Koraput: A two-day national seminar on ‘Role of Tribal Museums in the Preservation of Tribal Culture’ was recently held at the Council of Analytic Tribal Studies Complex here.
The seminar was organised as part of the silver jubilee celebrations of the Tribal Museum in Koraput.
Eminent scholars from all over the state attended the seminar and the focal point of the two-day deliberation was the importance and sheer lack of proper tribal museums both in the state and India.
Students from the Central University, Koraput, and the Vikram Dev College, Jeypore, attended.
The seminar was inaugurated by Koraput collector K Sudarshan Chakravarthy along with the Vice-Chancellor of Central University Dr. Sachidananda Mohanty.
Eminent anthropologist Dr. Kishore Basa gave the key note address in which he elaborated the impact of globalisation on tribal communities.
He opined that the multifaceted tribes are negatively affected not only in India but all over the world.
The vice-chancellor said that in the name of development, the life, livelihood, culture and habitat of indigenous people has brought been under severe stress.
Octogenarian scholar Prof S N Rath stressed that tribal studies have been traditionally pioneered by anthropologists over the last hundred years, whose purpose was different than what conceived now. “During the colonial rule, British and Indian civil servants studied tribes not for their ethnographic and cultural diversity, but delved just enough to provide the basic information to facilitate administration by indirect rule,” he said.
Anil Dhir, Project Head of INTACH Odisha, said that cultural loss among the tribals was intangible in nature; hence it was difficult to comprehend the extent of the loss. Platforms like Tribal Museums should be created where the intangible heritage can be shared, preserved and promoted, he further said.
“According to the 2011 Census, 32% of Odisha’s tribal population now lives in non-tribal areas, mostly urban. They have been the biggest victims of development, repeated and mass displacement for industry, mining and dams had resulted in a major demographic shift,” he added.
Gadhadhar Parida, the former collector of Koraput and the Director of the Tribal Museum, said that museums can become the catalysts for tribal studies, and serve as a communication tool, disseminating beliefs and traditions of the indigenous people.
Dr. A C Sahoo, a tribal expert who had spent years in the Bonda hills, opined that tribal museums can create a network of support for the fringe and on the edge groups and prevents culture and languages from dying.