Saturday, September 26, 2009

Nagaland's Hornbill Festival

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n order to facilitate tourists to have a glimpse of all the Naga festivals at one time and one place, the Government of Nagaland has evolved a festival called Hornbill Festival, which is celebrated at Kohima, the capital town of Nagaland, since 2000. The Hornbill Festival celebrated between the 1st & 5th of December every year, for a full week. The Hornbill Festival of Nagaland is aimed at reviving and sustaining the richness of the Naga heritage and traditions. Named after the hornbill, a bird that shows up in the folklore of most of the state's tribes, the seven-day festival brings them all together in one giant color-splashed hodgepodge of dances, performances, crafts, parades, games, sports, food fairs and religious ceremonies. The festival exposes the Naga people to their mainland counterparts and reinforces Nagaland's identity as a distinct state in India's federal union.

It has to be mentioned here that though the Hornbill is the state bird of Nagaland, paradoxically, there are hardly any to be seen these days, due to aggressive hunting. The Hornbill can be seen more now in neighboring Assam, where it is a protected species. A bird enthusiast on a visit to Nagaland recently came back disappointed, as there were no birds to be seen apart from the odd crow!

The Hornbill festival is held annually at the Cultural Village constructed permanently for the festival. Most of the year, the model village is relatively deserted except for a few curious visitors and tourists, who browse through the cluster of traditional houses that reflect the architectural styles of the different regions of the state. During the Hornbill festival, however, the place transforms into a bustling carnival. The organizers display good marketing skills similar to those of tourist spots around the world by strategically placing souvenir and handicraft stalls at the entrance and exits of the complex. Directly in front of the shopping complex there is a small arena where the main events are held. There is also a small ground adjoining it on the right, where Naga's try their hands at games of skill. There are a surprising number of gambling stalls, which are crowded with those trying to place a wager on the games.

Once the festival starts, however, one is drawn almost hypnotically to the source of throbbing drums from within the tribal huts. Here there are young boys and girls beat in unison on the hulls of canoes with masks, weapons, pots, pans and other everyday items of a traditional village home. There are also other thatched huts; typical Naga boy's dormitories (morungs) of each tribe are constructed in their respective tribal architectural designs to simulate a real village scene. The morungs are places where young boys learn to socialize and live in a community, where survival skills are taught against the backdrop of head-hunting and the constant fear of wild animals and the enemy. It is a sort of a school where they learn ideals like honesty, bravery as well as arts and crafts like tool-making, carpentry and handicraft making. Here they are also passed down the traditions of their people, their stories, myths and legends. In these modern-day Morungs, the tribes depict their original tribal lifestyles as accurately as possible. Although they don't have the original totem poles or carvings, the ceremony still serves to give an authentic idea of the traditions of the tribes. The sight of tribal dancers, strolling around the village after their performances, adds a touch of authenticity to the setting.

In the arena, tribal dances are numerous, depicting the culture of the many Naga tribes. It is the dances that capture the spirit and essence of the Hornbill festival - a bubbling cauldron filled with Naga heritage and culture, topped off with a liberal helping of good natured fun and laughter. Over the five days, this annual festival showcases the rich diversity of the proud tribes that inhabit this hilly terrain. Handsome young men and dewy-faced young girls dress in their traditional costumes, with necklaces made of animal fangs, body paint and menacing shields set the arena alight with their vivid song and dance performances, with traditional drums throbbing in the background. It is an absolute parade of dance, from the war dances with their whooping chants, hunting party dances, as well as those of depicting the simple tasks of tilling the fields and of the harvest: the initiation of the young into adulthood, and wedding dances.

These are followed by a traditional Naga wrestling competitions; where sturdy, well-built men with firm muscles grip their opponents by the waist band, not unlike the Sumo style, and struggle to flip them over. The other games played in the arena include some comical acts, like a competition where the contestants would attempt to feed each other, while being blindfolded. The results, naturally, are hilarious, and games like this usually have the entire audience in splits.

