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In India’s struggle to safeguard tribal
rights, the deliberations on tribal identities are still coloured by stereotypes.
The discourses pertaining to tribal populations and tribal identities invariably
fall upon the civilised-uncivilised, primitive-modern dichotomies.
Political representatives in the
country have not been able to effectively lobby for tribal rights and tribal voice
in policy decisions. The National Tribal Policy, which was formulated in 2008
and is still in the draft phase, bears testimony to this fact. The country has
not yet formulated a comprehensive national policy guaranteeing tribal rights.
Apart from the lack of a strong political will; the policy formulation
mechanism is also based on the model of assimilation of a ‘primitive’ culture
to a ‘mainstream’ culture, the root cause of which, perhaps, is that the
discourse governing policy decisions is a bureaucratic discourse prescribing
modes of modernisation of the primitive instead of being driven by the tribal
voice and demands, the Draft National Tribal Policy is a case in point.
Need for Tribal Welfare
The need to
safeguard tribal rights arises because; “as per the 2001 Census, the tribal
population was 8.43 crore or eight per cent of the total population, with over
90 per cent living in rural areas with poor social indicators...Infant
mortality, maternal mortality and neo-natal death figures are unacceptably high
among the STs because of lack of healthcare infrastructure [and] low literacy
rates.” Moreover almost 40% of those who have been permanently displaced from their native
habitats due to development projects are tribals.
As a result of these
displacements a large number of tribals have migrated to metropolises where while
some work as domestic and shop servants, rickshaw-pullers, even sex-workers, some
get pushed into petty, deviant and criminal activities. But the draft notices
that tribes are scattered “over all the States/Union Territories, except
Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, and the Union Territories of Pondicherry and Chandigarh.”
These three states and two union territories do not have the native communities
scheduled as tribes; however, they have a considerable population of migrant
tribals. While the draft acknowledges this phenomenon, it does not provide for acknowledging
this section of the tribal community, which has moved out of the conventional
markers of tribal identity.
Locating
Stereotypes
Clause 20 of the draft, which
deals with the Scheduling and De-scheduling of Tribes, refers to criteria
evolved by the Lokur Committee for determining which communities could be
classified as Scheduled Tribes which include: (i) an ensemble of primitive
traits, (ii) distinctive culture, (iii) geographical isolation, (iv) shyness of
contact with the community outside, and (v) backwardness. It follows by noting
that the criteria laid down by the Lokur Committee are hardly relevant today.
The draft notes that “for instance, very few tribes can today be said to
possess ‘primitive traits’. Other more accurate criteria need to be fixed.”
Again, while the draft
acknowledges the need for more accurate criteria, it does not provide for reformulating
the tribal identity as one that is dynamic and not static. Vinay Kumar
Srivastava in his analyses of the draft policy, by way of an analogy notes,
that many “of the traits that are found in the so-called primitive societies, may
also be found among the contemporary affluent and patriarchal societies.”
Moreover he notes that in “the context of definition, we need to use concepts
that have an operational value, i.e., they are given an empirical content, and
with their help, we are able to classify societies as objectively as possible.”
Conclusion
Policy interventions cannot be
effective unless the policy making decision is guided by the needs of the
stakeholders. For this Srivastava notes, realistic understanding of tribal
society lies in refraining from using value-loaded assumptions, such as the
ones the draft notes: tribal way of life is “woven around harmony with and
preservation of nature.”
Preserving a culture to
contribute to the ethnic diversity of the country traps the tribal community in
a frozen image. The dynamic reality of tribal living is missing in the draft,
the policy needs to incorporate tribal voice and more comprehensively
acknowledge the dynamism of tribal identity.
Ashwin Varghese
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