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Language, Landscape and Our World of Many Worlds

Language, Landscape and Our World of Many Worlds

A view of Svalbard from Earth orbit. Photo: Google Earth.

“In our faith there is no heaven or hell,” spoke Mayalmit Lepcha in the Janata Parliament – an Indian people’s parliament which happened online this year, on account of COVID-19. Her network is spotty. She’s in the mountains. I listen hard and try to piece together what she’s saying. Mayalmit is from the Lepcha tribe in North Sikkim, and she is among the people on the ground fighting the Teesta dam project in her state. In the virtual parliament she explains how the successive damming of her community’s waterways has displaced her people and decimated her forests.

I wrote to Mayalmit later, telling her that I was awestruck by the story she narrated about her culture, but couldn’t quite catch it fully. She completes it over email to me – “all the rivers, mountains and lakes are very sacred for Lepchas. We worship and believe that the river Rongyoung (a tributary of Teesta river) is most sacred among the rivers of Sikkim. Lepcha believe that after they die their soul travels back to Poomzoo Lyang through Rongyoung river, to the foothills of Khangchendzonga”.

I spent the next week finding and reading up all I could about Lepcha culture. I was deeply captivated by how the tribe’s spirituality braided with their land’s ecology and geography. I began seeing Mayalmit and her community’s protests in a different light now. They were not campaigning for the rivers and forests just as such. It was a fight for their identity, sacrality, themselves.

In Lepcha folklore, the stormy tumultuous love between the rivers Rongyoung and Rangeet culminates in their uniting as Teesta (Teeth-Sutha), Sikkim’s life-giving river. Their genesis story is not an abstracted one, happening somewhere in an unearthly heaven. In their genesis, among many passed down versions of it, Itbumu ‘The great mother’ created the first Lepcha man and woman with pure snow from Mt. Khangchendzonga. After death, they believe that their souls traverse their rivers upstream and go to rest in the mountain again. Being an outsider to their tribe, I can’t help note how their cultural life-cycle seems so alike to the hydrological cycle here – invoking the transformations between mountain, river, snow and life. Lepcha culture is rich with mountainous and riverine references. Tsun is to meet or join, to be confluent as rivers (a-tsun is river confluence). Un-ti is to swell or increase like river. Kyok is to be curved like river.

Here is a Lepcha blessing:

Ado bryan run-nyo run-nyit su-re zon ma-ta-o.

(May your name be celebrated as the rivers Rongyoung and Rangeet).

A view of Mt Khangchendzonga from Pelling, Sikkim. Photo: shankaronline/Flickr, CC BY 2.0

In 2012 a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences made a profound finding. Written by L.J. Gorenflo and colleagues, it was called the ‘Co-occurrence of linguistic and biological diversity in biodiversity hotspots and high wilderness areas’. It surmised one simple fact – that wherever in the world biodiversity was high, linguistic and cultural diversity were also high, and vice versa. The world’s biodiversity hotspots were also the most linguistically diverse places. The richness of language and the richness of life everywhere on Earth, were deeply synonymous in their own complex ways. Some subsequent literature suggested that the same climatic and environmental factors influence both. In other places, life and language share wondrous reciprocities and direct mutual relationships.

Debra Utacia Krol, a journalist from the Xolon Salinan tribe in Central America, has written about how the Honu, or the green sea turtle in Hawaiian, made an extraordinary comeback in the 1980s after its massive decline on the Hawaiian coasts. This was after the local Hawaiian language was revived back into schools, following a law banning it being repealed. The turtle’s totemic role and location in people’s cultural imagination was held together in the semantic bonds of their mother tongue. When it came back into schools and the lives of people, it fuelled extraordinary conservation efforts. Around the world there are several such stories of the co-extinction of life and language, though at the same time stories of co-resurrection as well. And surely there are many more to be discovered.

