Jenu Kuruba

The Jenu Kuruba are a tribal group from the Nilgiris, numbering around 37000. They are concentrated in the Kodagu and Mysore districts of Karnataka. 'Jenu' means 'honey' in Kannada, referring to their traditional occupation as collectors of honey in the forest. In the early 20th century they lived in huts in the forests and cultivated.[1] Starting from the 1970s and continuing today, many of the Jenu Kurubas have been evicted from their homes due to conservation measures in the various tiger reserves of the Nilgiris, like Nagarhole and Bandipur. Those who have been relocated outside the forest are daily wagers and agricultural labourers, who live in extreme poverty. Many work as labourers on coffee estates in Kodagu or for the Forest Department.[2] They speak the Jenu Kurumba language, either classified as being related to Kodava or a rural dialect of Kannada.[3] The tribals have fought multiple times to live in the reserved forests, most recently in 2020, under the terms of the Forest Rights Act.[4]

Previously their women wore a sari in the style of typical Mysore rural women, and if poor, wore a cloth around the waist and another to partially cover the upper body. The men of the community cut their hair short in the style of a typical cultivator, providing some protection from heat and sun.[1]

References

  1. Thurston, Edgar. (1993). Castes and tribes of Southern India. 4. Asian Educational Services. ISBN 81-206-0291-9. OCLC 734094928.
  2. Girisha (15 July 2020). "Karnataka tribals evicted from Bandipur in the 1970s allege raw deal in relocation". The News Minute. Retrieved 2020-08-06.
  3. Kumar H, Pavan (2019-03-03). "Indigenous dwellers can be evicted only with consent". Deccan Herald. Retrieved 2019-08-20.
  4. Jul 16, Lakshmikantha BK /; 2020; Ist, 04:30. "Aggrieved Jenu Kuruba community members write to PM Modi seeking justice | Mysuru News - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 2020-08-05.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
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