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Encyclopedia > Singpho

The Singpho people of Arunachal Pradesh inhabit in the district of Lohit and Changlang and the Kachin State of Myanmar. Some Singpho are also found in the Tinsukia district of Assam. Comprising a population size of 7,200 in India, they live in 12 villages, namely Dibang, Ketetong, Pangna, Ulup, Ingthem, Mungbhon, Pangsun, Hasak, Katha, Bisa, Namo and Kumsai. They are a tribe belonging to the Kachin of Burma and are ethnically related to the Jingpo of China. In contrast to the Jingpo, they speak separate languages. , Arunachal Pradesh   (Hindi: Aruṇācal PradeÅ›; Chinese: 藏南 Zangnan or South Tibet) is the eastern most state on Indias north-east frontier. ... Lohit is an administrative district in the state of Arunachal Pradesh in India. ... The Changlang district is located in Arunachal Pradesh, located south of the Lohit district and north of the Tirap district. ... Kachin State (Jingphaw Mungdan), is the northernmost state of Myanmar. ... Tinsukia District is one of the twenty three districts of Assam state, India. ... Assam   (Assamese: অসম Ôxôm) is a north eastern state of India with its capital at Dispur, a part of Guwahati. ... Kachin may refer to: An ethnic group, in Myanmar known as Kachin (or Jingpaw), in China (Yunnan) known as Jingpo. ... The Jingpo or Kachin people (Chinese: 景颇族 Jǐngpōzú; own names: Jingpo, Tsaiva, Lechi) are an ethnic group who largely inhabit northern Myanmar (Kachin State). ... The Jingpo or Kachin people (Chinese: 景颇族 Jǐngpōzú; own names: Jingpo, Tsaiva, Lechi) are an ethnic group who largely inhabit northern Myanmar (Kachin State). ...


The Singphos are divided into a number of clans, each under a Chief known as Gam. The principal Gams include the Bessa, Duffa, Luttao, Luttora, Tesari, Mirip, Lophae, Lutong and Magrong. The Singpho are also divided into four classes, namely Shangai, Myung, Lubrung and Mirip.

Contents

Religion

Like the Khampti, the are Theravada Buddhist by religion. In memorial of Gautama Buddha, the Songken festival is celebrated in April. Spiritual worship (nat) is also practised as well in addition to Buddhism. According to their belief, malevolent and responsible spirits causing miseries to mankind were worshipped on ceremonies and spirits like Ningsenat, Multung-Dingna, Cit-Hungnat, Natkum, Mainat, etc were given offerings upon the sacrification of cattle such as bulls, pigs, cows and chickens to appease the spirits. They also believed that God uses rainbow as the ladder to meet his wife on the moon. Small Christian communities do exist among the Singpho. The Khampti is a tribal group found in the Lohit district of Arunachal Pradesh in India as well as in northwestern Myanmar. ... ... Standing Buddha sculpture, ancient region of Gandhara, northern Pakistan, 1st century CE, Musée Guimet. ...


Lifestyle

Unlike most tribes, shifting cultivation (Jhum) is not as widely practised, although tea is widely planted. The Singpho produce their tea by plucking the tender leaves and drying them in the sun and exposing to the night dew for three days and nights. The leaves are then placed in the hollow tube of a bamboo, and the cylinder will be exposed to the smoke of the fire. In this way, their tea can be kept for years without losing its flavour. The Singpho also depended on yams and other edible tubers as their staple food.


Dress

The Singpho made shields from buffalo hide, many of them can be as long as four feet. They also have helmets are made from either buffalo hide or rattan-work, and vanished black and decorated with the boar's tusks.


Most men tie their hair in a large knot on the crown of the head. The women dress their hair gathered into a broad knot on the crown of the head, fastening it by silver bodkins, chains and tassels, which is similar to the architecture of the modern skyscraper. The maidens tie their tresses into a roll and keep it tied just above the nape.


The Singpho uses the Burmese pasto as an undergarment, which is woven from coloured cloth or silk in check pattern. A coloured cotton jacket is worn over the upper portion. The Chiefs tend to wear Shan or Burmese dresses. The Singpho women wear a cloth similar to the Assamese mekhela that is tied at the breast, which reaches to little below the knee. The men occasionally wear small earrings, although the women wear large pieces of amber earstuds on their ears. The men lightly tattooed their limbs, arm and shoulders. At the same time, the married women also tattooed their legs from the ankle to the knee in broad parallel bands which consist of eight bars in alternate black and white. However, the unmarried women are not permitted to tattoo at all. Assam   (Assamese: অসম Ôxôm) is a north eastern state of India with its capital at Dispur, a part of Guwahati. ...


The opium problem

The consumption of opium was a traditional practice among the Singpho, and it can be witnessed that the opium has severely harmed the fertility among the tribesmen. According to the 1950 census, the population of the Singpho tribe has fallen from 50,000 to less than 10,000 in recent years. With the free trade of opium between India and Myanmar since the signing of the Bilateral trade in 1995, extreme abuse of opium have been reported since of 1997, especially in the villages of Pangsun and Kumsai. Cases of selling off their properties for the sake of buying opium was widespread in recent years. Many of these addicts consumed opium by smoking wooden and bamboo pots known as Doba, although injection of needles fed with opium is also used. Most of these addicts take twenty grams, or even higher amounts of opiums. According to one villages, Opium used by the Singpho is supplied by members of the Tangsa tribe living just across the Burmese border. The Tangsa tribe, also known as the Tase, lives in the Tirap and Changlang district of Arunachal Pradesh. ...


The Indian government had also responded to the problem. Of late, they have established laws of jail terms and rehabillation centers for opium addicts. The Singpho National Council also have plans to set up posts to restrict of the opium inflow into India.


External links

  • Kachin National Organization
  • The Kachin of Burma
  • Singpho: Victims of India
  • Art and crafts of the Singpho
  • Ethnologue profile
  • Christianity Overwhelming Buddhism in India's North-East

  Results from FactBites:
 
The Telegraph - Calcutta : Northeast (464 words)
Rajesh Singpho’s restaurant, which is unlike any of the eateries along the National Highway 38, has already become the favourite hangout of diners looking for exotic fare.
The Singphos are scattered across the Patkai range, stretching from Margherita subdivision and Changlang district of Arunachal Pradesh to parts of Myanmar and Yunnan province of China.
The restaurant serves only Singpho delicacies and the ambience is appropriately rustic, though Rajesh reminds everyone that he has not dispensed with any of the basic amenities his patrons expect, “including a back-up generator”.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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