Shompen people

Mixed group of Shompen in 1886

The Shompen or Shom Pen are the indigenous people of the interior of Great Nicobar Island, part of the Indian union territory of Andaman and Nicobar Islands.

The Shompen are a designated Scheduled Tribe.[1]

Etymology and autonym

"Shompen" is possibly an English mispronunciation of "Shamhap", the Nicobarese name for the tribe. The Shompens living on the western side of the island call themselves Kalay, and those on the eastern side Keyet, with both groups referring to each other as Buavela.[2] A suggestion from 1886 that the Shompen call themselves Shab Daw'a has not been confirmed by modern research.[3]

History of contact

Prior to the first outside contact with the Shompen in the 1840s, there is no reliable information about these peoples. Danish Admiral Steen Bille was the first to contact them in 1846 and Frederik Adolph de Roepstorff, a British officer who had already published works on the languages of Nicobar and Andaman,[4] collected ethnographic and linguistic data in 1876. Since then very little has been added to the stock of reliable information on the Shompen, mainly because access to the Nicobar Islands has been restricted for foreign researchers since Indian independence.[3]Polling station was setup in their area for election of 2014.Shompen people for the first time participated in democratic process.[5]

Society

In 2001, the population was estimated at approximately 300.[2] Shompen Village-A and Shompen Village-B are home to most Shompens. Before the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, the villages were home to 103 and 106 Shompens respectively.[6] However, by the time of 2011 census, only 10 and 44 people were left in these villages respectively.[7]

They practice a hunter-gatherer subsistence economy. In keeping with the tropical climate of the islands, traditional attire includes only clothing below the waist. The traditional attire for men is a short, thin loincloth made of bark cloth, covering only the genitals without a 'tail' of cloth in front. Decoration is limited for men, consisting of bead necklaces and armbands. Women wear a knee-length skirt of bark cloth, occasionally with a shawl of bark cloth covering the shoulders. Decorations include bamboo ear plugs (ahav), bead necklaces (naigaak) and armbands of bamboo (geegap). Both sexes are barefoot. The Shompen probably learned to make and use bows from the Nicobaris. The main weapons are the bow and arrow. They do not use quivers but carry arrows by hand. Numerous types of spears, spear throwers, fire drills and a hatchet are the main tools.

A man usually carried a bow and arrows, a spear and through his loincloth belt, a hatchet, knife and fire drill. The Shompen are a hunter-gatherer subsistence people, hunting wild game such as pigs, birds and small animals while foraging for fruits and forest foods. They also keep pigs and farm yams, roots, vegetables, and tobacco. Shompen huts are built to house 4 people, and villages are made up of 4 to 5 families. Once a child is grown enough, he makes his own hut. The lowland Shompen build their huts on stilts and the walls are made of woven material on a wood frame and the roof of thatched palm fronds, and the structure is raised on stilts. The highland Shompen build their houses on the ground, and the houses are made of the same materials as the raised houses. The interior is covered with mats, with sleeping mats on one end and tools and utensils hung on the walls and rafters. Cooking is done outside.

In the late 1980s the Shompens were living in ten groups, ranging in size from 2 to 22 individuals, scattered across the interior of the island.[2]

Because of their isolated way of life in the interior of the island, the Shompens were largely protected from the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami that devastated the coastal regions inhabited by Nicobaris and the Indian population.[2]

Language

The Shompen languages, of which there are at least two, are very little known, but appear to be unrelated to Nicobarese, an isolated group of Austroasiatic languages, and perhaps even to each other. They may constitute a language isolate.[3]

Genetics

A group of Shompen in 1886. Variation in hair types can be an indication of genetic mixing.[2]

Studies of mitochondrial DNA have shown that the maternal lineage of Shompens is closest to that of Indonesians. Variations in DNA segments on the Y chromosome also reveal affinities to Austroasiatic people including the Nicobarese and Vietnamese, rather than to people from mainland India.[8] Other researchers have described the proposal that the Shompens are "descendants of Mesolithic hunter–gatherers" as unsubstantiated.[3]

See also

References

  1. "List of notified Scheduled Tribes" (PDF). Census India. p. 27. Retrieved 15 December 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Weber, George. "The Shompen People". The Andaman Association. Retrieved January 2010. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  3. 1 2 3 4 Blench, Robert. "The language of the Shom Pen: a language isolate in the Nicobar islands" (PDF). Retrieved January 2010. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  4. Fr. Ad. deRöepstorff (1874). "Vocabulary of dialects spoken in the Nicobar and Andaman Isles". Retrieved January 2010. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  5. http://www.india.com/election-2014/andaman-and-nicobar-elections-shompens-vote-for-the-first-time-37396/
  6. "Press Note: Safety and population profile of the primitive tribes in the andaman and nicobar islands". Ministry of Home Affairs. 2005-01-05. Maximum Shom Pens population are found in Shompen village (A) & Shompen village (B) with 103 & 106 population respectively.
  7. "District Census Handbook - Andaman & Nicobar Islands" (PDF). 2011 Census of India. Directorate of Census Operations, Andaman & Nicobar Islands. Retrieved 2015-07-21.
  8. Trivedi, Rajni; T. Sitalaximi, Jheelam Banerjee, Anamika Singh, P. K. Sircar and V. K. Kashyap (March 2006). "Molecular insights into the origins of the Shompen, a declining population of the Nicobar archipelago". Journal of Human Genetics. 51 (3): 217–226. doi:10.1007/s10038-005-0349-2. PMID 16453062. Cite uses deprecated parameter |coauthors= (help)

External links

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