Assam: Difference between revisions

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The origin of the name is uncertain.
The origin of the name is uncertain.
Some consider it is a corruption of the Sanskrit word ''asama'' meaning uneven, that describes the hilly region; since the Indo-Burmese corridor consists of a number of mountainous chains of the lower Himalayan region and valleys between them. Others believe the word is related to the [[Ahom|Ahoms]] who ruled Assam for 600 years, since there is no record of the use of this name before their advent in [[1228]] and since historical texts have occasionally used the word ''asam'' for the Ahoms.
Some consider it is a corruption of the Sanskrit word ''asama'' meaning uneven, that describes the hilly region; since the Indo-Burmese corridor consists of a number of mountainous chains of the lower Himalayan region and valleys between them. Others believe the word is related to the [[Ahom|Ahoms]] who ruled Assam for 600 years, since there is no record of the use of this name before their advent in [[1228]] and since historical texts have occasionally used the word ''asam'' for the Ahoms.

The word “assama” was used during the time while Bhaskarvarman ruled Kamarupa as well. Then the present upper Assam used to emit poisonous gasses and uninhabitable. To this land, some of the Kamrupi criminals escaped during those days in order to avoid punishment. The Chinese traveler [[Huentsang]] wrote about it in his travel note. Those people were also referred “assama”, and Huentsang not traveling back to China through this route was because he was worried about getting attacked by “assama” people.

However, the British general did not pick the name from any of the above, but concatenated it from the scientific name “Anthera Assama”, i.e., he dropped “Anthera” and “a” of “Assama”. This was done for the first time while “Upper Assam State” was created for the first time after “Yandabu Accord”.


==Geography==
==Geography==

Revision as of 18:48, 14 December 2004

Assam
Motto Land of the Red River and Blue Hills
Freedom from British Rule August 15, 1947
Language Assamese Bodo Karbi
Capital Dispur
Governor Ajai Singh
Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi
Area 78,438 km²
Population

 - Total (2001)

 - Density

26,414,322

286/km²
Currency Indian Rupee
Timezone UTC +5.5
Internet TLD .IN
List of country calling codes 91 40

Assam is a northeastern state of India with its capital at Dispur. Located just below the eastern Himalayan foothills, it is surrounded by the other northeastern states: Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, Tripura and Meghalaya. Assam and its commercial capital Guwahati form the gateway to the northeastern states, together called the seven sisters. These states are connected to the rest of India via Assam's border with West Bengal and a narrow strip called the "chicken's neck." Assam shares international borders with Bhutan and Bangladesh.

Origin of name

The origin of the name is uncertain. Some consider it is a corruption of the Sanskrit word asama meaning uneven, that describes the hilly region; since the Indo-Burmese corridor consists of a number of mountainous chains of the lower Himalayan region and valleys between them. Others believe the word is related to the Ahoms who ruled Assam for 600 years, since there is no record of the use of this name before their advent in 1228 and since historical texts have occasionally used the word asam for the Ahoms.

The word “assama” was used during the time while Bhaskarvarman ruled Kamarupa as well. Then the present upper Assam used to emit poisonous gasses and uninhabitable. To this land, some of the Kamrupi criminals escaped during those days in order to avoid punishment. The Chinese traveler Huentsang wrote about it in his travel note. Those people were also referred “assama”, and Huentsang not traveling back to China through this route was because he was worried about getting attacked by “assama” people.

However, the British general did not pick the name from any of the above, but concatenated it from the scientific name “Anthera Assama”, i.e., he dropped “Anthera” and “a” of “Assama”. This was done for the first time while “Upper Assam State” was created for the first time after “Yandabu Accord”.

Geography

T-shaped, the state consists of the northern Brahmaputra valley, the middle Karbi and Cachar hills and the southern Barak Valley. It experiences heavy rainfall between March and September, with very high humidity in the summer months. The temperatures are mild and never extreme during any season.

Assam is very rich in vegetation, forests and wildlife. Timber felling used to be a lucrative business, till it was declared illegal by the Supreme Court of India. The region also has a number of reserved forests, and one of them, Kaziranga is the home of the rare Indian Rhinoceros. The state produces a lot of Bamboo, though the bamboo industry is still nascent. The wildlife, forests and flora, rivers and waterways, and great natural beauty are providing the right ingredients for a growing tourism.