Are languages then just a collection of words, syntax and semantics? I’d like to sometimes see them as seeds and sometimes as fields – alive as the minds, tongues, throats, bodies, and air they pass through; germinating, growing roots, bearing fruit, evolving like beings. But also holding space, expanding out like a unique land of perception. A non-physical geography hosting human and non-human drama. A living medium, a speech-scape.

In Mithu and Midu, the dialects of the Idu Mishmi tribe of Dibang Valley, Arunachal Pradesh, almost every aspect of their landscape is animate and exercises agency. Khinu is the word for spirits in Idu speech. The Khinu of the river is Beka, the Khinu of the hills is Golo; Khe-pa – of deep gorges; Asha – of large trees; Apu-mishu – of land; Epa-saya, of forest; and so on. Spirits slip our objectification, elude materiality, escape intellect. But the Mishmi include this otherness of their landscape, their world, in their everyday speech. Practices, ceremonies, and rituals unique here exist to appease, acknowledge, and constantly recognise this beyond-human participation.

Further North, at the foothills of Sagarmatha (Mt Everest) in Nepal live the Sunuwari people who are known for their phenomenal ethno-botanical knowledge in the Himalaya. In their faith, bamboo is a psychological being, among other vegetation and lifeforms. It is animate whether a plant or an object and has an androgynous gender. The Sunuwari tribe’s word for bamboo is Lawa, but it is also the word for the shamanic faculty to ‘tunnel’ between worlds – the physical and the spiritual, the living and the ancestral. They predominantly follow ancestral worship, and Bamboo for them is conduit, is bridge in the material, metaphoric and spiritual senses. It is cultivated and used for construction, craft, irrigation channels, utensils, etc. It is also part of all the rituals performed by the Naso (Shamans of the tribe, who can be male – poinbo, or female – ngyami).

Different species and different structures of Bamboo facilitate different interactions between the living and the ‘other’ world. The Laga or the household altar is a cupboard-like bamboo construction, which acts like a window for prayer to the ancestors of the family. The Chandi, a large community altar made of bamboo, serves as a doorway to the mother goddess. It is the centre of many rituals and celebrations around sustaining plant growth and the solidarity of the village community. In death, a dulshi (a bamboo bier) carries the person and accompanies them into the grave. It is believed to be a crucial vehicle which takes the soul to the ancestral realm.

I am interested in the power of words and language to protect, vividify, dignify life, people and ecologies. Though language-systems have also been historically necessary in dividing, degrading, manipulating and suppressing. The epistemology of caste in India for instance has been carried and kept alive in words and text for the past two and a half millennia. Social constructs of the kind which dehumanise and discriminate are embedded and carried in languages, by way of which can seep deep into our consciousness.

And I am also interested in the power of words in a magical sense, if one may put it that way, partly defining magic as the capacity to enter new realms of perception, to open other worlds, expand our emotional, sensual and intellectual realms. To think of it – words for us span the height of the sky, depth of the ocean. So many processes, phenomena which are real, but which can never be experienced in a certain way, language helps the mind extrapolate and bring almost into our corporeal reality. Feelings of kindness and love for instance – for another person, for another life. There is no way I can know what it means to be a tree, or even another human being.A vocabulary which draws from and feeds into this felt experience, makes the inner landscape of even a different entity acquire a clarity and depth within oneself. As a wise wizard in the Harry Potter series said, “Words are, in my not so humble opinion, our most inexhaustible source of magic”.

The sense of time too can be said to be a mental extrapolation. It is difficult to think about time without its associated lexicon and the use of tenses. One of my favourite sci-fi movies is Arrival, wherein the benign aliens which come to Earth speak a circular language which the linguist – the protagonist of the movie – slowly begins to learn. This lets her simultaneously experience the past, present and future. Sometimes, the unique taste of temporality for a community can also be ecologically and culturally emplaced. For instance, in the fishing communities of Gomso bay, South Korea, time is deeply tidal. Most clocks and calendars around the world follow the luni-solar movements. But the days of the Gomso fisherfolk have alternate names describing daily tidal changes, and their calendar follows a ’15 day cycle’ – a Multtae system – tide time – stretching between a neap tide (jogeum) and spring tide (sari). They live and plan in spans and shoreline-rhythms of six hours, 12 hours, 24 hours and 50 minutes. Their thought, language and temporality are profoundly littoral.