All the fun and games often lead to a good appetite, which is when one can go to the numerous food stalls around the complex. The food stalls of the festival are worth a visit, with the aromas from the smoky wood-fired kitchens all over the Village getting the digestive juices flowing! Naga's have eating habits that are very exotic to most: they supposedly eat anything - dogs, monkeys, frogs.they are also known to snack on bamboo worms, larvae, snails, practically anything that might have a name and be classified as an animal or insect! (Therefore the lack of wildlife!!) If one is not a meat-lover (vegetarianism is unheard of in Nagaland!) one might want to play it safe and stick to the more mainstream boiled vegetables in spicy sauces, plain rice and various local adaptations of the Indian "dal" or lentil soup. The Naga cuisine includes a lot of chilies, so be sure to wash your meal down with the lightly alcoholic rice beer that is available in plenty during the festival. Nagaland is a dry state (the commercial sale of alcohol is prohibited), so one wonders how rice beer is sold during the festival!!

Once dusk sets on the last day, the festival shifts into a more modern gear, as teenagers spill off the stands into the center of the arena to witness at close range the break dance competition! Psychedelic disco lights flash over the ground and young boys and girls dance till the wee hours. Anyone is welcome to join in and good humor prevails all round. Witness the best of the Nagas at the Hornbill Festival - with their free spirits, ancient and enduring history, tempered with the gentleness of their earthy innocence.

Mizos – The Lost Tribe of Israel in North East India

By - Karen Lawlor - Tariang
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izoram must be among the last places on earth where you’d think there was a sizable Jewish population. Think again. The Jews of this remote region in India believe they are descendants of a legendary lost tribe of Israel that, according to the Old Testament, disappeared almost 3,000 years ago. For many among thousands of those living in Mizoram and Manipur, Israel is the Promised Land. According to an Israeli association formerly called Amishav — "My people return" — there are 1 million to 2 million Bnei Menashes living in the hilly regions of Burma and northeast India.

Let’s begin by explaining some of the Bible, as well as a small history lesson of the Mizo people. In Genesis, God promised Abraham that his descendants would become "a great nation," but the line begins with Jacob, Abraham's grandson. Jacob's favorite son, Joseph, does not have a tribe bearing his name. Instead, Joseph's two sons, Ephraim and Manasseh, are blessed by Jacob as his own and each fathers a separate "tribe". The Menashes are descendants of Menasseh.

After an Assyrian invasion circa 722 B.C., Jewish tradition says 10 tribes from the northern part of the kingdom of Israel were enslaved in Assyria. Later the tribes fled Assyria and wandered through Afghanistan, Tibet and China. About 100 A.D. one group moved south from China and settled around northeast India and Burma. These Chin-Mizo-Kuki people, who speak Tibeto-Burmese dialects and resemble Mongols in appearance, are believed to be the Bnei Menashes. According to the local folklore, the Mizos' Jewish connection goes back more than 1,000 years to a remote cave in China where the scattered remnants of the lost Jewish tribe of Menashe were holed up. They called themselves Chhinlung, after the cave, and over the years they made their way south through Thailand, settling for good in the hill tracts of Mizoram and Manipur.

Coming back to the present day, in 1952, a local headman plunges into a trance, has a vision of sorts, and announces that God has told him that the Mizos are the lost tribe. A group of believers then set off for the Promised Land, under the notion that it might just lie around the corner. Some actually reach as far as Assam and Nagaland, but no one quite makes it to Israel. This unproductive attempt inspired one of the relatives of one of the travellers to investigate this entire claim.

