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Letter sent to Commerce Ministry for allowing import of additional 20,000 tonnes of rice

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The Food Ministry has sent a letter to the Commerce Ministry for allowing six more private companies to import 20,000 tonnes of rice to keep the rice market stable.

 

The letter, signed by Additional Secretary Mojibor Rahman, has been sent to the senior secretary to the Commerce Ministry recently seeking permission to import 13,000 tonnes of boiled rice and 7,000 tonnes of not-boiled rice.

 

Read more: Govt approves import of 17 lakh tonnes of rice

 

The ministry asked to allow these persons or agencies to import specified quantity (with maximum of 5 percent coarse grains) of boiled and Atap rice.

 

According to the conditions of rice import, the permitted importers have to market all the rice in Bangladesh by December 31. The quantity of imported rice, storage and marketing information should be informed to the District Food Controller concerned.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

 

India’s tribespeople seek formal recognition of ancient nature-worshipping faith

 

The ritual began with a thunderous roll of leather drums, its clamor echoing through the entire village. Women dressed in colorful saris broke into an Indigenous folk dance, tapping and moving their feet to its galloping rhythm.

 

At the climax, 12 worshippers โ€” proudly practicing a faith not officially recognized by the government โ€” emerged from a mud house and marched toward a sacred grove believed to be the home of the village goddess. Led by the village chieftain Gasia Maranda, they carried religious totems โ€” among them an earthen pitcher, a bow and arrow, winnowing fan and a sacrificial axe.

 

Maranda and others in Guduta, a remote tribal village in Indiaโ€™s eastern Odisha state that rests in a seemingly endless forest landscape, are โ€œAdivasis,โ€ or Indigenous tribespeople, who adhere to Sarna Dharma. It is a belief system that shares common threads with the worldโ€™s many ancient nature-worshipping religions.

 

On that day inside the grove, worshippers displayed their reverence for the natural world, making circles around a Sal plant and three sacred stones, one each for the malevolent spirits they believe need pleased. They knelt as Maranda smeared the stones with vermillion paste, bowed to the sacred plant and laid down fresh leaves covered in a cow dung paste.

 

โ€œOur Gods are everywhere. We see more in nature than others,โ€ said Maranda, as he led the men back to their homes.

 

But the government does not legally acknowledge their faith โ€” a fact that is increasingly becoming a rallying point for change for some of the 5 million or so Indigenous tribespeople in the country who follow Sarna Dharma. They say formal recognition would help preserve their culture and history in the wake of the slow erosion of Indigenous tribespeopleโ€™s rights in India.

 

Citizens are only allowed to align themselves with one of Indiaโ€™s six officially recognized religions โ€” Hinduism, Buddhism, Christianity, Islam, Jainism and Sikhism. While they can select the โ€œOthersโ€ category, many nature worshippers have felt compelled by the countryโ€™s religious affiliation system to associate with one of the six named faiths.

 

Tribal groups have held protests in support of giving Sarna Dharma official religion status in the run-up to the upcoming national census, which has citizens state their religious affiliation.

 

The protests have gained momentum after the recent election of Droupadi Murmu, the first tribal woman to serve as Indiaโ€™s president, raising hopes that her historic win will bring attention to the needs of the countryโ€™s Indigenous population, which is about 110 million people as per the national census. They are scattered across various states and fragmented into hundreds of clans, with different legends, languages and words for their gods โ€” many, but not all follow Sarna Dharma.

 

Read: Various religions coexist in harmony in China: diplomat

 

Salkhan Murmu, a former lawmaker and community activist who also adheres to Sarna Dharma, is at the center of the protests pushing for government recognition of his religion. His sit-in demonstrations in several Indian states have drawn crowds of thousands.

 

At a recent protest in Ranchi, the capital of eastern Jharkhand state, men and women sat cross-legged on a highway blocking traffic as Murmu spoke from a nearby stage. Dressed in a traditional cotton tunic and trousers, Murmu explained how anxieties over losing their religious identity and culture are driving the demand for formal recognition.

 

โ€œThis is a fight for our identity,โ€ Murmu told the crowd, who held their fists in the air and shouted: โ€œVictory to Sarna Dharma.โ€ Thunderous applause washed over the venue.

 

Murmu is also taking his religion recognition campaign beyond city centers and into remote tribal villages. His message: If Sarna Dharma disappears, one of the countryโ€™s last links to its early inhabitants goes with it. It is a convincing argument evidenced by the increasing number of tribal members rallying behind Murmu, who are helping fuel the slow morphing of the campaign into a social movement.

 

โ€œIf our religion will not get recognized by the government, I think we will wither away,โ€ said Murmu, as a group of villagers huddled around him in Odishaโ€™s Angarpada village. โ€œThe moment we get into any other religion by force, by pressure or by gratification we will lose our entire history, our way of life.โ€

 

Murmuโ€™s efforts are just the latest push for official recognition.