The high rainfall, deforestation etc have resulted in annual floods that cause widespread loss of life, livelihood and property. An earthquake prone region, Assam experienced two very big earthquakes: 1897 (8.1 on the Richter scale) and 1950 (8.6).

History

Ancient Assam

The region that comprises Assam and the adjoining areas was called Prakjyotisha in ancient times, as mentioned in the Indian epic of Mahabharata. The land was populated by kiratas and chinas, generally believed to be people with Asian features.

Prakjyotisha Pura was the capital of ancient Kamarupa, according to Purana.

Medieval Assam

Medieval Assam was known as Kamarupa or Kamata, and was ruled by many dynasties. Chief among them was the Varman Dynasty. During the rule of the greatest of the Varman kings, Bhaskarvarman, a contemporary of Harshavardhana of Kanauj, the Chinese traveler Xuanzang visited the region, and recorded his travels. The other dynasties that ruled the region were the Kacharis, the Chutias etc. that belonged to the Indo-Tibetan groups.

Two later kingdoms left the biggest impact in the region. The Ahoms, a Tai group, ruled eastern Assam for 600 years; and the Koch, a Tibeto-Burmese/Dravidian group that ruled western Assam and northern Bengal. The Koch kingdom later split into two. The western kingdom became a vassal of the Moghuls whereas the eastern kingdom became an Ahom satellite state.

In spite of numerous invasions from the west, mostly by Muslim rulers, no western power could establish its rule in Assam till the advent of the British. The most successful invader was Mir Jhumla, a governor of Aurangzeb, who briefly occupied Gargaon the then capital of the Ahoms (1662-1663). But he found it difficult to control the people who carried on guerilla attacks on his forces and he and his army had to leave the region. The last attempt by the Moghuls under the command of Raja Ram Singh resulted in the victory for the Ahoms at Saraighat (1671) under the Ahom general Lachit Borphukan.

British Conquest

Ahom palace intrigue (and political turmoil resulting from the Moamoria rebellion) aided the expansionist Burmese ruler of Ava to invade Assam and install a puppet king in 1821. With the Burmese having reached the doorsteps of the East India Company's borders, the First Anglo-Burmese War ensued, in which Assam was one of the sectors. The war ended with the Treaty of Yandaboo in 1826, and the East India Company took control of the region.

Under British Administration, Assam was made a part of the British India province called the Bengal Presidency. Sometime about 1905-1912, Assam was separated and erected as a seperate province of Assam.

At the time of independence of India, it consisted of the original Ahom kingdom, the present-day Arunachal Pradesh (North East Frontier Agency), Naga Hills, original Kachari kingdom, Lushai Hills, and Garo, Khasi and Jaintia Hills. Of the Assam province on the eve of Independence, Sylhet choose to join Pakistan in a referendum; and the two princely states Manipur and Tripura became Group C provinces. The capital was Shillong.

Post Independence

After the independence from British rule in 1947, Assam spawned four more states to become one of the seven sister states in the 1960s and 1970s. The new states were Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Mizoram and Meghalaya. The capital of Assam, which was in Shillong, had to be moved to Dispur, now a part of an expanding Guwahati.

When the leaders of Assam tried to establish Assamese as the official language, the Cachar district, which is populated by a predominantly dominant Bengali speaking people, erupted in rebellion. This resulted is the death of some agitationists, and finally the order was watered down.

In the 1980s the Brahmaputra valley saw a six-year Assam Agitation that began non-violently but became increasingly violent. The movement tried to force the government to identify and deport foreigners who, the natives maintained, are illegally inundating the land from neighboring Bangladesh and changing the demographics. Critics called it a xenophobic reaction of a chauvinistic people. The agitation ended after an accord between the leaders of the agitation and the Union Government. Most of the accord remains unimplemented today, a cause for a simmering discontent.

This was followed by demands for greater autonomy especially by the Bodos in the later 1980s and 1990s. The period also saw the growth of armed secessionist groups like United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) and National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB). The union government responded by deploying the Indian army to control the situation in November 1990, leading to claims of human rights violations. The Indian army deployment has now been institutionalized under a Unified Command. Worsening inter-ethnic relationships also marked this period.

The 2000s saw inter-ethnic killings, especially in the Karbi and Cachar hills (e.g the Hmar-Dimasa conflict).

