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File:Great Andamanese - two men - 1875.jpg

The Andamanese are a group of stateless peoples with egalitarian gatherer-hunter traditions in the Bay of Bengal's Andaman Islands, between India and Myanmar.

Today, the Andamanese peoples and their languages are under threat of extinction. Survival International reported that in 2010, the last speaker of the Bo language died, and as of 2012, the Jarawa people was threatened by "human safaris" that went through the islands, disrupting native hunts and sometimes leading to sexual abuse of Jarawa women.[1]

Culture

The Andaman peoples have gender egalitarian cultures. For example, the journalist Madhusree Mukerjee reports that the Jarawa have a "totally egalitarian culture."[2] And Down to Earth notes that among the Onge, "women are neither subservient nor are they subordinate."[3]

Newlyweds tend to live with the mother's family at least until their first child is born.[4]

John Zerzan comments:

"The Andaman Islanders, west of Thailand, have no leaders, no idea of symbolic representation, and no domesticated animals. There is also an absence of aggression, violence, and disease; wounds heal surprisingly quickly, and their sight and hearing are particularly acute. They are said to have declined since European intrusion in the mid-19th century, but exhibit other such remarkable physical traits as a natural immunity to malaria, skin with sufficient elasticity to rule out post-childbirth stretch marks and the wrinkling we associate with ageing, and an ‘unbelievable’ strength of teeth: Cipriani (1966) reported seeing children of 10 to 15 years crush nails with them. He also testified to the Andamese practice of collecting honey with no protective clothing at all; 'yet they are never stung, and watching them one felt in the presence of some age-old mystery, lost by the civilized world.'"[5]

Decisions

According to Vishvajit Pandya, "Women are particularly influential in the family and married women often collectively influence major campsite decisions."[6] A.R. Radcliffe-Brown documented that the Andamanese did not have government, although elders tended to have a disproportionate influence during decision-making, by virtue of their experience.

"There is no organized government in an Andamanese village. The affairs of the community are regulated entirely by the older men and women. The younger members of the community are brought up to pay respect to their elders and to submit to them in many ways. It has already been shown how, in the distribution of food, the elders get the best share. When it is a question of shifting camp to some better hunting ground the opinion of the older men would weight against that of the younger if they disagreed. It must not be thought, however, that the older men are tyrannical or selfish. I only once heard a young man complain of the older men getting so much the best of everything. The respect for seniority is kept alive partly by tradition and partly by the fact that the older men have had a greater experience than the younger. It could probably not be maintained if it regularly gave rise to any tyrannical treatment of the younger by the elder."[7]


Crime

Vishvajit Pandya:

"In times of dispute, women were instrumental channels of negotiation and resolution. Dispute resolution continues to be marked by feasting."[8]



  1. "Extinct: Andaman tribe’s extermination complete as last member dies," Survival International, 4 February 2010, http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/5509. "India misses deadline to end Andaman 'human safaris'," Survival International, http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/10735.
  2. "Disease and Exploitation Threaten Indigenous Andaman Island Tribe," Earth Island Journal, 13 February 2012, https://www.earthisland.org/journal/index.php/articles/entry/disease_sex_and_expolitation_threaten_indigenous_andaman_island_tribe/.
  3. "Battle of the Sexes," https://www.downtoearth.org.in/indepth/the-battle-of-the-sexes-28761.
  4. Vishvajit Pandya, "The Andaman Islanders of the Bay of Bengal" in The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Hunters and Gatherers ed. Richard B. Lee and Richard H. Daly (1999).
  5. John Zerzan, Future Primitive Revisisted (Port Townsend: Feral House, 2012), 13-14.
  6. Pandya, "The Andaman Islanders."
  7. A.R. Radcliffe-Brown, The Andaman Islanders (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1933), 44.
  8. Pandya, "The Andaman Islanders."