Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Understanding ‘cultures’ of pastoralism and modern development in Thar: deciphering contemporary History of ‘present’





The French historian Marc Bloch who was a pioneer in mastering anthropological insights into studying history of rural transformations argues:

“…history is the study of dead and living. The faculty of understanding the living is, in truth, the master quality of the historian, who does not love the past but loves life”.


The present ongoing discussion strives to seek answers to understand changes in the complex social formation, especially the aspects of engagements of communities with each other, with the state and its institutions and the natural ecology of which they are an integral part. What interests us here is the history of the human and livestock communities of the Thar and the physical territory in which they were inscribed, the deciphering of the relations, multiple, intertwined and elusive, between man and biosphere in Thar.

It would be of interest to decipher the fast changing contemporary realities that seem to shape up a present that is eager to throw away, shake off the heavy lethargic weight of past as a obscurantist legacy. It needs to be said that in the midst of this noisy clamor for ushering in a new present it is important that we do not loose sight of this remarkable ability of past to persist at the level of mentalities as well as a ‘prodigal inertial mass’.    
 
The Indian Thar is a hot desert and ranks among the few deserts of the world that have had a long human history of settlement. This history has been made possible by the unique attributes of the complex of eco systems and their natural endowments that make the natural setting of Thar. Equally ingenious and resilient have been life practices of different communities, mobile and sedentary, who have displayed remarkable forbearance and endurance in populating the region.

It would not be very off the mark to suggest that pastoralism, along with the ways of life associated with it, has been one of the core elements of human history of this region. From early on it became an indispensable part of the combinatory of survival practices that included subsistence based sedentary farming and hunting- gathering. Pastoralism represented one of the significant patterns of mobility that was a phenomenon characterizing much of pre modern life in Thar. Mobility of pastoral groups contributed to urbanisation as well as the emergence of settled clan aristocracies, mainly of the Rajputs. The variant of pastoralism that was typical of this region was a diverse range of semi nomadic pastoralism that evolved in interaction with agriculture.

The agro pastoral region of the western and north western parts of the state of Rajasthan has been home to different pastoral communities nested within the overarching hegemonic dominance of the Rajputs. The Rajputs, Jats, Raikas, Charans, Bishnois, Meghwals and a group of Muslim communities are some of the major pastoral communities. The livestock rearing practices of these different communities are specific adaptations to distinct ecological niches negotiating a middle space between sedentary agriculture and free ranging pastoralism, relying on commons pastures and grasslands. These regions have their localized and hereditary customs, social ties, inter dependencies and practices relating to natural resource use and traditions of music and craft. The realms of the anthropological and the natural were articulated in specific ways for these distinct ecological regimes.

The pastoral way of life was majestic, given the frugal and rustic ecology where it had originated and thrived over centuries. It had come to represent a substantive holistic experience and was innovative in the sense of having capability for a range of adaptations devised to survive in the long periods of harshness, and bloom in the brief spells of abundance in the region. The sway of pastoral way is evident in the dexterous everyday work ethic of rearing animals to aesthetic pursuits of exquisite creations of music and rustic textiles and other crafts. These life-sustaining practices weave the complex of cultures of pastoralism. They are intimately linked and draw upon each other profusely in terms of their relation with nature.

Pastoralism has been increasingly relegated to margins of settled existence and indeed of the development discourse. The ecology that sustained it over centuries has dissipated fast having fallen prey to radical transformation by modernizing impulses of modern development.  

Notwithstanding the almost fatalistic present prophecies justifying the contemporary ‘sedentary turn’, long term historical sensibility urges the need to situate the historical roots of pastoralism as a resource use strategy and a way of life more firmly into our existence. This is considered necessary, because such a perspective is often found wanting in the numerous prophecies (like nomadic pastoralism will / must / should disappear) on the future of pastoralism and pastoral communities in Thar. Far from assuming that contemporary pastoralism is in an inevitable crisis and should/would give way to agro industrial complexes in the rapid on-going transformation, there is sense in learning from this remarkably resilient and frugal way of life.

It may hold insights and cues for transition to a sustainable world.


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