This relative, Zaithanchhungi, a former teacher, went to Israel in 1983. There she met Eliyahu Avichayil, an Orthodox rabbi whose Amishav organization searches the world for descendants of the lost tribes. He showed immediate interest in her story, saying Jews had been scattered as far as China. He urged her to return to India to catalogue Mizo history. She came up with a list of perceptible similarities, including the construction of altars, the sacrifice of animals, funeral customs, marriage and divorce dealings, a belief in an all-powerful deity and the symbolic presence of the number seven in many festivities. There were also apparently other links in things like medical instruments and household practices. According Shavei Israel, India has more than a million people who are ethnically Bnei Menashes. Since they lived for centuries in northeast India, mingling with local people, many of their Jewish traditions became diluted. And after Welsh missionaries arrived in the region in 1894, nearly all Indian Bnei Menashes converted from their animistic beliefs to Christianity. More recently, DNA studies at the Central Forensic Institute in Calcutta conclude that while the tribe's males show no links to Israel, the females share a family relationship to the genetic profile of Middle Eastern people. The genetic disparity between the sexes might be explained by the marriage of a woman who came from the Middle East to a man of Indian ancestry. Additional genetic studies on the Indian tribes are ongoing at the University of Arizona and the Technion Institute in Haifa, Israel.

The Jews in Mizoram have been trying to “return” to Israel for the past 50 years. After Zaithanchhungi’s initiatives, there were a spate of actual conversions, and over 400 men and women made the journey, and have been settled in Israel – mainly in the occupied territories. Zaithanchhungi, who was skeptical about Mizos belonging to Israel when she began her research, claimed she found that Mizo "prophets" like Chala of Buallawn village had declared way back in 1950 that Mizos were the lost tribes of Israel, the descendants of Menashe. It took them twenty five years before the Israeli government would acknowledge their claims of being one of the lost ten tribes of Israel. After being recognized, they were allowed to migrate to Israel and settle. In order to migrate they need to be accepted as Jewish and have to undergo a conversion ritual, a requirement fulfilled by visiting Rabbis. Which then brings up the question – If they were Jewish to begin with, why the need for conversion?

Israel does not acknowledge the Mizos as Jews, though the Interior Ministry said that 100 Mizo tribesmen would be allowed annually to enter the country as tourists. Is they were practitioners of the Jewish faith, they would be allowed to become immigrants under the Law of Return, which grants citizenship to all Jews. According to embassy statistics, over 2,000 Mizos have applied for Israeli visas over the last five years. An average of 30-50 Mizos actually make the trip each year. But in 2003, when the Interior Ministry decided to end the Bnei Menashe aliyah ("right of return" to Israel), Shavei Israel activists started intense lobbying through the chief rabbinate to get the Indian group accepted by Israel as one of the lost tribes. They succeeded when the March statement came from the chief rabbinate.

The topic has been an issue of debate for many years, and has not unexpectedly, created political complications. The mass conversions to Judaism, initiated by the Shavei Israel activists have been frowned upon by both the majority Christian population of Mizoram, as well as some sections of the Indian and Israeli Governments. Today, next to Aizawl’s many churches, lie a sizable number of Synagogues. Community centers have been established by the Shavei Israel to tech the Bnei Meneshe Jewish Tradition and Modern Hebrew.

A trip to the state capital, Aizawl, will leave one plainly confused as to whether they are in Tel Aviv or Mizoram – where shops carry names like Israel Stores and Zion Tailors. One hillside locality is called Bethlehem, another Salem. The names seem to have been plucked right out both the New and the Old Testaments, clearly reflecting the confusion of the Mizo society over their religious identity.

‘Naga society running on one wheel’

