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ID191702
Title ProperTell Them Our Story
Other Title InformationMemories of the Sumi Naga Labour Corps in World War I
LanguageENG
AuthorAchumi, Ilito H
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article recounts the ways in which the Sumi (or Sema) Naga tribes of Northeast India remember their service in Europe during World War I (1914–18). The state records pertaining to the Sumi Naga Labour Corps (SNLC) in the War were destroyed during the Japanese invasion of Kohima in 1944. However, the descendants of the SNLC members have transmitted and preserved their experiences through oral histories and storytelling, leaving a vast repository of cultural histories that weave together structures of wars, politics, violence, and ideas of nations. The article delves into the personal experiences evident in these memories and critiques the silencing of non-literary communities where they find no resonance with written archives, demonstrating that storytelling is pivotal in the transmission of ideas and the prosecution of wars. The scarcity and fragility of Naga memories of events beyond Nagaland raise questions about the relationship between oral and written history.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 46, No.1; Feb 2023: p. 55-70
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol: 46 No 1
Key WordsCollective Memory ;  World War I ;  Colonial Labour Regime ;  Food and Nation ;  Naga Labour Corps (NLC) ;  Primitive Component in Indian Labour Corps (ILC) ;  Sumi Naga Labour Corps (SNLC)


 
 
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