 

In 2011, a government agency for Indigenous tribespeople asked the federal government to include Sarna Dharma as a separate religion code in that yearโ€™s census. In 2020, the Jharkhand state, where tribespeople make up nearly 27% of the population, passed a resolution with a similar objective.

 

The federal government did not respond to either request.

 

One argument for granting Sarna Dharma official recognition is the sheer number of nature worshippers in India, said Karma Oraon, an anthropologist who taught at Ranchi University and has studied the lives of Indigenous tribes for decades.

 

The 2011 national census shows Sarna Dharma adherents in India outnumber Jains, who are officially the countryโ€™s sixth largest faith group. Hindus are No. 1, making up nearly 80% of the 1.4 billion people in India.

 

Read: Leaked data shows China’s Uighurs detained due to religion

 

More than half โ€” a number close to 4.9 million โ€” of those who selected the โ€œOthersโ€ religion option in the 2011 national census further identified as Sarna Dharma adherents. Comparably, Indiaโ€™s Jain population is slightly more than 4.5 million people.

 

โ€œOur population is more than the recorded believers who follow Jainism. Why canโ€™t then our faith be recognized as a separate religion?โ€ Oraon said.

 

Decades ago, there were more options for Indigenous tribespeople.

 

The census, started in 1871 under British rule, once allowed for the selection of โ€œAnimists,โ€ โ€œAboriginal,โ€ and โ€œTribes.โ€ The categories were removed in 1951 when the first census in independent India was conducted.

 

Some hope giving Sarna Dharma official status could stem the various existential threats to the faith.

 

The natural environment is integrally linked to worshippersโ€™ identity, but fast-disappearing ancient forests and encroachment by mining companies has led many to leave tribal villages, creating a generational disconnect among followers, Oraon said. Plus, many from younger generations are abandoning their centuries-old religious customs for urban life.

 

โ€œWe are going through an identity crisis,โ€ said Oraon.

 

His concerns have heightened after Hindu nationalist groups, including Prime Minister Narendra Modiโ€™s ruling party, have sought to bring nature worshippers into the Hindu fold. They are motivated by potential electoral gains but also want to bolster their agenda of transforming a secular India into a distinctly Hindu state.

 

These efforts stem from a long-held belief that Indiaโ€™s Indigenous tribespeople are originally Hindus, but adherents of Sarna Dharma say their faith is different from monotheistic and polytheistic ones.

 

Sarna Dharma has no temples and scriptures. Its adherents donโ€™t believe in heaven or hell and donโ€™t have images of gods and goddesses. Unlike Hinduism, there is no caste system nor rebirth belief.

 

โ€œTribespeople might share some cultural ties with Hindus, but we have not assimilated into their religion,โ€ said Oraon.

 

The gradual embrace of Hindu and Christian values by some Indigenous tribal groups has exacerbated his concerns.

 

Read: India gets its first tribal President

 

In the late 19th century, many tribespeople in Jharkhand, Odisha and other states renounced nature worship โ€” some voluntarily and others coaxed by money, food and free education โ€” and converted to Christianity. Hindu and Muslim groups also encouraged conversion, further chipping away at nature worshipper numbers.

 

In some cases, the conversions were resisted, said Bandhan Tigga, a religious leader of Sarna Dharma. When Hindu groups showed up, some tribespeople sacrificed cows, a holy animal for Hindus. They also slaughtered pigs, considered unclean in Islam, when Muslim missionaries arrived.

 

โ€œIn each case, the women smeared either pig or cow fat on their foreheads so that no Hindu or Muslim man could marry them,โ€ said Tigga, wearing a white and red striped cotton towel around his neck, a design that also makes up for the Sarna Dharma flag fluttering atop his house in Murma, a village in Jharkhand.

 

Most Christian missionaries are met with resistance these days, but conversions can still happen, said Tigga, who travels to remote parts of eastern India to persuade converts to return to their ancient faith.

 

For Sukhram Munda, a man in his late 80s, much is already gone.

 

He is the great-grandson of Birsa Munda, a 19th-century charismatic Indigenous leader who led his forest-bound community in revolt against British colonialists. Mundaโ€™s legend grew after his death and bronze statues of him appeared in almost every tribal village in the state. Soon, a man who worshipped nature was worshipped by his own people.

 

But Mundaโ€™s religion barely survived the onslaught of conversions in his ancestral Ulihatu village in Jharkhand. Half of his descendants converted to Christianity, Sukhram said. Now, the first thing visitors to Ulihatu see is a church, a large white building that stands out against the green of the surrounding forests.

 

โ€œThis used to be the village where we worshipped nature,โ€ said Sukhram. โ€œNow half of the people donโ€™t even remember the religion their ancestors followed.โ€

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh