West Bengal is now home to about 5.3
million tribal people; they form five per cent of the total tribal population
of India. In the state itself, they comprise 5.80 per cent of the total
population. In fact, it can be said that of the people of Bengal, one in every
17 belongs to a tribal community. It is this little-known world of the tribals
that this book presents. Contemporary stories and photographs, taken by the
author, bring alive many incidents in the lives of these fascinating
people. Tribal Bengal: Life in the Sub-Himalayan Terai Duars is divided
into two parts—Indo-Mongoloids and the Proto-Australoids and Others. Each
chapter offers glimpses of the tribal people, their customs and celebrations,
the languages spoken and their lifestyle. These are some of the earliest people
in the subcontinent who are struggling to combat with the changing
socio-economic scenario of the country. This book is an intimate witness to
their day-to-day life, amid joys and sorrows.
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Krishnopriyo Bhattacharya has
been studying the tribal affairs of North Bengal for more than three decades.
Krishnopriyo’s published works include two multilingual lexicons on script less
tribal speeches in Bengali and the International Phonetic Alphabet; an
intensive field study on the tribal predicament of the Bengal-Duars; a sociological
study of the contemporary life-struggle of two indigenous communities of North
Bengal; a work on tribal ethno-photography, among others. He has also worked as
the Duars correspondent of the Kolkata-based dailies, Aajkaal and The
Telegraph.