
JARAWA
By the neighbouring Great Andamanese the tribe was referred to as Jarawa, 'the other people' or 'stranger', indicating a somewhat later migration than the Great Andamanese, both tribes being traditional territorial rivals.
This fact was exploited by the British who utilized the services of the Great Andamanese to track down the Jarawa. Also the British mounted punitive expeditions in Jarawa areas on South Andaman to capture men, women and children. Those who resisted were killed and their huts burned. In official language the Jarawa were referred to as 'the hostile people'.
They now inhabit the west coast and jungle of the South and Middle Andamans, possibly migrating from the region of lower Burma, according to Radcliff-Brown. According to Cipriani the Jarawa have migrated from Little Andaman to Great Andaman. The presence of the Negritos in the Great Andamans are by examination of the kitchen-middens estimated to have lasted for at least 2000 years.
Of species the endemic wild pig and the monitor lizard are the largest dwellers in the tropical jungle, the wild pig as main provider of both meat and sculls preserved as trophies in the huts. Early this century, from 1905 -1930, the British chose for cultural reasons to import spotted and barking deer, animals considered by the Jarawa to be brought by the gods and thus never hunted but instead adored and celebrated by the aborigines.
Hunting of the wild pig is by means of bow and arrow, spear and harpoon arrow too, the shaft from the harpoon getting entangled in the bushes and helping the hunter to catch the animal. For the gathering digging rods, baskets of cane strips and net bags are used.
The surrounding sea is as rich in marine life as the forests are devoid of large wildlife. Migration of the tribes on the Andamans has been by crossing the sea using the islands as stepping stones, but in due time their knowledge confined to the sea was lost.
Labels: Jarawa