.D. Kosambi:
“The tribe as a whole turned into a new peasant jâti
caste-group, generally ranked as Shudras, with as
many as possible of the previous institutions (including endogamy) brought
over. (…) The Brahmin often preserved tribal or local peasant jâti customs and primitive lore in some special if
modified form (…) This procedure
enabled Indian society to be formed out of many diverse and even discordant
elements, with the minimum use of violence.”96
What Kosambi says is that the
Brahmins did not impose the caste system, they found it ready-made in its
defining features of endogamy and commensality, and they blessed
it. The Indian caste system is the continuation in
agricultural and urban society of an ancient tribal institution. Tribal
endogamy was preserved when the tribal hunter-gatherer lifestyle was surpassed
because, as veteran India-watcher Girilal Jain told
me: “In
There exists a profound continuity between literate
Brahmanism and the illiterate “animism” of the tribal communities which
gradually joined Brahmanic society in the
past. Hinduism has been described, in the
introduction to a pre-independence Census Report (1901), as “animism more or
less transformed by philosophy, or to condense the epigram, as magic tempered
by metaphysics”.98 This
echoes what leading archaeologist S.R. Rao said about
the Harappan religion, “ranging from very elevated
philosophical and ethical concepts down to a crude animism”.99
When convenient, even the secularists readily admit the
continuity between Hinduism and more primitive phases of Indian culture.
Thus, one editorial asserts about the Hindu festivals of Holi
and Diwali: “These festivals, in fact, are not really
defined as Hindu. They are ancient events of the solar calendar that
predate Hinduism. The practice of cremation, too,
has come down from time immemorial and is not peculiarly Hindu.”100 A more sympathetic way to
make this same point would be to admit that Holi, Diwali and the practice of cremation are very Hindu (of
course they are), and that consequently, Hinduism in India stretches back to
“times immemorial” and includes pre-Vedic or “tribal” strands.
During the Ayodhya crisis,
the secularists alleged that Hindus had demolished “animist shrines” and
replaced them with Hindu temples such as Jagannath Puri This has been countered with reference to just this
type of continuity, admitted in other contexts by the secularists
themselves. Apart from the fact that “animists” usually didn’t build
shrines but preferred worship in the open air (just like the Vedic Aryans),
mainly in sacred groves, research on the spot is quoted as revealing a much
more positive kind of interaction between “animism” and Sanskritic
Hinduism than violent replacement of one by the other.
Girilal Jain quotes a
research volume about Puri: “The archaic iconography
of the cult images on the one hand and their highest Hindu iconology on the
other as well as the existence of former tribals (daitas) and Vedic Brahmins amongst its priests are
by no means an antithesis, but a splendid regional synthesis of the local and
the all-Indian tradition.”101 And
he comments: “The uninterrupted tribal-Hindu continuum finds its lasting
manifestation in the Jagannath cult of Puri.”102
After citing some similar cases, Jain proposes to
“clinch the issue” with a very telling example: “The Lingaraja
temple in
Linga worship is, of course, a
hoary tradition carried from very ancient cultures into the centre of
Hinduism. It is slightly absurd to accuse the linga-worshipping
Hindus of demolishing the shrines of linga-worshipping
tribals to replace them with temples for linga
worship.
9.13. Hindu-tribal unity
Given the Hindu-tribal continuity, Guru Golwalkar proposed that for the integration of tribals and
untouchables, one and the same formula applies: “They can be given yajñopavîta (…) They should be
given equal rights and footings in the matter of religious rights, in temple
worship, in the study of Vedas, and in general, in all our social and religious
affairs. This is the only right solution for all the problems of casteism found nowadays in our Hindu society.”104
The RSS affiliate Vanavasi
Kalyan Ashram is implementing this programme,
adapting its strategy to the local situations.105 In some cases, it will
work for a full “sanskritization” as envisioned by Golwalkar. The schools which RSS-affiliated
organizations have founded in tribal areas are thought of as new Vedic gurukulas, much closer to the original Vedic
lifestyle than any urban Hindu school could offer, combining Sanskrit-centred education with the forest environment in which rishi Valmiki flourished.
This is sociologist Gérard Heuzé’s
assessment:
“Those cost-free tribal schools, about a hundred in
1990, cater to an undemanding population, and often the poorest section of it.
(…) These children are made to live like the ‘Vedic ancestors’, to which the vanavasis are supposed to have remained closer. It is
also in this framework of mission to the tribals that the most traditional
ideals of Hindu nationalism (power of the sage, study of Sanskrit) are
implemented most seriously. These RSS schools have
remained lacking in influence and prestige vis-à-vis the Christian mission
colleges with their infinitely larger financial support base.”106
In others situations, the VKA will support a grass-roots
tribal reaction against the Christian missions, for the tribals have developed
their own religious reform movements since more than a century, such as the Bhili Bhagats, Tana Bhagats, Sapta
Hors and Haribaba. Though often adopting
certain Christian elements, particularly a prophet-centred
millennarism, the contents of their reforms can best
be understood by comparison with the Arya Samaj, e.g. Jatra, the Oraon founder of the so-called Tana Bhagat movement (ca. 1920),
told his followers to abstain from meat and alcohol, and enlisted his movement
in the national freedom struggle.”107 Birsa
Munda, whose Munda
rebellion started with attacks on mission posts in 1899, claimed
to have visions after the mode of the Biblical prophets, but told his flock to
give up animal sacrifice, witchcraft and intoxication and to wear the sacred
thread, all amounting to a kind of self-sanskritization.108 While such charismatic
leaders come and go, the tradition of tribal nativism
continues, and the VKA seeks to channel it towards integration into a larger
Hindu activism.
For an example of a grass-roots movement towards
integration in Hinduism inspired by the VKA: “A small village of Meghalaya, Smit, about 15 km away
from the State capital Shillong, witnessed a unique
gathering on April 20 when about 20,000 Khasi tribals
of the State took a pledge to protect and preserve their traditional Sanatana Dharma. (…) The function was organised
by the ‘
Speaking on the occasion Shri G. L. Niyang of Jayantia hills said
that he was offered many a time to adopt Christianity but he refused because of
inspirations from his Hindu brethren who apprised him of the greatness of his
religion.”109
The two main distinctions breaking the cultural
continuum between tribals and Hindus are these: the former have no taboo on
cow-slaughter, and they have a sexual morality deemed loose by the Hindu middle
class. As Gérard Heuzé
remarks, “the tribals are known as people who drink alcohol and eat meat,
sometimes even beef. They have, in this
perspective, lowly and ‘impure’ mores which call for upliftment.”110 G.S.
Ghurye has given an account of the rather vivid and
varied sex life of some tribals he knew personally, not too different from what
you see in the concrete jungles of American cities but quite repellent to
middle-class Hindus.111
These are the things which have made the tribal
despised in the eyes of upper-caste Hindus for centuries, but which they may
well have in common with the Vedic Aryans. It seems that the tribals, in
their relative isolation, have missed the development which changed the robust
Vedic Aryans into the prudish, purity-obsessed Hindus of recent centuries.
As for sexual morality, Hindu society
became a lot more prudish in several waves, the last and most pervasive being the
contact with the Christian West in its Victorian phase.112 By trying to whitewash
the Vedic Aryans from the vices which modern scholarship has imputed to them
(including cow-slaughter) and strait-jacket them into the fussy norms of modern
Hinduism, Hindutva history-rewriters make the additional mistake of cutting
some of their common roots with the tribals.
9.14. BJP policies and the tribals
In a way, the main problem for tribal-Hindu unity is
the Hindus themselves. Whatever arguments for tribal-Hindu kinship may
have been considered above, most urban BJP-voting Hindu businessmen generally
don’t feel one with the tribals, whom they only know from TV
documentaries; they don’t feel concerned. Therefore, Shrikant
Talageri calls on his fellow Hindus to change their
outlook:
“On the Indian front, [the Hindutva movement] should
spearhead the revival, rejuvenation and resurgence of Hinduism, which includes
not only religious, spiritual and cultural practices springing from Vedic or Sanskritic sources, but from all other Indian
sources independently of these: the practices of the Andaman islanders and the
(pre-Christian) Nagas are as Hindu in the territorial
sense, and Sanâtana in the spiritual sense, as
classical Sanskritic Hinduism. (…) A true Hindutvavâdî should feel a pang of pain, and a
desire to take positive action, not only when he hears that the percentage of
Hindus in the Indian population is falling (…), or that Hindus are being
discriminated against in almost every respect, but also when he hears that the Andamanese races and languages are becoming extinct; that
vast tracts of forests, millions of years old, are being wiped out forever
(…); that innumerable forms of arts and handicrafts, architectural
styles, plant and animal species, musical forms and musical instruments etc.
are becoming extinct.”113
As for practical politics, the BJP emphatically
supports a number of tribal demands, e.g. the creation of smaller states
including statehood for the tribal areas of
However, one important tribal grievance presents more
difficulties for the BJP: conservation of the tribal habitat in places where
dams may be built. The Sangh Parivar
counts many Gandhian proponents of
environment-friendly “soft” development among its office-bearers.115 Thus, the Tehri Dam is rejected because it is deemed seismically
unsafe and because it encroaches on the natural purity of the sacred
In this case, the BJP’s
consolation is that the other parties have no better deal to offer: under any
Government, rising population pressure is an objective factor limiting the
possibilities to conserve tribal habitats. Leftists like Arundhati Roy may campaign all they want against the
encroachment on tribal land by developers, the various Leftist parties have a
very similar record in this regard whenever they have been in power. The
objective necessity of economic development is only one of the ways in which
even historically isolated tribes are moving closer to the mainstream, losing
what distinctively “tribal” characteristics the British census officers had
ascribed to them. To the extent that there exists
a tribal identity, new social realities militate against its preservation and
cause its irrevocable dissolution into the broader Hindu society.
9.15. Conclusion
Of all the traditions discussed in this book, tribal
“animism” is the only one which cannot be described as an “offshoot” of
Hinduism. Some tribal traditions may be transformed borrowings from the Sanskritic tradition, but in most cases they have developed
in parallel with and separate from the Vedic tradition. In that sense
they date back to antiquity and perhaps even to pre-Vedic times, though at that
time-depth they may still have common roots with the Sanskritic
mainstream.
If we go by the historical definition, the question
whether tribals are Hindus is very simple to answer: they are Indians but not
prophetic-monotheists, so they are Indian Pagans or Hindus. Moreover,
typologically the tribal religions are similar to the Vedic religion. They
have many elements in common, partly by distant common roots, partly by the
integration of tribal elements in the expanding literate Sanskritic
civilization, and partly by the adoption of elements from the Vedic-Puranic Great Tradition in the tribal Little Traditions.
A first little problem appears when we consider Savarkar’s definition: do tribals, who have no ancestral or
religious attachment to any place outside
Therefore, whereas a case without ifs and buts could be
made that “Sikhs are Hindus” or “Ramakrishnaites are
Hindus”, such a straightforward and simple claim cannot be made regarding the
tribals, at least not if we follow Savarkar’s
definition, which breaks down at this point.
If we consider essentialist definitions, we find that
tribal cultures have a lot in common with Hinduism thus defined, including a
strong sense of caste (endogamy, commensality, in some cases even untouchability) and various doctrines of reincarnation, as
well as similarities in forms of polytheistic worship. In many cases, cow
slaughter is one element which sets them apart, but only from classical
Hinduism, not from older Vedic and pre-Vedic forms.
From a Christian or Islamic viewpoint, any such
differences between tribal “animism” and Hinduism are purely academic, since by
all accounts both religions belong to the polytheistic and Pagan
category. This does not nullify the practical distance between many
Hindus and many tribals, a cultural gap which Hindu activists are working hard
to bridge. In this effort, they are greatly helped by the natural
socioeconomic evolution which is inexorably drawing the tribals into society’s
mainstream and hence into its predominant religion, Hinduism.
Footnotes:
1V.D. Savarkar: Hindu
Rashtra Darshan. p.77.
2A. Chatterjee: Hindu
Nation, p.4. Doni-pollo is “sun &
moon” as the basic polarity of the cosmos as seen from Arunachal
Pradesh, roughly equivalent to Chinese yin & yang. The term Sarna “refers to a grove of sal
trees where the tribes of Chhotanagpur venerate their
God and their spirits. It is therefore the name of a sacred grove.
Today Sarna is used to designate the ancestral
religion of these tribes for which there is no specific term”, explains Y.
Philip Barjo: “The religious life of the Sarna tribes”, Indian Missiological
Review, June 1997, p.42
3Art.244 of the Constitution, and its
amendments, vide P.M. Bakshi: The Constitution of
India, p.160-161, p.259-277.
4Smita Gupta: “The Numbers War”, Times of
India,
5A.M. Mujahid: Conversion
to Islam, p.132.
6A.M. Mujahid: Conversion
to Islam, p.132.
7A.M. Mujahid: Conversion
to Islam, p.132.
8Varghese Palatty Koonathan: “The Religious World-view of the Oraons”, Sevartham 1994,
p. 102. Hindi terminology and even Hindi as first language is making big
inroads in the tribal cultures of Chhotanagpur; even
Christian missionaries, though always accused of fomenting tribal separatism,
are opening Hindi-medium schools, a development which may lead to the loss of
the tribals’ linguistic identity.
9J. Troisi: Tribal Religion, p.74.
10S.K. Chatterjee: Indo-Aryan
and Hindi(1960),
p.56, quoted in Mahadev Chakravarti:
The concept of Rudra-Shiva through the Ages,
p.69. The “two races” are supposed to be the “Aryan invaders” and the
“aboriginals”.
11Harold Gould: *Sacralization
of a Social Order*, p,1, against the description of
certain Coorg rituals as “pre-Hindu” by M.N. Srinivas: *Religion and Society among the Coorgs of South India*. Ofcourse,
the very notion of “pre-Hindu” is questionable.
12E.g. about the attribution of monotheism to the Maori,
see Jane Simpson: “Io as supreme being: intellectual colonization of the Maori?”, History of Religions, August 1997. She notes
that since the 1920s, a vast corpus has been created about “Io” as the supposed
mono-God of the Maori, and that lately, a native scholar and a missionary have
jointly challenged this notion as a projection, a colonial-age “textual
artifact” resulting from missionary influence.
13George M. Soares-Prabhu: Tribal
Values in the Bible, p.99.
14A. Soares: Truth Shall
Prevail, p. 267. The Niyogi Committee was a
fact-finding committee in the tribal belt of eastern-central
15Y. Philip Barjo: “The religious life of the Sarna
tribes”, Indian Missiological Review, June
1997, p.46.
16J. Troisi: Tribal Religion, p.75-79. The writer
consistently uses the term “Santal pantheon”, which
is polytheistic enough.
17Ruth
Waterman: “Fakkeldraagsters in Manipur” (Dutch:
“Female torchbearers in Manipur”), India Nu (
18Erik Robbemont: “
19Thus George M. soares-Prabhu: Tribal
Values in the Bible, p.99.
20See Pupul Jayakar: The Earth
Mother, and Johnson Vadakumchary: “The Earth
Mother and the Indigenous people of
22According to
Y. Philip Barjo (“The religious life of the Sarna tribes, Indian Missiological
Review, June 1997, p.47), “Sing Bonga’s purity
demands that he be offered sacrifices only of things that are white.
Hence he is given sacrifices of white goats, white fowls, white gulainchi flowers, white cloth, sugar, milk etc.” The
Indian preference for white-skinned marriage partners (as attested in the matrimonial
advertisements) is often explained as a hold-over of the “race pride” of the
“white Aryan invaders” or, more historically, of the Turks and Englishmen, but
Sing Bonga’s “aboriginal” preference for white pushes
the phenomenon farther back.
23M.S. Golwalkar: Bunch of Thoughts, p.472. The verse is Gita 10:41.