Languages

Assamese and Bodo are the official languages of the state. Linguistically modern Assamese traces its roots to eastern Magahi Prakrit, with strong influences from the Tibeto-Burman and Mon-Khmer languages which are spoken by ethnic groups in the region. Bodo is a Tibeto-Burman language. Bengali (Sylheti) has become the dominant language in the Barak valley after the advent of the British and the partition of Bengal in 1947. Nepali and Hindi are other important languages spoken in the state.

Culture

Assamese culture is a rich conglomerate of ethnic practices and assimilated beliefs. One feature of the Ahom rulers, unlike that of medieval rulers of India, was that they graciously took up the Assamese culture and in turn also enriched it with their own cultural distinctiveness. This is one reason why Assamese culture is so rich in heritage and values.

The Gamosa is an article of great significance for the people of Assam. Literally translated, it means 'something to wipe the body with' (Ga=body, mosa=to wipe). It is generally a white rectangular piece of cloth with a red border on three sides (other colors are also used) and red woven motifs on the fourth. It is used by the farmer around his waist (tongali), a Bihu dancer wraps it around the head. It is hung around the neck at the prayer hall and was thrown over the shoulder in the past to signify social status. Guests are welcomed with the offering of a gamosa and elders are offered gamosas (bihuwaan). It is used to cover the altar at the prayer hall, or cover the scriptures. One can therefore, very well say, that the gamosa symbolizes the life and culture of Assam.

The word gamosa is derived from the Kamrupi word gaamsa (gaam+chadar), the cloth used to cover the Bhagavad Purana at the altar.

Significantly the gamosa is used equally by all irrespective of religious and ethnic backgrounds.


Bihu

Chief among the cultural artefacts is the Bihu festival celebrated by most ethnic groups in the state. Bihu is celebrated (or observed) three times a year, in the months of Magh (mid-January), Bohag (mid-April) and Kati (late-October).

Durga Puja

Other than Bihu, Durga Puja is also celebrated in Assam with great pomp and splendour, although this might be a cultural effect of the millions of bengali people living in the state. Even then, whole of assam rejoices during Durga Puja, which signifies the victory of good over evil.

Music

Assam, being the home to many ethnic groups and different cultures, is very rich is folk music. The indigenous folk music has in turn influenced the growth of a modern idiom, that finds expression in the music of such artists like Rudra Baruah, Parbati Prasad Baruah, Bhupen Hazarika, Khagen Mahanta among many others. See also Music of Assam.

Economic Activity

Assam Tea

Assam's biggest contribution to the world is its tea. Assam produces some of the finest teas in the world. Other than the Chinese tea variety Camellia sinensis, Assam is the only region in the world that has its own variety of tea called Camellia assamica. Assam tea is grown at elevations near sea level, giving it a malty sweetness and an earthy flavor, as opposed to the more floral aroma of highland (e.g. Darjeeling, Taiwanese) teas.

The tea industry developed by the British planters brought in labor from Bihar and Orissa and their descendents form a significant demographic group in the state.

Assam Oil

Assam also produces crude oil and natural gas. Assam is the second place in the world (after Titusville in the United States) where petroleum was discovered. The second oldest oil well in the world still produces crude oil. Most of the oilfields of Assam are located in the Upper Assam region of the Brahmaputra Valley.

Problems in Assam

The region was part of the British Empire and most of the nationalities of this region were integrated peacefully into the new country. Unfortunately economic indexes of the region, which were above average before independence, began to fall compared to the rest of the country.

Militant groups began forming along ethnic lines after Independence and demands for sovereignty grew, resulting in the new states of Nagaland, Meghalaya and Mizoram in the 1970s. ULFA, and NDFB are two major militant groups that came into existence in the 1980s, leading to a strong military crackdown. The low-intensity military conflict has been continuing for more than a decade now without an end to the insurgency at sight. A high rural unemployment adds to this insurgency.

At the turn of the last century (1900s), people from present-day Bangladesh migrated to Assam, encouraged by the British to increase agricultural production and thus revenue. The migration continues today under different conditions, a claim which is hotly contested by some. The British tea planters imported labor from central India to work in the estates adding to the demographic canvas.

Like indigenous people in other parts of the world, the many ethnic groups of this region are in a struggle to maintain their cultural heritage. There are active autonomy movements in the Bodo and Karbi dominated regions. In recent times, ethnicity based militant groups have mushroomed (NDFB, BLT, UPDS, DHD, KLO, HPCD etc.) leading to violent inter-ethnic conflicts (e.g. the Hmar-Dimasa conflict).

See also

External links

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