http://www.telegraphindia.com/1071211/asp/opinion/story_8654412.asp

The Telegraph, Calcutta. Tuesday, December 11, 2007

READING THE TEA LEAVES
- The understanding of tribal status must be rid of colonial errors

SANJIB BARUAH

After the mayhem in Guwahati around the adivasi rally of November 24, the 
government of Assam is reportedly considering legislation that would 
restrict the public display of bows and arrows and other 'traditional' 
weapons.

That a group that provided the muscle for the 19th-century capitalist 
transformation of Assam today finds the bow and arrow to be an attractive 
ethnic symbol is rather interesting. So is its preferred self-description 
as adivasis, in sharp contrast to the English term 'tribe' preferred by 
most other groups that have legal recognition as scheduled tribes in 
northeast India.

The adivasis of Assam trace their roots to Munda, Oraon, Santhal and other 
people of the Jharkhand region. They are descendants of indentured 
labourers brought to the tea plantations of Assam. Adivasi activists argue 
that since their ethnic kin in their places of origin are recognized as 
STs, they should have the same status in Assam.

According to some estimates, there are as many as 4 million adivasis in 
Assam - more than half of Assam's tea labour community. They constitute 
the majority of the tea labour community in Lower Assam, but other groups 
outnumber them in Upper Assam. If ST status is about whether a group 
deserves reservations in jobs and in educational institutions, the case 
for adivasis being recognized as STs is indisputable.

A study on the tea labour community by the North Eastern Social Research 
Centre found that 60 per cent of the girls and 35 per cent of the boys in 
the age group of 6 to 14 are out of school, and only 4 per cent study 
beyond class VII. Tea plantations are still the major sources of 
employment: half of them live near plantations and work as casual 
labourers.

Many adivasis were displaced during the Bodoland agitation because they or 
their forefathers had settled in reserved forest lands after giving their 
working lives to tea plantations. Since their villages were not legal 
settlements, the government did not facilitate their return to their homes 
even after the Bodo movement ended.

Political mobilization of a community in support of a demand for inclusion 
on a schedule that would entitle them to preferences is not surprising. 
Yet the demand of the tea workers' descendants for ST status, and the 
framework within which the debate is being conducted, draw attention to 
our continued reliance on a highly questionable stock of colonial 
knowledge about Indian society and culture. This should be a source of 
embarrassment, as well as cause for serious introspection.

The tribal affairs minister, P.R. Kyndiah, a politician from the Khasi 
community, recognized as a scheduled tribe, says without any sense of 
irony that ST status for adivasis would involve examining the case using 
the criteria of "tribal characteristics, including a primitive background 
and distinctive cultures and traditions".

Ethnic activists opposed to the adivasi claim cite with approval the 
statement of the home minister, Shivraj Patil, that the adivasis have 
"lost their tribal characteristics". They also argue that the adivasis are 
not "aborigines of Assam". Since STs of Assam are not treated as STs in 
other parts of the country and even Bodos are not recognized as STs in 
Karbi Anglong, says a leader of an indigenous tribal organization, migrant 
communities cannot be recognized as STs in Assam.

The argument points to a peculiarity of ST status in northeast India that 
goes back to British colonial thinking about race, caste and tribe in this 
region. However, whether migrants should be considered ST or not, given 
the contribution of the tea labour community in blood and in sweat to the 
formation of modern Assam, no other group has a better claim to full 
citizenship rights and compensatory justice than they do.

Colonial ethnography relied on racist notions of tribes having fixed 
habitats and ethnic traits that are almost biological and even 
inheritable. In northeast India, the so-called 'hill tribes' were thus all 
fixed to their supposed natural habitats. Therefore, it became necessary 
to distinguish between so-called pure and impure types to account for 
those that stray away from the assigned physical spaces, or do not conform 
to particular ethnic stereotypes.

The distinction between plains tribes and hill tribes can be traced to 
this difficulty of colonial ethnic classification. As the anthropologist, 
Matthew Rich, has shown, the relatively egalitarian mores and habits of 
many of the peoples of northeast India - for instance, the absence of 
caste in the hills - presented a 'problem' for colonial ethnographers.
Since India for them was a hierarchical and a 'caste ridden' civilization, 
the question was: were these people outside or inside India? There was no 
easy answer, since many of the ethnic kin of the people without caste also 
performed Hindu-like rituals just a short distance away.

The opposition between hills and plains became the solution to this 
conceptual 'problem'. It is this history that explains why a number of 
groups that today seek ST or sixth schedule status were distinguished 
sharply from 'hill tribes' in the colonial classificatory system. For 
instance, the Koch Rajbongshis were labelled caste Hindus and not a 
'tribe', and the Bodos were labelled a 'plains tribe'.

Tea workers posed a classificatory problem for the census as early as in 
1891. The "aboriginal tribes of central India" were explicitly excluded 
from the "forest and hill tribes" in the census of Assam, and instead were 
classified simply as labourers.

Colonial knowledge continues to shape categories of Indian census. Thus of 
the 23 STs in Assam, 14 are hill tribes and 9 are plains tribes. Since the 
census counts tribes only in their supposed natural habitats, it produces 
the absurdity of the number of people classified as plains tribals being 
zero in the hills, and those classified as hill tribals being zero in the 
plains. This is the source of the complaint of Bodo activists that Bodos 
are not a scheduled tribe in Karbi Anglong, which is a hill district. 
Thus, if one goes by the Indian census, the number of hill tribals living 
even in metropolitan Guwahati is zero.

The discourse surrounding the adivasi claim to ST status underscores a 
major structural dilemma for our practice of citizenship. The effect of 
making indigenousness the test for rights, says the African intellectual, 
Mahmood Mamdani, in another context, is that the state penalizes those 
that the commodity economy dynamizes.

Seen through the prism of the global political economy, the adivasis of 
Assam are part of the same 19th-century migration that took Indian 
labourers to plantations in various parts of the British Empire, such as 
Fiji, Guyana, Mauritius or South Africa.

We now celebrate the Indian diaspora. The Pravasi Bharatiya Divas honours 
descendants of those migrants to far-away shores, some of whom rose to 
become presidents and prime ministers of their countries. But the 
descendants of those who remained within India's borders are reduced to 
defending their ordinary citizenship rights, and making claims to 
compensatory justice, with a borrowed idiom of remembered tribal-ness.

It is time to rethink our image of northeast India as remote and exotic, 
and recognize that the region was incorporated into the global capitalist 
economy earlier and more solidly than many parts of the Indian heartland. 
The basis for making claims to rights and entitlements in such a region 
must be common residence and a vision of a common future, and not only a 
real or imagined shared past.

The genocide in Rwanda was ultimately the product of the Hutu and Tutsi 
being constructed as native and outsider, thanks to the legacy of colonial 
knowledge embedded in African political institutions. This should serve as 
a warning against trying to manage conflicts in northeast India by simply 
tinkering with institutions such as the sixth schedule and ST status that 
have ample traces of colonial knowledge built into them.

The author is at the Centre for Policy Research, New Delhi and the Indian 
Institute of Technology, Guwahati.


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