Title: The Issue of Tribal Rights:
1The Issue of Tribal Rights
- Colonial Policy towards Pastoral Nomads and
Adivasi Groups
2Areas Inhabited by Tribal Groups, c. 19th c
Afghan, Gujjar Lohani tribes
santals
Gonds
Gujjars Bhattis
Bhils
Bedars
3The use of Tribal in Colonial Discourse
- Used to differentiate groups that in the govts
observation did not follow Hindu caste rules - Covered a range of un-related groups pastoral
nomads, settled Afghans, forest dwellers - A range of values are ascribed to each of these
groupssome mutually contradictory
4Values/Stereotypes associated with Tribal
groups in Colonial sources
- Completely different and cut off from caste
societytheir mobility and lifestyle are very
different - Placed on an imagined historical/social scale of
difference as aboriginal barbaric - In early 19th century seen as troublemakersraider
s and bandits, some labeled as belonging to
criminal castes and tribes - By mid-19th century new ideas emergeinfluenced
by notion of noble savage - Regardless, these groups are seen by colonial
officials as a problem to be solved
5What generates this view?
- Prejudices associated with the mobility of these
groupsideas about a historical scale of
civilization - Their mobility is a threat to colonial ideas of
law and order, sealing of borderlands - Racial prejudice plays a role
- Protestant/evengelical notions of productivity
and utilitarianism view tribal modes of
production as primitive and wasteful - Their territories are in land that now has value
- Nomads and forest dwellers are hard to tax
6Traders on Indo-Tibetan border, 19th c
7Historical scale of Civilization
- The idea created by whig view of history that
historical development is a constant process
towards human betterment - In this view, human civilization moves from
primitive activity such as hunting and gathering
to settled agriculture to industrialized
production - Societies that do not exhibit this forward trend
are backward - Does not incorporate notion of ecological
specialization - Stress their use of land, religious beliefs,
acquisition of wealth as a measure of civilization
8Problem of Mobility for Colonial Government
- In the northwest Afghan, Lohani and other groups
cross borders that are considered unsecure and
dangerous - Concerns about spying, issue of Central Asian
rivalry with Afghanistan, later w/ Russia - In Central and western India tribal groups
accused of raidingseen as congenital criminals - Mobile groups are hard to tax
- Mobility of slash and burn agriculture in
Central and Northeastern India seen as wasteful
loss of timber
9Racial Prejudice
- By 19th century a scientific discourse of race is
being created - Tribal groups are placed at the bottom of the
new hierarchy of European/Asians - New disciplines such as Anthropology use
so-called scientific methods to support these
claims - New literature, live exhibitions of such groups
popularize these theories
10Portrain from Northeast, c. 1880
11Ideas of Productivity
- Moral values ascribed to hard work such as
farming and factory labor, versus idle
occupations such as hunting - Stereotype of lazy tribals, emphasis in
literature about their leisure activitiesdances,
drinking - More value placed on getting maximum output from
landlower extraction of resources by tribal
groups seen as a problem - Activities such as timber, mining, industrial
farming come in conflict with tribes established
hunting and pastoral grounds
12Tribal Rebellions in North east
Birsa Munda (L), Leader of a 19th C.
rebellion, Land cleared for tea plantaion (above)
13The Noble Savage
- Romanticized view of Tribal groups such as
Bhils popularized in late 19th century - Their hunting skills and sportsmanship admired
- Seen as more manly and warrior like than
peasant (Martial races theory) - New policies created to draft groups such as
Afghans and Bhils into colonial Army - Attitude is still paternalistic, seen as brave,
but child-likei.e need colonial supervision
14Baluchis, changing colonial views
15Zones of conflict
Irrigation projects Extension of farming
Tea Plantations
Timber
Mining
Timber Industry Tea/Coffee Plantations
16Influence of Colonial Attitudes on Elite Indian
views
- Earlier history of interaction with these groups
is modified, only negative aspects are remembered - New religious reform movements attempt to
reclaim tribal groupsconcerns about missionary
activities by Christian groups - Values of new Nationalist groups and
Hindu/Islamic reformers on sobriety, hard works,
mainstream religious valuen out of sync with
belief systems of nomadic and Adivasi groups - Growing population pressure brings settled Indian
society into greater conflict with these groups
17Reminder Student Led Discusion
- Need to post question sheets week before class
presentation - i.e. need to meet with me before that, in case
you have questions - Before meeting
- Read texts, create open-ended questions that will
spur discussion and analysis - Identify what class needs to know about subject
matter or author to answer those questions - Dont forget to add references to quest. Sheet
(avoid websites, unless academic)