PROBASHI- A Cultural News Magazine Volume 2 Issue 2 | Page 12

Probashi-Cover Story Creating Anthropological History much was expected, probably like many futile missions in the past this probably would also to go down in the file as another wasted attempt. However unlike in the past, this mission had one difference, there was a women anthropologist in the contact team. At around 8 am in the morning the team of 13 including Madhumala set sail for the Island in a small craft. The key team members were Shri Shri S. Awaradi ( Director ,Tribal Welfare, A&NI administration)-Team Leader, Dr Arun Mullick, Medical Officer ( for providing medical attention in case of sickness or injury) and Dr Madhumala ChattopadhyayAnthropologist. The rest were support crew. As the craft approached the Island three huts came into view. The dreaded Sentinel Island, Madhumala had read so much about was now in front of her. As the boat inched closer to the shore, Madhumala’s heart beat went up a notch - will the tribe show up. However the shore looked deserted. Seeing smoke coming out from another part of the Island, the contact party steered their boat towards that direction. And suddenly Sentinelese were there behind the trees- the most secluded tribe in the world had come to view. Most were men, four being armed with bows and arrows. It was now up to the contact team to take initiative, and they started dropping coconuts in water which they had brought with them. Then something which had never been seen before happened, after a bit of trepidation a few Sentinelese men came sprinting and waded on the shallow continental shelf to collect the floating coconuts. The team was awestruck; the Nelson Mandela might have never visited the Andaman Islands, but one Islander gave him company during his solitary confinement at Robben Islands. This was a Jarawa woman, whose photograph Mandela had cut from a 1975 issue of the National Geographic. The photograph clicked by the renowned photographer Raghuvir Singh shows a Jarawa woman full of life and joy. Mandela named this lady Nolitha and she shared space on his study table in his prison cell with his wife Winnie Mandela. And in a letter to his wife he wrote “How can my spirits ever be down when I enjoy the fond affection of such wonderful ladies?” Sentinelese had accepted a ice. friendly gesture which till now had It was 2 PM when the team returned. been met by arrows. The process of dropping coconuts The team leader instructed that started and this time the tribe more coconuts be dropped and welcomed the contact party with this time the Sentinelese brought a shouts “Nariyali Jaba Jaba” (which in canoe to collect the coconuts in Onge Language means more and cane baskets. The women and more coconuts). Madhumala who for children however maintained a long stretches had worked with the distance and remained on the Onges understood the distinct Onge shore. But still an invisible wall dialect which the Sentinelese use, an stood between the Islanders and indication that there were times the contact team. No party made when the tribes of the Islands would the first move to bridge the gap intermix, The Sentinelese in the further. Four hours rolled by, the second round had become bolder, contact party kept floating and then something unexpected coconuts and the Sentinelese kept happened, a young Sentinelese youth collecting them. Perhaps this was waded up to the life boat and the farthest that the Islanders touched it with his hands. Now more would go. men closed in to collect the coconuts. In this moment of breaking the ice a With coconuts over, the team went Sentinelese youth who was sitting on back to the ship to replenish their the shore got up and aimed his arrow stock, it