The other Santiniketan~II
It is well-known that Rabindranath Tagore harboured a special affection for the 
Santhals in the villages around Santiniketan. He saw in their life a special 
beauty. They combine the tilling of the earth as farmers with poetry, songs and 
dance. Through this blending of the practical work for food and livelihood with 
the fulfillment of one’s artistic needs, life receives a fullness which it 
otherwise would lack. The farmer’s life, by itself, is monotonous. But when it 
is mirrored, symbolised, and interpreted through poetry and dance, farming 
becomes a primeval activity of archetypal importance.
Do we not see here in action Rabindranath’s concept of raising everyday life on 
to a higher, more meaningful level through the expressions of beauty? Hence, I 
believe, his special love of Santhals. He also felt a deep compassion for them 
on account of their poverty and the repression they suffer. Years ago, I 
translated Rabindranath’s poem Saoñtal Meye in which he describes the hard 
labour young Santhal girls have to perform working on construction sites and in 
brick kilns, sacrificing the flower of their youth and beauty for a paltry 
daily wage.

Different world

When I arrived in Santiniketan in 1980 and began to visit Santhal villages 
around, entering them was like stepping into an entirely different world. The 
name of Rabindranath Tagore was known only to a very few. Nobody from the 
villages went to attend festivals in Santiniketan. The Santhal farmers walked 
to Bolpur to buy from the bazaar, and, perhaps, to visit the cinema. Otherwise, 
Santhals kept to their villages. Teachers from neighbouring Hindu villages told 
me then that not so long ago Santhal men only wore a panchi, an embroidered 
waist cloth reaching to their knees. When they saw an outsider from 
neighbouring villages, they timidly fled the road and their courtyards to 
retreat into their huts.
An inestimable change has taken place. True, the levels of the living standard 
in Santiniketan and the Santhal villages are still sadly disparate. True, the 
Santiniketan community still very much lives in splendid isolation from its 
rural surroundings. But, the level of education in the villages all around has 
noticeably improved. The institutions of Visva-Bharati have indeed contributed 
considerably to this. Santiniketan has become probably the largest centre for 
educated Santhals in West-Bengal. An estimated fifty Santhals with university 
education live in and around Santiniketan. Many have become teachers, several 
even of Visva-Bharati, others are social workers. Most of them are ex-students 
of Visva-Bharati or Bolpur College. The majority hail from villages in the 
vicinity of Santinketan, but Santhals from Jharkhand, Bihar and Orissa have 
also been attracted to Visva-Bharati. One advantage for Santhal students from 
far-flung villages
 is that Visva-Bharati offers a continuous education from primary level up to 
graduation and beyond. They can stay in hostels without the insecurities of 
having to change their place of study.
In the beginning of this development, say, fifteen years ago, the first 
Santhals students who sought admission, had to fight to enter via the quota 
system for tribal students. Among them were Boro Baski and Gokul Hansda who 
both became students of the Social Work Department in Sriniketan. They with 
others started an informal forum for Santhal students meant to facilitate the 
entry of new Santhal students and provide some orientation to new entries. I 
imagine it is not easy for these students to live outside their villages which 
have a strong community-based life. So this forum can provide them with a 
semblance of community living and render practical help as well.
Four years ago, the Santhals of Santiniketan became more tightly organised. A 
group, called “Kulhidhuri”, was established. It tries to preserve and revive 
traditional Santhal culture. It is typical that members of a group who are 
already alienated, or are threatened to become alienated, from their culture, 
are anxious to preserve it. “Kulhidhuri” collects and sings traditional 
Santhal songs at Santhal festivals throughout West Bengal, Jharkhand and Bihar.
It wishes to re-establish these songs as part of the informal education of 
village boys and girls. By doing so, they oppose the unfortunate trend 
perceivable in most Santhal villages, viz. to replace Santhal songs by Hindi 
film music and pop songs. They try to weaken the influence of video shows 
rampant in Santhal villages which threaten to tear apart the very fabric of 
these village communities.
However, “Kulhidhuri”, inspired and led most of the time by Gokul Hansda, is 
not averse to modernising Santhal songs by including contemporary themes and 
more rhythmic melodies. Here the young, gifted singer Rathin Kisku has already 
made a name for himself. Members of the same group also play theatre and have 
won state-level prizes with their productions which highlight the evils 
threatening society such as drinking and sorcery.
It is important that students who leave their villages to seek a modern 
education, do not cut their village roots but find avenues to serve their 
community. Not so long ago, Santhals who received a modern Bengali education 
felt an aversion to their own culture which to them seemed to lack 
sophistication. I have met educated boys who in fact denied that they were 
Santhals although their accent gave them away. Today, nobody would think of 
doing that. A certain self-assurance and even cultural pride have gained 
ground..
While Santhals have moved into Santiniketan, Santiniketan, in spite of 
Rabindranath’s affection for Santhals, has not yet dared to move into 
Santhal culture. About 12 years ago, when I was the “priest” at the Christmas 
Service in the Santiniketan temple, I saw to it that several Christian 
Santhal hymns were sung by my Christian and non-Christian Santhal friends 
during the service. It was the first time this happened ~ and I think the last 
time. In those years, boys and girls of Ghosaldanga and Bishnubati informally 
performed their Santhal dances during the Basanta Utsab. This too was something 
unheard of. By now, it has caught on, and several Santhal groups fuse with the 
many visitors to celebrate the arrival of spring.

Songs & dances

But why, I ask, have Santhal songs and dances not yet become part of the 
official programme performed on stage? When will the university begin to become 
aware of the many wonderful Santhal festivals celebrated in the villages and 
provide a space for them within its ashram confines?
Much can and should be accomplished by the Santhal Department of Visva-Bharati 
which, permit me to say, was in a dormant state for long and is about to become 
nascent. Some is already being done by Barka Soren, retired teacher of 
Santhali, and his wife Manjushree through their Binapani Ashram near 
Sriniketan where they educate Santhal and non-Santhal children.
What must be avoided at all cost is the commercialisation of Santhal culture. 
Santhal dance may look exotic to city folks. For many a visit to 
Santiniketan is incomplete without seeing a Santhal dance performance. As a 
result, certain hotels have linked up with clever Santhal men of nearby 
villages who bring a group of village women for a performance on the hotel 
lawn. In such an environment, these dances can neither be understood nor 
appreciated because they lack their particular atmosphere and dignity. This is 
mostly sheer financial and cultural exploitation and therefore offends the pure 
traditions of Santiniketan. (Concluded)
Martin Kämpchen
http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=3&theme=&usrsess=1&id=250792


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