Note: The following text
was not produced by the Adivasi-Tee-Projekt but is a complete citation
of the article "The Kurumba" published in P.Hocking (1992) by ############
People identified as Kurumbas have been reported across
a wide area in south India. Major settlements, however, are found in
the Nilgiri area located between 11°10� and 11°30� N and between 76°25�
and 77°00� E, at the junction of the Eastern Ghats and the Western
Ghats. There the Kurumbas occupy the thickly forested slopes, glens,
and foothills of the Nilgiri-Plateau.
The Nilgiri groups are seven in number: the Alu-(�milk�),
Palu-(�milk�), Betta-(�hill�), Jenu-(�honey�), Mulla-(�net�), and
Urali-(�village�) Kurumbas, as well as the Mudugas (no etymology). Each
is a distinct ethnic group differing from the others in dialect,
religious beliefs, and other cultural attributes. The 1971 Indian
census counted 12.930 Kurumbas. In 1981 the Nilgiri District census
reported 4,874 Kurumbas, most of whom are Muduga. Together the Kurumba
groups compose the smallest proportion of the plateau population there,
and the poorest. Of the four tribes that occupy the Nilgiri Plateau,
legend says that the Toda, Kurumba, and Kota tribes were brought into
being simultaneously by a parent creator. There were three brothers who
either transgressed against the parents or quarreled among themselves.
As a result their father, a super-natural, assigned to each a different
function in life and ordained that the three would exchange goods and
services. The descendants of these three brothers became the three
tribes and thus the three peoples have been bound in a common fate
since the beginning of time. Traditionally, the Kurumbas have subsisted
as hunters and gatherers. Living in jungles on the steep edges of the
plateau, they practice shifting cultivation and the foraging and
trapping of small birds and animals. Early settlements were usually
isolated, with Kurumbas living in caves or rock shelters, in dwellings
near forest clearings, or in houses or huts in small hamlets
interspersed with garden patches. Bananas, mangoes, jackfruit, maize,
and chilies were the usual gardenproduce. Today, with increasing
population and deforestation, the Kurumbas have been forced to lower
elevations of the plateau and subsist primarily by working on tea or
coffee plantations. Historically, the Kurumbas have had a cooperative
relationship with the other tribes that includes the exchange of goods
and services. Kurumbas supply the tall poles used in Toda funeral
rites, three types of baskets used by the Badagas, and often music for
Badaga and Toda festivals. However, the activity for which the Kurumbas
are best known has been the provision of sorcery. Traditionally each
Badaga commune appointed a specific Kurumba man to act as guardian and
watchman to certain constituent villages. This was a lifelong
appointment that passed from father to son. In addition to guarding,
the watchman took part in the sowing and harvest festivals as an
adjunct priest (�kani-kuruma�). A number of other magical roles are
played today by the Kurumbas. In the diviner (�kanigara�), exorcist
(�devvagara�) , and sorcerer (�odigara� or �odia�) roles a Kurumba,
with the help of herbs, spells, and roots, can bring sickness or death
to the enemy. The therapist (�maddugara�) functions as a medicine man
and curer. As a wizard (�pilligara�) the Kurumba may turn himself into
an animal. As a result of their knowledge of sorcery, the Kurumbas were
feared; the other tribes frequently banded together against them. A
number of massacres of Kurumbas were reported throughout the 1800s.
These massacres were in retaliation for supposed deeds of sorcery
inflicted on particular individuals or communities. Kurumba watchmen,
however, no longer patrol the village fields, and the other tribes no
longer fear the Kurumba as in the past. Their tradition for sorcery
remains but personal fear is now little felt by neighboring
tribespeople. Today the question arise as to whether the Kurumbas are
descended from ancient Nilgiri ancestors who were primarily gatherers
or from far more recent farming immigrants. Their language belongs to
the South Dravidian Subfamily. In general the groups have a clan
organization that is exogenous and patrilineal. The tribes practice
endogamy. Cross-cousin marriages frequently occur. Traditionally there
are a number of offices within the tribe including the village headman
(�maniagara�) and priest (�mannugara�). The headsman and assistant
headman's offices are hereditary in the male line, while either a male
or a female may be a priest or sorcerer. Traditional religious beliefs
involve an ancestor cult with an emphasis on pollution and purity,
which parallels other such beliefs upheld in Hinduism generally. Today
young people are embracing both Hinduism and Christianity in addition
to the traditional beliefs.
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