*Eulogy for the Unsung: The Death of Bo and Boa Sr.

February 12, 2010 by Vinay Lal<http://vinaylal.wordpress.com/author/vinaylal/>

http://vinaylal.wordpress.com/2010/02/12/eulogy-for-the-unsung-the-death-of-bo-and-boa-sr/

  The Great Andamanese relaxing by the water, 1920.

Great Andamanese Couple, 1876

Great Andamanese children & Maurice Portman, 1874

An indescribable feeling of sadness crept over me when I read some days ago
of the passing away of Boa Sr., the last known speaker of Bo (also known as
Aka-Bo and Ba), one of ten languages belonging to the Great Andamanese
group.  Though Boa Sr. had learnt Hindi and was able to converse with the
outside world, over the last three decades she remained Bo’s sole speaker.
What great many thoughts could she not convey to others?  How must she have
felt to know that she was the only surviving speaker of a language and the
link to a world that only she could apprehend?  How must it feel to know a
language and yet not be able to communicate in it with anyone else?

In an earlier time, Boa Sr. would have been rendered into a museum piece.
Her death brought to mind the fate of Truganini, the last of the Tasmanian
Aboriginals.  The few thousand Tasmanian aboriginals encountered by European
colonizers had, through genocide, disease, and murderous neglect, been
reduced to 47 women, men, and children by 1847, and for the last three
years, before her death in 1876, Truganini led a solitary existence in
Hocart as the last Tasmanian aboriginal.  Shortly thereafter, her skeleton
would be exhibited for the benefit of the curious-minded and the
scientific-minded alike.  Those were the indignities to which people such as
her, and the Andamanese, have been subjected since they came into contact
with what is called ‘civilization’.  In the barbarous language of the day,
occasionally still encountered when, for example, the Americans come into
contact with ‘unruly’ tribesmen in Afghanistan, the unquestionable duty of
the Europeans was to *pacify* the wild islanders.

The Andamans have long been the haunt of anthropologists and criminologists.
In the mid-19th century, the British established a penal colony at Port
Blair, reserving the infamous ‘circular jail’, also studied by those who are
entranced with the idea of Jeremy Bentham’s panopticon, for political
prisoners transported for life.  A man sent across the *kaala paani
*[literally,
‘the black waters’], so the British figured, was as good as dead, and not
merely because no “convict” was expected to return alive to civilization.
Before the convict entered into what we might call ‘social death’, he was
supposed to have suffered what we might understand as ‘psychic death’ since
the passage across ‘the black waters’ was deemed to have led the person to
lose caste.  That, in the British view, was horrible enough a suffering for
a caste Hindu.  Later in the 19th century, as anthropometry and craniology,
among many of the other supposed sciences gifted by the West to the rest,
became the rage among European and American scientists, anthropologists,
criminologists, and psychologists, the British began to arrive in the
Andamans with rulers and other measuring instruments.  The intent was to
ascertain where the Great Andamanese belonged in the ‘scale of
civilization’, a determination that apparently could be made by measuring
the distance from the navel to the nose, from the nose to the eyebrow, and
so on.  No wonder idiocy is known by many names!  The only firm lesson to be
learnt from all this appears to be that if one wants to lead a European
somewhere, lead him by the nose.

The twin processes of pacification and assimilation had the unsurprising
consequence of decimating the population of the Andamanese and other tribes
on the Andaman islands.  Some tribes were rendered extinct – the Aka-Kol in
1921, the Oko-Juwoi and the Aka-Bea by 1931.  In 1858, when the Great
Andamanese first came into contact with the British, they numbered around
5,000 people.   Attempts with which we are familiar from the long history of
colonialism to ‘civilize’ them were, of course, nothing but another name for
genocide.  In one experiment, children born between 1864 and 1870 were
placed in what came to be called ‘Andaman Homes’, but none of the 150
children lived beyond the age of two.  Nevertheless, the colonial
administrator Maurice Portman gave it as his opinion that ‘Under any
circumstances the Homes should certainly be maintained until the whole of
the Andaman Tribes are friendly’ [quoted in Madhusree Mukherjee, *The Land
of Naked People* (Boston:  Houghton Mifflin, 2003), 66].  One way to ensure
that people are friendly, which is to say not hostile, is to eliminate
them.  In 1901, the Census still recorded 600 Great Andamanese, but by 1951
their numbers had been reduced to 23.  The Sentinelese, who have
miraculously evaded all attempts at contact, had been reduced to 10 in
number by 1951. Today, according to the Indian linguist Anvita Abbi, who
came to have a close association with Boa Sr. over the last decade and whose
work in the Andamans is reflected in the “Vanishing Voices of the Great
Andamanese” (VOGA) project <http://www.andamanese.net/about.htm>, there are
about 50 Great Andamanese still alive.

The Great Andamanese, we are told in this obituary of Boa Sr.
published in *Survival
International* <http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/5509>, “are
thought to have lived in the Andaman Islands for as much as 65,000 years,
making them the descendants of one of the oldest human cultures on Earth.”
If it were true, one should marvel at this fact – and consider the
possibility that, in this age of dazzling technology, that unbroken link may
be snapped before our own eyes.  Either way, the question of just who the
Andamanese are, and what they represent for the history of humankind, is not
easily resolved.  For even the most well-intentioned linguists and
anthropologists, the Great Andamanese – and the other three main groups on
the islands, namely the Jarawa, Onge, and Sentinelese – still represent
principally a crucial picture of the puzzle about the origins of human
societies, language groups, the migrations of people and their languages,
and so on.  The quest to know everything, manifested in
Enlightenment-inspired projects to create vast compendiums of knowledge,
remains undiminished, even if we are committed to multiculturalism and
diversity and are more cognizant of the genocidal policies that led to the
extermination of entire tribes and their cultures.  How we can best be
committed to such ecological survival of plurality without instrumentalizing
humans, animals, or nature is an ethical question that may determine the
course of the future.

Posted in South Asian
Politics<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/south-asian-politics/>,
The Politics of
Culture<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/the-politics-of-culture/>| Tagged
19th
century anthropology<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/19th-century-anthropology/>,
Aka-Bo <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/aka-bo/>, Andaman
Homes<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/andaman-homes/>,
Andamanese <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/andamanese/>,
Andamans<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/andamans/>,
anthropometry <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/anthropometry/>,
Bo<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/bo/>,
Boa Sr. <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/boa-sr/>, ecological survival of
plurality <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/ecological-survival-of-plurality/>,
Great
Andamanese <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/great-andamanese/>,
Jarawa<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/jarawa/>,
kaala paani <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/kaala-paani/>, linguistic
survival<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/linguistic-survival/>,
Maurice Portman <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/maurice-portman/>,
Onge<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/onge/>,
pacification <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/pacification/>,
panopticon<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/panopticon/>,
penal policy <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/penal-policy/>, Professor Anvita
Abbi <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/professor-anvita-abbi/>, psychic
death<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/psychic-death/>,
Sentinelese <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/sentinelese/>, social
death<http://en.wordpress.com/tag/social-death/>,
Tasmanian Aboriginals <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/tasmanian-aboriginals/>,
Truganini <http://en.wordpress.com/tag/truganini/> | No Comments Yet

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