9/20/2018

Headline September 21, 2018/ '' ' SINGING HAPPY SAPIENS ' ''


'' ' SINGING HAPPY SAPIENS ' ''




CURIOUS whistles and chirrups echo through the jungle around Kongthong, a remote Indian village, but this is no birdsong. It's people calling out to each other in music - an extraordinary tradition that may even be unique.

Here in the lush, rolling hills of northeastern state of Meghalaya, mothers from Kongthong and a few other local villages compose a special melody for each child.

Everyone in the village, inhabited by the Khasi people, will then address the person with this individual little tune - and for a lifetime. They have conventional ''real'' names too, but they are rarely used.

To walk along the main road in this village of wooden huts with corrugated tin roofs, perched on a ridge miles from anywhere, is to walk through a symphony of hoots and toots.

On one side a mother calls out to her son to come home for supper, elsewhere children play and at the other end friends mess about - all in an unusual, musical language of their own.

''The composition of the melody comes from the bottom of my heart, mother-of-three Pyndaplin Shabong told AFP.

''It expresses my joy and love for my baby,'' the 31-year-old said, her youngest daughter, two and a half years old, on her knee.

''But if my son has done something wrong, if I'm angry with him, he broke my heart, at that moment I will call him by his actual name,'' rather than singing lovingly, said Rothell Khongsit, a community leader.

Harmony with nature : Kongthong has long been cut off from the rest of the world, several hours of tough trek from the nearest town. Electricity arrived only in 2000, and the dirt road in 2013

Harmony with Nature : Kongthong has long been cut off from the rest of the world, several hours of tough trek from the nearest town. Electricity arrived only in 2000 and the dirt road in 2013.

Days are spent, foraging in the forest for broom grass - the main source of income and revenue........leaving the village all but deserted, except for a few kids.

To call out to each other while in the forest, the villages would use a long version lasting around 30 seconds of each others musical ''name'' inspired by the sounds of nature all around.

''We are living in far-flung villages, we are surrounded by the dense forest, by, the hills. So we are in touch with nature, we are in touch with all the gracious living things that God has created,'' says Khongsit.

''Creatures have their own identity. The birds, so many animals, they have ways of calling each other.''

The custom is known as ''jingrwai lawbei'', meaning ''song of the clan's first woman,'' a reference to Khasi people's mythical original mother.
And unusually for India, this is a matrileneal society. Property and land are passed down from mother to daughter, while a husband moves in with his wife and takes her name. 

''We consider the mother the goddess of the family. A mother looks after a family, after the inheritance we get from our ancestors.'' Khongsit said.

Modern world : But according to anthropologist  Tiplut Nongbri, a professor at Millia Islamia University in Delhi, it is something of a ''disguised patriarchy''.

Women don't have decision making powers. Traditionally, they can't take part in politics, the rules are very clearly demarcated between male and female,'' she told AFP.

''Taking care of the children, that's the women responsibility. Statecraft all that is a male function.''

The origin of ''jingrwai lawbei'' isn't known, but locals think it is as old as the village, which has existed for as long as five centuries.

The tradition's days may be numbered, though, as the modern world creeps into Kongthong in the shape of television and mobile phones.

Some of the newer melodic names are inspired by Bollywood songs.

And youngsters are increasingly going off singing out their friends' melodic names, preferring instead to phone them.

With very respectful dedication to the villagers of Kongthong, and then the Students, Professors and Teachers of the world.  See Ya all ''register'' on : www.wssciw.blogspot.com : The World Students Society - for every subject in the world and Twitter- !E-WOW! - the Ecosystem 2011:

''' Students & Blessings '''

Good Night and God Bless

SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless

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