24“All-pervader”,
i.e. Vishnu, of whom
25Pupul Jayakar: The Earth Mother, p.20-22.
26Jan Van Alphen: personal communication, May 1992. He related
that the report could not be published in
27Asok K. Ghosh and P.N. Hansda: “Encounter
between Hindus and Santals”, *Journal of Dharma*,
April-June 1994, p. 194.
29M.S. Golwalkar: Bunch of Thoughts, p.471-472.
30K.V. Jayaram: “Propitiating the snake”, Hindustan Times,
31Prasanna Damodar Sapre: Hamâre Vanavâsî aur Kalyâna Ashrama
(Hindi: “Our Forest-Dwellers and the Well-Being Hermitage”), p.25.
32Vide the
influential article by Christoph von Fürer-Haimendorf: “Youth dormitories and community-house in
33Henk Boon:
34AJ. Philip: “Hindutva, the lexical way”, Indian Express,
8.3.99.
35A.J. Philip:
“Hindutva, the lexical way”, Indian Express, 8.3.99.
36Reproduced in
C.H. Philips ed.: Select Documents on the History of India and Pakistan,
part IV, p.315.
37About the
justice Party, founded in
38Dick Kooiman:
39A Bengali professor in the
40“Stepsons of the Soil”, Times of
41About ancient
Hindu culture as largely a silvan culture,
see Thomas Parkhill: The Forest Setting in Hindu
Epics.
42G. Pandey: “Hindus and others: the Militant Hindu
Construction”, Economical and Political Weekly,
43Shrikant Talageri (Aryan Invasion Theory and Indian Nationalism)
argues for the rather static view of history that all the present-day language
groups in
44In Prof. Kisku: “Urgent Appeal to Adivasis Abroad”,
45It is, at any
rate, not at all uncommon to read in Western media about tribal areas as
countries “occupied by
46Quoted in Dalit Voice,
47Reported in Dalit Voice,
48Dalit
Voice,
50André Béteille: “Colonial construction of tribe” (an old column
of his in Times of India), Chronicle of Our Time, p. 187.
51André Béteille: “Colonial construction of tribe”, Chronicle of
Our Time, P.189.
52Kautilya: The
Arthashastra 9:2:13-20, Penguin edition, p. 685.
53H. Walter et al.: “Investigations on the variability
of blood group polymorphisms among sixteen tribal populations from Orissa, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra,
India”, in Zeitschrift flr
Morphologie und Anthropologie,
Band 79 Heft 1 (1992).
54J. Van Troy s.j.: The Prehistoric Context
of the Coming of the Mundas to the Ranchi Plateau. A Review. In Sevartham vol. 15, 1990, p.27 ff.
55As asserted
in the Encyclopaedia of Tamil Literature,
vol.1, p.45, and by A.L. Basham in his introduction to Deshpande
& Hook: Aryan and non-Aryan in South Asia (1979). This is
supported also by David McAlpin’s theory (argued in Deshpande & Hook: op.cit.)
of “Elamo-Dravidian”, originating in southern
56Jan van Alphen: “Adivasi”,
57The Chinese
language has a number of Austro-Asiatic loan-words, probably including the
“cyclical” characters, two series (of 10 and of 12) of numerals used for
counting hours, compass directions etc.
58Quoted by J.
Van Troy: “Coming of the Mundas”, Sevartham,
1990, p. 27 ff.
59S. Fuchs:
“Priests and Magicians in Aboriginal India”, Studia
Missionalia, vol.22 (1973), p.219.
60For an
admirable synthesis of the evidence, see B. Sergent: Genèse de l’Inde, p.85-96.
61André Béteille: “Colonial construction of tribe”, Chronicle of
Our Time, P. 189.
62For a
re-examination of the Aryan Invasion Theory from a Hindu angle,
vide N.S. Rajaram & D. Frawley:
Vedic Aryans; or G. Feuerstein, D. Frawley &
S. Kak: In Search of the Cradle of Civilization.
63S. Talageri: Aryan Invasion Theory and Indian Nationalism,
p. 34, with reference to S.K. Chatterji’s
contribution to R.C. Majumdar, ed.: The Vedic Age,
Ch.8; emphasis in the original.