The pre-eminent British nature-writer Robert Macfarlane calls language a ‘geological force’. And in corollary to this, land and its influence can be said to birth language in its image. It continually parturates a vision, a field of perception, cognition – which perhaps can hold the way a place wants itself to be seen and belonged to. In her essay, The Landscape Glossary, photographer Arati Kumar Rao quotes a shepherd in the Thar desert describing his mother tongue to her: “Yeh drishya ka roop hai, bhasha nahi” (‘This is the land’s manifestation, not a language.’)

Language in the way we’ve come to define and experience it is considered a uniquely human capacity. Perhaps it’s a bit more than that too. Maybe it’s a unique ecological bonding shared between humankind and the planet. Not an isolated capacity of a species, but a relationship. We find ways of speaking through the environment but places, environments too find ways of speaking through us.

In March of 2019, at the Songlines Farm-School (which I am part of running), the grade nine children went out into the Vellaputhur village, Kanchipuram, Tamil Nadu, where our campus is located. Over two days, children in small groups walked, interacted and interviewed the people of the village – farmers, teachers, panchayat members, elders, livestock-keepers, householders and so on. We learnt a great deal about the village and its community and forged new bonds with our surroundings. One old woman told us the story of the village’s name. Vellai in Tamil is ‘white’ and Putthu is ‘termite mound’. “Many decades ago, we couldn’t even dry our clothes on bare ground here. Termites would finish them off,” she told us. “We kept boiled rice in the four corners of our hut to feed them.” Each temple in the village, most of them in worship of the goddess Amman, had a termite hill inside it. Or rather, temples were built incorporating termitaries.

The tank near the centre of the village was called a Poigai. It was the word for a waterbody with lotuses, lilies and general aesthetic beauty. Women lined up on its steps in the mornings with bright plastic drums to draw water. Cattle were herded here for drinking in the afternoons. Sengai on the other hand was a waterbody which received lot of sediment run-off and had its surface covered with duckweed. Here are some more words for waterbodies in common use from this part of Tamil Nadu, a region where farmer communities have a long tradition of water conservation and management systems:

* Pongukinaru – Well fed by a bubbling spring.

* Theppakkulam – Temple tank with a paved path along the parapet.

* Sunai – a natural pool in the mountain.

* Kundu – large natural pool used for bathing.

* Eri – a manmade lake as a catchment for rainwater and irrigation, defined by a bund on three sides and one side open for catchment.

* Aazhikkinaru – A freshwater spring or well occurring near the seashore

* Ooruni – tank for drinking water

* Kumizhi – a rock-cut well fed by a spring

Traveling a few hundred miles northeast from Tamil Nadu, one reaches Karnataka. We are no longer in the plains. The terrain is pleated deeply by the Western Ghats and its wet rainforests. In the Kisamwar glossary, Ullal Narasinga Rao documents a Kannada lexis from various subjects and dialects. Here are some words for rain in Kannada, a language in which many cosmic events are synonymous to periods of rain for people to augur its nature from the night sky:

* Bedar – a short and impetuous rain.

* Ma-le – rain.

* Anekallu – hail.

* Adda – heavy rain.

* Kall – hail storm.

* Jadi – a continued shower.

* Tunturu – drizzle.

* Sone – gentle, light rain.

* Honcu – an unexpected shower.

* Hada – sufficient rains to render the earth fit for sowing.

* Himaka – sleet.

Some cosmic terms:

* Mrigasira – rain from June 5 to 18, marking the advent of the southwest monsoon (also the star Pollux and its zenith period).

* Ardra – rain from June 19 to July 2, marking the outburst of the southwest monsoon (also the star Betelgeuse and its zenith period).

* Pushya – rain from July 17 to 30, when gram and mango is sown; showers which awaken pests (also the star delta Centauri and its zenith period).

Paddy farmers in the field, in Gingee, Tamil Nadu, December 2018. Photo: rajeevrajagopalan/Flickr, CC BY 2.0

In a geographically distant continent, but in an interesting likeness to the Lepcha, Mishmi and the farmers of Tamil Nadu, several Australian aboriginal languages are profoundly ‘geo-centric’. In the Guugu Yimithirr language spoken by the indigenous people of North Queensland, there are no words for ‘left’ and ‘right’ which are ‘self-centric’ so to speak. It purely uses cardinal directions (Gungga, Jiba, Naga and Guwa – approximately north, south, east and west but slightly shifted in orientation of their seasonal winds). Their Origo (frame of reference) is Earth in all their communication. Cardinal directions are one of the first things Aboriginal children learn. And very early, their powers of navigation, spatial memory and awareness are known to be exceptional, as is their feeling of belonging to the land, empathy and kinship for other life.

In my sessions with younger children at my school, I try to replicate this aboriginal philosophy. We do a handful of activities which require orienting to cardinal directions. One such game which children do surprisingly well at is to be blindfolded and guided around the classroom or part of the campus by a friend using cardinal directions alone. Before this, they spend time calibrating themselves – to the sounds, smells and patterns of light coming from different directions which may guide them in the absence of vision.

These ways of speaking within these communities carry not just words but values, metaphors, knowledge and ways of seeing. They carry stories, and in the words of the Nigerian poet Ben Okri, “stories are the secret reservoir of values; change the stories that individuals or nations live by and you can change the individuals and nations themselves”. One relevant exemplar for Okri’s statement are the Anansi folktales originating from the Asante people in Africa. Anansi is a trickster-spider and folk-hero. A serial rule-breaker, an arachnid unconfined by social norms and a master of language and wordplay – which he uses to get the better of his adversaries. Through the Atlantic slave trade, starting in the 16th century, when Europeans shipped millions of Africans to Jamaica to make them labour in plantations, Anansi tales travelled with the people. They morphed in their tellings to include the realities of bondage and captivity. Anansi and his adventures inspired acts of resistance by the African people to weaken the structures of domination in these plantocracies. The spider became a symbol of dissent, metaphor for insubordination and a way to remember homeland.

The meshwork of these various subliminal parts of speech is in some ways inseparable from its place, and no longer the same when separated. To borrow David Abram’s words – “the local Earth is for them, the very matrix of discursive meaning; to force them from their native ecology is to render them speechless – or to render their speech meaningless”. Language is at the confluence of a region’s collective mindscape and landscape. And so it always carries in it, affirms and conveys an ecological identity of some form of the people who speak it, as strongly as and braided with a social and cultural one.

I remember the words of Lado Sikaka, a leader of the Dongria Kondh tribe in Odisha. In a speech campaigning against the mining giant Vedanta in the Niyamgiri hills, Lado says “to kill the mountain is to kill us”. More notably, his words, even when translated from Kui, never rove a distinction between the mountains and his people. All of them were one life – an ontology quite despicable and dead to a corporate mining company to whom the hills were ‘bauxite’, ‘raw material’, ‘growth potential’ and other posh terms for plunder. In a recent panel discussion, I happened to listen to the amazing young Adivasi activist Archana Soreng. She spoke about the Khadia tribe to which she belonged, and how different surnames of different clans meant rock, river, plants, birds and other denizens of her land, forming the identities of her people.

Arne Naess wrote about the Lapps community of Norway when they spoke in court under the charge of ‘illegal’ demonstrations, at a dam being built on their river. To the court’s perplexity, the people asserted that the river in question ‘was’ themselves. A spiritual oneness with the river was their lived reality.

Language, consciousness and place share a mysterious relationship in the human mind, rooting, growing, merging into one another in strange and little understood ways. Words can change the breadth of our sensorium and experience, sometimes just as strongly as sensory perception nourishes what we speak and describe. The hundreds upon hundreds of Kigo words (season words) in traditional Japanese poetry forms is something which comes to mind here. They evoke each season and its manifestations, natural and human responses to it and the inner experiences associated with them in such granularity, filling the passing days of the year with wonder and a keenness of being.

The great Indian linguist G.N. Devy says that “each language is a complete and unique worldview”. He laments in so much of his writing about how India, a naturally linguistically diverse and plural subcontinent, is becoming a language graveyard in the way states are being divided and how political systems work. Homogenisation, mono-culturing in its numerous forms in human society is one of the greatest violence of our times. Are many worldviews important? Are many ways of seeing and knowing, are many realms of perception needed? When do they not become necessary? And for whom? In another talk Devy tells the fascinating story of how the tribes of the Andaman Islands sensed the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004 well before the event and went to higher ground, though urban society has labelled them as ‘primitive’ tribes. “They have words which allow them to sense the different textures of waves,” he narrates. “They said the ‘ocean is angry with us’ and travelled up the hills in repentance.”

During the great indigenous uprising in Mexico, the Zapatista movement, one of the declarations made by the people was “the world we want is a world in which many worlds fit”. The living Earth is naturally, intrinsically such a place. A magical place. An infinitely vivid and fluid mosaic of ecologies, realities. A world of many worlds.


References

* Charisma K. Lepcha, ‘Religion, Culture and Identity: A Comparative Study on the Lepchas of Dzongu, Kalimpong and Ilam’, North-Eastern Hill University, 2013.

* Pema Wangchuk, Lepchas and their Hydel Protest, Bulletin of Tibetology, 2007.

* G.B. Mainwaring, Dictionary of the Lepcha Language, Berlin, 1898.

* L.J. Gorenflo et al, ‘Co-occurrence of linguistic and biological diversity in biodiversity hotspots and high wilderness areas’, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012.

* Endangered Languages, Endangered Ecologies • The Revelator

* Mridul Chakravorty and Barnali Bezbaruah, Ethics and Practices of Idu Mishmi Community: Igu and the Faith System, Study of Minor tribes in Arunachal Pradesh, 2018.

* Werner M. Egli, The Life and Gender of Bamboo Objects in Sunuwar Culture, East Nepal, Pennsylvania State Univ, 2016.

* Sook Jeong Jo, Tide and Time: Korean Fishermen’s Traditional Knowledge of Multtae in Gomso Bay, 2014.

* Robert Macfarlane, Landmarks, Hamish Hamilton, 2015.

* A Landscape Glossary – Peepli

* The Ecosystem of Learning | Vikalp Sangam

* Nakheeran, Neer Ezhuthu (Tamil), Kadodi, 2020.

* Ullal Narasinga Rao, A Kisamwar Glossary of Kannada Words, Asian Educational Services, 1985.

* John B. Haviland, Guugu Yimithirr and Cardinal Directions, Ethos, March 1998.

* Ben Okri, The Famished Road, Anchor, 1993.

* Emily Zobel Marshall, Liminal Anansi: Symbol of Order and Chaos An Exploration of Anansi’s Roots amongst the Asante of Ghana, Caribbean Quarterly, 2007.

* David Abram, Spell of the Sensuous, Penguin, 1996.

* (5) Dongria Kondh Leader Lado Sikaka – YouTube

* (5) Climate Change, Infrastructure and Adivasi Knowledge: Perspectives from India (25 Nov 2020) Part 1 – YouTube

* Arne Naess, Ecology of Wisdom, Penguin, 2008.

* Haruo Shirane, Japan and the Culture of the Four Seasons, Rethinking Nature in Japan, Edizioni, 2017.

* G.N. Devy, After Amnesia, Orient Blackswan, 1993.

* (5) Algebra: GN Devy – YouTube

This essay was first published by Vikalp Sangam and has been republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

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