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imapur | September 25 : “Naga society is running on one wheel,” chairperson of the Nagaland State Women Commission, Sano Vamuzo, said while addressing a seminar on women’s rights and issues in Dimapur today. Calling Naga women the ‘missing piece’, the chairperson opined that in the patriarchal Naga society, women are often not seen in the picture. This has resulted in women not being able to contribute to the God-given potentials and capacities in building the society, Vamuzo said.
Vamuzo, who was accompanied by NSWC member, Abeni TCK, emphasised the need for Naga women to come out of their homes and contribute more to society. She said Naga women have greater challenges in their homes and society more than ever before, pointing out that “Nagas are losing their values and have become an unprincipled and undisciplined society leading to many social problems”. Vamuzo also reminded that, perhaps, Naga society is lagging behind as a result of disorganisation.
The chairperson advocated on the various rights women enjoy under the Constitution and urged women to claim their rights. “It is the right of every woman to be given equal access to opportunities as a man in all walks of life,” she said. Vamuzo further urged greater economic empowerment of women through various government schemes and assistance from non-governmental organisations and spoke highly of self-help groups.
Explaining that empowering women is all about giving space, Vamuzo expressed happiness that many Naga women are now coming forward in every field. She said women can no longer be ignored or sidelined, and that a ‘silent revolution’ is taking place. However, shedding light on the reservation for women in decision-making bodies, Vamuzo lamented that it is still not realised and hoped for its speedy implementation through the efforts of women in the state at all levels.
The programme also heard Alongla Aier, lecturer at Oriental Theological Seminary, speak on the Biblical perspective of women. Aier encouraged women to recognise their God-given potentials and keep no doubt that they are equal in the eyes of God. From a Christian perspective, Aier said that men and women are of one essence and equal in value and dignity before God. “There is enough evidence in the Bible that women have played great roles in society and church,” Aier said and encouraged women to come to the forefront. She later held an interactive session with the participants.
The Christian women awareness programme was organised at the Ao Baptist Church Fellowship by the Dimapur Baptist Women Union. Women from different churches and denominations participated in the programme.

Women listen to a discourse on women’s rights and issues at an awareness programme for Christian women at the Ao Baptist Church Fellowship in Dimapur on Friday.

Naga girl beaten, molested by miscreants in Delhi; culprits threaten to drive out Manipuris

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espite assurances by the Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dixit that northeast students would be protected in her state… the pass of events do not echo the CM’s promises… It has once again brought out the racial discrimination on the northeast students. Once again a girl from Manipur had to face the wrath of Delhi miscreants and landowners. According to the North East Support Centre & Helpline, the girl was beaten up and molested by neighbours of her Murnika, New Delhi rented house last evening. The police are yet to take action against the culprits. The racial discrimination against northeast people continues in the national capital Delhi… the latest incident involving a Naga girl from Manipur staying in a rented house at Murnika. She was allegedly beaten up badly by her landlady’s son over a trifle matter. According to the victim and her elder sister, apart from the landlady, her son and husband, even neighbours joined the miscreants to beat up the girl and molest her. Her clothes were also torn. They also told NETV that the miscreants threatened to chase all Manipuris out of Murnika. Northeast Support Centre and Helpline immediately reported the matter to the police and to the media in the northeast. Talking to NETV in Delhi, the spokesperson of the organization M. Madhu Chandra said that the victim was rushed to the hospital and the matter reported the police. Meanwhile, the police only tried to colour the incident as ordinary landlord-tenant matter. When the matter was reported to the Vasant Kunj police station, they were told that the other party had also countered their complaint with the allegation of rape attempt by the younger brother of the victim. With such incidents of harassments and racial discrimination being reported from time to time, the students are having to go through a harrowing time. Their dream of better and advanced education is only turning into a nightmare in Delhi.

NDFB delegation leaves for Delhi; talks with Centre on Wednesday

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fter four years of will-they-won’t-they, the Centre is all set to talk to the National Democratic Front of Bodoland cadres on Wednesday. A ten member delegation of the Bodo rebel outfit now in ceasefire has left New Delhi on Tuesday for the political dialogue. It’s a long spell of four years since that National Democratic Front of Bodoland struck a ceasefire deal with the Centre. Since then for the first time, the Bodo rebel outfit in ceasefire on Monday received an invitation from the Union home ministry for a round of dialogue on Wednesday. A ten member delegation of the outfit led by general secretary B Samkhour and publicity secretary S Sanjarang has already left for New Delhi on Tuesday. Talking to the reporters at the Gopinath Bodoloi International Airport before leaving for the national capital publicity secretary Sanjaang said they would talk to the top ranked union home ministry officers on the basis of their charter of demands they submitted before the Centre on May 30 where they demanded land for the indigenous people. The top NDFB rebel refused to divulge anything in detail as they were asked about their demand for a satellite state. It may recalled that on June 1, 2005, the pro-truce group announced ceasefire with the government and on May 30, 2008 they submitted before the Centre their charter of demands. The Centre invited the rebel outfit for talk after the Union home minister P Chidambaram announced that the UPA government would chalk out a set of strategies within a period of 100 days to solve the north east insurgency problem. Somkhour further called the Ranjan Daimary faction a fake rebel outfit. However, it remains to be seen how long will this round of dialogue be able to ensure peace in Assam. Will this initiative be leading to the path of peace?