64See S.K. Chatterji: Balts and
Aryans (1968).
65Brahma, the
truly Brahmanic (hence supposedly “Aryan”) member of
the trimûrti (i.e. Brahma, half-Aryan Vishnu
and reputedly indigenous Shiva) is worshipped in only one temple, in Pushkar, Rajasthan, in the original cradle-land of Vedic
culture.
66S. Talageri: Aryan Invasion Theory and Indian Nationalism,
p.38.
67Henk Boon:
68B. Sergent: Genèse de l’Inde, p.402. Talageri
himself (Aryan Invasion Theory and Indian Nationalism, p.205 ff.) tries
to prove the same point regarding the Indo-Aryan vocabulary: that words usually
explained as loans from “aboriginal” languages have a demonstrable
Indo-European etymology, e.g. ibha,
“elephant”, could be related to Latin ebur, “ivory”.
69E.g. André van Lysebeth: Tantra, le cults de
la féminité, introduction.
70J. Verkuyl: De New Age Beweging,
p.71.
71Robert Parkin: The Munda of Central
India, p.222. This view is also known in Sikhism and Buddhism, see e.g. Harcharan Singh Sobti: “Bhagat Trilochan: A Study of the
Last Wish and the Next Birth”, in K.K. Mittal: Karma
and Rebirth, p. 199-207.
72Robert Parkin: The Munda of Central
India, p.222.
73H. Ten Dam: Ring van Licht, p.45 ff.
74Rarn Swarup: Hindu View of Christianity and Islam, p.47.
75George L.
Hart, III: “The Theory of Reincarnation among the Tamils”, in Wendy Doniger: Karma and Rebirth in Classical Indian Traditions,
p. 116.
76A.K. Ramanujan: “Is there an Indian way of thinking?”, in McKim Marriott: India
through Hindu Categories, p.44.
77A.K. Ramanujan: “Is there an Indian way of thinking?”, in McKim Marriott: India
through Hindu Categories, p.44, with reference to research by Sheryl
Daniel. The belief in an imprint at birth is all the more compatible with
astrology, which sees the stellar configuration as the agent of this imprint of
fate. This basic postulate is again difficult to reconcile with karma,
yet astrology is immensely popular among Hindus.
78F. Staal: Zin en Onzin, p. 15.
79S. Talageri: Aryan Invasion Theory and Indian Nationalism,
p.40.
80S. Talageri: Aryan Invasion Theory and Indian Nationalism,
p.40. There is truth in this statement but there are some exceptions, e.g.
Jawaharlal Nehru, the godfather of secularism, made no compromise with casteism, then marginally promoted by Socialists like Ram Manohar Lohia.
81Julian
Burger: The Gaia Atlas of First Peoples, p. 50.
82S.V. Ketkar: History of Caste, p.29.
83Jan De Mets:
“
84Erik Raspoet: “Scheutist in Kongo”, De Morgen, 20-10-2001.
86C. von Fürer-Haimendorf: Tribes of India, p. 30.
87C. von Fürer-Haimendorf: Tribes of India, p.218-219.
88Martin Topno: “Pati and Parha: Social Structure of the Munda”,
Sevartham 1991 (1978), p.9.
89Y. Philip Barjo: “The religious life of the Sarna
tribes”, Indian Missiological Review, June
1997, p.43.
90J. Troisi: Tribal Religion, p.227.
91J. Troisi: Tribal Religion, p. 167.
92Serge Bouez: Réciprocité et hiérarchie. L’alliance chez les Ho et
les Santals de l’Inde,
p.76. Bouez quotes the speech of a village elder
giving the rationality behind endogamy: the ancestors will be angry if a girl
marries outside the tribe and thereby deprives them of her progeny, who would
otherwise become part of the ancestors’ constituency of worshippers, feeding
them in the hereafter through sacrifice.
93A. Van Exem: “The Mistake, reviewed after a century”, Sevartham 1991, p.88.
94A. Van Exem: “The Mistake”, p.87.
95in keeping
with the anti-caste trend in society at large, some modern-educated tribal
youngsters now conclude love marriages with outsiders. In some cases, viz. when
Muslims are involved, “these marriages have often triggered communal tension
and violence in Chhotanagpur plateau”, according to Manoj Prasad: “Stupid Cupid sees not caste, creed in
96D.D. Kosambi: Culture and Civilization of Ancient
97Interview at Girilal Jain’s house in
98Quoted with
approval by Premchand Roychand:
Ethnic Elements in Ancient Hinduism, p. 1.
99Quoted in A.
Van Lysebeth: Tantra,
p. 19.
100Killing
with kindness: The VHP’s conversion programme betrays
bad faith”, Indian Express,
101A. Eschmann, H. Kulke and G.C. Tripathi, eds.: The Cult of Jagannath,
p.xv, quoted in G. Jain: The Hindu Phenomenon,
p.23.
102G. Jain: The
Hindu Phenomenon, p. 23.
103G. Jain: The
Hindu Phenomenon, p. 24, with reference to Eschmann,
Kulke and Tripathi, eds.: Cult
of Jagannath, p.97.
104M.S. Golwalkar: Bunch of Thoughts, p.479. Yajñopavîta: the sacred thread given during Vedic
initiation.
105Organiser
regularly reports on Vanavasi Kalyan
Ashram activities, e.g. Prakash Kamath:
“Serving vanvasis is our national duty”, Organiser,
106G. Heuzé: Où va l’Inde
moderne? p. 141.
107Vide A. Tirkey: “Evangelization among the Uraons”,
Indian Missiological Review, June 1997, esp.
p. 30-32. Tana means “pull out”, a cry uttered
during exorcism.
108Gérard Heuzé (Où va l’Inde moderne?
p. 1 33) aptly notes that the tribal rebellions of the 19th century, such as
the 1830 Kol movement, the 1855 Santal
Hoot and the 1899 Birsa rebellion, were
incorporated by the Freedom Movement in its vision of a native tradition of
struggle against foreign invaders (embodying “the authentic spirit of the
nation”), though in fact, exploitation by native (Hindu and Muslim) landlords
and money-lenders had also played a role in provoking the tribals into
rebellion.
109“Khasi
Tribals pledge to protect Sanatana Dharma”, Organiser 25-51997. About the relation with
the missions, Niyang “pointed out that the new
generation, especially the school children, are confounded whether to be a
Christian or remain Hindu as the teachers in their schools want to convert them
into Christianity and their family members decide against it”.
110Gérard Heuzé: Où va l’Inde moderne?, p.
140-141.
111G.S Ghurye: The Scheduled Tribes, p.60 ff.
112Several
bawdy Vedic hymns (e.g. the duet of sage Agastya and
his wife Lopamudra, who implores him to have
intercourse with her more often, Rigveda 1:179;
similarly RV 1:126:6-7, a love song fragment by Svanaya
and his wife Romasha; and RV 10:61:5-8; in Ralph
Griffith’s translation, Hymns of the Rigveda,
p.652-653, these passages are put in appendix and in Latin rather than English
translation because of their explicit language) and Vatsyayana’s
Kama Sutra are evidence enough that the
quasi-Victorian morality codes of modern middle-class Hindus diverge widely
from Vedic and even post-Vedic standards.
113S. Talageri in S.R. Goel (ed.): Time
for Stock-Taking, p.227-228.
114BJP: Election
Manifesto 1996, p.10. Likewise Balraj Madhok’s plea for smaller states: “Re-draw India’s
Political Map!”, India Worldwide, Dec. 1992.
115Nana Deshmukh’s work concerning indigenous forms of
“development” including such innovations as the “rural university” (see Manthan, April 1997) is a case in point. Deshmukh has said: “My ideal is not Raja Ram but Vanvasi Ram” (“Nanaji Deshmukh felicitated for national service”, Organiser,
116Swapan Dasgupta: “Green Terrorism”, Sunday,