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ID080584
Title ProperReligious and economic reform
Other Title Informationthe gaidinliu movement and the heraka in the North Cachar Hills
LanguageENG
AuthorLongkumer, Arkotong
Publication2007.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Heraka or Gaidinliu Movement among the Zeme Nagas of the North Cachar Hills, Assam, provides a case of millenarian activities based on agrarian reforms. The movement is associated with opposing British rule during the 1930s until India's Independence in 1947 under the guidance of Jadonang and later Gaidinliu. I examine the genesis of the movement which was based on agrarian reform by linking it with the influx of Kuki people and the effect of British land policy on Zeme agricultural practices which caused land shortages and famine. I argue that the Heraka Movement provided an alternative by abolishing certain rituals associated with the agricultural cycle and this in turn changed the social hierarchies and the worldview of the Zeme.
1 This paper was first presented at the 2006 European Conference of Modern South Asian Studies, organised by the European Association for South Asian Studies (EASAS) at Leiden University (Panel 28: Ethnicity and Development: Tribes and Small Peoples of India). I am grateful to Tahulung and Adeule for helping me understand the 'Zeme world'. I am thankful to Paul Streumer, Mohan Gautam, Lindsay Graham, Jeanne Openshaw, Amanda Bowden, Mark Turin, Steven Sutcliffe, Vibha Joshi and Erik de Maaker for their comments and feedback
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 30, No.3; Dec 2007: p499-515
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 30, No.3; Dec 2007: p499-515
Key WordsMillenarianism ;  Rationalisation ;  Reform ;  Cycle Migration ;  Sacrifice