Dark side of holiness Durga Puja celebrations

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his is dark side of holiness Durga Puja celebrations. Immersion of over 500 Durga idols in the next week is likely to increase pollution level of Brahmaputra threatening the existence of water organisms including rare species of river fish and aquatic plants. Holiest holidays can be marred by human foolishness. This time Brahmaputra is set for another toxic invasion with 500 clay idols of the goddess Durga and her pantheon are likely to be immersed in its murky waters in the next week. Notably, the idol makers use some toxic paints in idols. Such paints contain large amount of ingredients like cadmium, chromium, lead and zeldal nitrogen. Moreover, seven different categories of wastes like paints, plaster of paris, flowers, bamboos and other beautification materials and polythene and plastics will go into the already polluted water. These materials are dangerous for any living being. The capital city saw over 500 idols being immersed along with the decorative materials after the popular four- day Durga puja festival that ended on Monday. According to a study of Assam Pollution control Board APCB, such toxic materials have been found in the Brahmaputra due to immersion of the idols in last several years. The river water pollution affects water organism and aquatic plants. It also causes various diseases as 90 per cent of the city people have to depend on Brahmaputra water. But there is no specific guidelines from the administration to for protection of rive organism and aquatic plants. Over the years, the APCB warned all DCs across the state on the use of such toxic paints in Durga idols. What makes the situation worse is that the district administration never took any hard steps for stopping use of such toxic paints. Many idol makers are knowingly and un knowingly using such toxic paints in their idols. Brahmaputra in Guwahati is already polluted with million litres of sewage enter the river daily. Environmental experts, however, say the administration never bothers to stop uses of colours according to APCB guidelines. This is just another example of our environmental apathy. Thus Durga Puja celebration pose a danger to the lives of water organisms like fish and the dolphin, an endangered species.

Lapang-led MUA completes 100 days in office

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he Meghalaya United Alliance has claimed it has achieved great heights in the 100 days that it has taken over the reins of the state. On this occasion, chief minister Dr DD Lapang released a booklet on its achievements, at a function held at Yojana Bhavan. Meghalaya United Alliance government completed 100 days in office on Wednesday. And an elated Chief Minister DD Lapang lost no time to highlight what his government achieved during these 100 days. A meeting to mark the completion of hundred days was held at the Yojana Bhawan in Shillong. The meeting chaired by chief secretary Ranjan Chatterjee was attended by MUA members including CM DD Lapang, Deputy Chief Minister Bindo Mathew Lanong and others. Claiming that the government is not blowing its own trumpet, Lanong praised the Chief Minister for his able leadership. Looking back to the 100 days Chief minister DD Lapang told the gathering that this is a “moment of quiet reflection of the past activities, performance and the parameters achieved.

Air Chief clarifies, China’s air power superior than India; Army says border is secure

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he Air Chief Marshal PV Naik on Wednesday admitted that India was no match to China when it came to air power. Interestingly, former Navy chief Suresh Mehta had also, last month, claimed that India is no match to China when it comes to military strength. He, however, chose to downplay the threat from India’s eastern neighbour amid reported violations of the Indian airspace and territory by Chinese troops. The IAF chief also stressed that there was no imminent threat from the Dragon. He also refuted reports of violation of airspace along the Line of Actual Control by the Chinese. The IAF Chief’s remarks came a day after China's Ambassador to India, Zhang Yan met Home Secretary GK Pillai and tried to clarify the picture over the reported border incursions. Indian Air Force chief denied reports of any air incursions in the country. Addressing a news conference in Gandhinagar on Wednesday, Air Marshal PV Naik said there were no air incursions from any side and added that the government was not downplaying Chinese threat. Speaking on country's security, Naik further added that India's present aircraft strength was one-third that of China and the IAF was in the process of acquiring more aircraft. The IAF has taken various initiatives to refurbish the infrastructure in the states bordering China that has included upgrading various landing grounds and runways in the region. The Asian giants have a simmering dispute over their long running border and both still claim vast swathes of each other's territory along their 3,500 kilometres Himalayan border, which has remained largely peaceful since a border war in 1962.

