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![[Santals, India]](../images/i/in-santl.gif) image by Chrystian Kretowicz, 16 April 2009
 
image by Chrystian Kretowicz, 16 April 2009
Santals are the largest adivasi (indigenous) community in the Indian 
subcontinent with a population of more than 10 million, and they reside mostly 
in the Indian states of Jharkhand, Orissa, West Bengal, Assam and Bihar, and 
sparsely in Bangladesh and Nepal. The estimate of their numbers varies widely 
from source to source. "The Santali language is part of the Austro-Asiatic 
family, distantly related to Vietnamese and Khmer. A few of the Indian 
anthropologists also believe that humans first came to India about 65000-55000 
years ago. Historians believe that they were the ancestors of the tribal 
community residing in the eastern part of India (excluding hilly portions). So 
the Santals, Kols and Mundas may be the descendants of them. But in those times 
their primary way of subsistence were hunting and food gathering. The agrarian 
way of living was brought by the Aryans who came about in the 1500 B.C. How the 
Mohenjo-Daro civilization annihilated is a big question whether there was an 
Aryan invasion or a major environmental change that wiped them out is still 
under research and every day new theories are coming out. Coming back to the 
history of tribals, the Proto Australoids, their earliest ancestors, started 
living in the forest in the eastern part of India.
The Santal community 
is devoid of any caste system and there is no distinction made on the basis of 
birth. They believe in supernatural beings and ancestral spirits. Santali 
rituals are consist mainly of sacrificial offerings and invocations to the 
spirits, or bongas. It is believed by some scholars that Bonga means the same as 
Bhaga (or Bhagavan). The Santal system of governance, known as Manjhi–Paragana, 
may be compared to what is often called Local Self Governance. This body is 
responsible for making decisions to ameliorate the village's socioeconomic 
condition.
In 1855, the Santals rebelled against the British. Although 
the revolution was brutally suppressed, it marked a great change in the colonial 
rule and policy. The day is still celebrated among the Santal community with 
great respect and spirit for the thousands of the Santal martyrs who sacrificed 
their lives along with their two celebrated leaders (Sido and Kanhu Murmu) to 
win freedom from the rule of the Zamindars and the British operatives." (from 
Wikipedia)
Today, the Santals are engaged in the vicious war with Bodos 
in Assam. The fight is led by the Birsa Commando Force - BCF which is a 
separatist group made up of ethnic Santhals, an Indian minority group that lives 
in several northeastern Indian states. The Birsa Commando Force was founded in 
response to ethnic clashes between Santhals and Bodos (another minority group) 
in the state of Assam. Bodos and Santhals both demand independent states in 
Assam, and have often clashed over territory and economic issues. Santhals make 
up a large majority of tea-workers in Assam, which has created a backlash among 
Bodos who resent the Santhal's higher economic standing.
More on Santals 
can be read at 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santal and
http://wesanthals.tripod.com/ 
including a story about their unusual and interesting alphabet and script - Ol 
Chiki. 
James B. Minahan (Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations - Ethnic and National 
Groups Around the World - volume IV) pictures and describes their flag as: 
"The Santhal national flag, the flag of the national movement, is a horizontal 
tricolor of green, white and red, bearing a centered gold disk on the white 
stripe."
Chrystian Kretowicz, 16 April 2009