ISRO launches Oceansat-2, nano satellites from Sriharikota

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ndia successfully launched its 16th remote-sensing satellite Oceansat-2 and six nano European satellites in 1,200 seconds with the help of Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV- C-14) from Sriharikota on Wednesday. The launch was carried out as per schedule at 11.51 am and ended at 12.06 pm. The 44.4-metre tall, 230-tonne Indian rocket Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) freed itself from the launch pad at the spaceport and lifted itself up, lugging the 960-kg Oceansat-2 and the six nano satellites all together weighing 20 kg. In copybook style, the rocket first flung out Oceansat-2 at an altitude of 720 km above the earth in a sun-synchronous orbit (SSO), followed by the four nano satellites - also called Cubesats, each weighing one kg. The remaining two, each weighing eight kg, were attached to the rocket's fourth stage. Of the six nano satellites, four are from Germany, one is from Switzerland and one from Turkey. The seventh is a big one, India's Oceansat-2 weighing 960 kg. Soon after the satellites were put into orbit, Indian Space Research Organisation's (ISRO) satellite tracking centres started monitoring them.

Rahul's Kalavati withdraws nomination

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alavati, the symbol of hardship of farmers in the suicide-ridden Vidarbha region, will not fight the Maharashtra assembly polls. The farm widow, who first made headlines when Rahul Gandhi mentioned her during a speech in Parliament, withdrew her nomination on health grounds on Saturday.

Kalavati was in hospital with severe chest pains on Friday morning, leading to concerns that she wouldn't be able to file her nomination before the deadline. But a few hours later, her party escorted her to complete her formalities.

Kalavati was introduced to India
last year, when Rahul Gandhi mentioned her in a speech in Parliament. Her husband, a farmer committed suicide in 2005 because he couldn't repay his loans. Kalavati lived all her life in a village without electricity. Gandhi shared her story as an example of how India's nuclear deal with America will help deliver power to rural parts of the country.

Last week, she announced that she would stand for elections from the Wani Constituency in the Yavatmal district, representing the Vidarbha Jan Andolan Samiti. Another farm widow Babytai Bai will contest instead.

Kalavati's party alleges that she is being pressured to skip the elections by Sulabh International, an NGO that offer her a donation of 30 lakhs after Gandhi shared her story in Parliament. The NGO has reportedly asked Kalavati to focus on social work, and to avoid any role that requires political affiliation.

Slow start to Air India strike, 5 flights hit

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ercifully for passengers, it's been a slow start to the strike by Air India pilots. So far, 5 flights have been affected. Three of those are flights from Delhi to Mumbai, Lucknow and Kabul; the others were one each from Mumbai and Chennai.

On Friday, 400 executive pilots at Air India threatened to go on mass leave. They're upset with a decision taken earlier this week that reduces their pay. The pilots claim they were not consulted by the airline's management before their productivity-linked incentives (PLIs) were slashed by up to 50 per cent. The executive pilots are part of the management and are non-unionized. The pay cut does not apply to union pilots.

The Management claims that it has not been notified of the strike. It says that "almost all domestic flights" have operated on schedule on Saturday.

The Airline adds, "Every effort is being made to maintain normalcy even as a handful of pilots have reported sick mostly at Delhi...Air India is working out a contingency plan to ensure that passengers are not inconvenienced. Air India and Air India express aircraft will be deployed if necessary."