|
Anyone who is more
than casually acquainted with Nepal will be able to
testify that is not that easy to grasp what exactly
constitutes being a Nepali. There are Nepalese whose
features look highly Caucasian while there are others who
would not look out of place among the Eskimos; and in
between are millions whose looks are as indeterminate –
from Japanese to South Indian. It is not only in
physiognomy that the diversity of the Nepali people
becomes evident. It is for reasons far more profound that
Nepal lives up to its appellation of being the
"melting pot of Asia".
Down through history,
Nepal was the meeting point of Asia’s great migrations:
those of the Aryan and of the Mongolian peoples. The two
races move into the Nepali hills mainly from two
directions into the Nepali hills. From the northeast swept
in the Mongolians in their continuous movement down from
the cold grasslands of Mongolia across the breadth of Asia
and into the Subcontinent of South Asia. They moved
steadily westward until they met the other great migration
from the west – Aryans on a march that had begun in the
Central Asian steppes. A diagram showing the population
– majority areas would hence show the two races, wedged
into each other somewhere in Central Nepal, with solid
bulks forming the rear to the east and the west.
This description of course, only
gives a most superficial view of the rich cultural
diversity of the country. For, just as there are so many
different Nepali faces,
there are many traditions that go
a long time back into history – a result of centuries of
internal migration along with still-ongoing arrival of
people from both north and south.
At one level, the
diverse religious beliefs of Nepalese echo this variety in
Nepali life. There are communities whose shamanistic way
of life is no different from those of Mongolian nomads,
while there are others whose scruple in following the Manu
Dharma (the Hindu canon dealing with the Hindu way of
life) would earn them the admiration of even the most
orthodox South Indian Brahmin. Similarly, Buddhists from
the world over come seeking an uncorrupted religion as
practiced for more then a millennium, and there are those
that come to marvel at the syncretism of Buddhism and
Hinduism in the inner cities of Kathmandu Valley.
Besides the so many
religious practices, there is more to Nepal’s claim to a
rich heritage. There is hardly a cultural tradition common
to different parts of the country. Even people from the
same ethnic background, although they share the same
outward characteristics, will have evolved their own
culture depending on where they live.
This is even truer for
languages. Two examples stand out. The northern part of
Nepal bordering Tibet is inhabited by the Bhotia people,
who share many affinities with Tibetan speaker would feel
comfortable using his native tongue in any communities
would be able to communicate with each other, so
differently have the languages developed.
Even more amazing are
the Rais, an ethnic group of the eastern Nepal mid-hills.
The Rais’ traditional homeland is crisscrossed by
rivers, which, in earlier times, effectively, barred
intercourse among them. As a result, 12 different
languages developed. The Rais are, therefore, a community
which, even as it possesses a homogeneity that runs
throughout, cannot communicate within the group without
resorting to the lingua franca, Nepali.
It is all these
differences and varieties that have contributed to the
entity that are a Nepali. Outward differences there may be
many, but there is no underlying strain that is stronger
than that comes of being a Nepali.
Write
to us for further more detail
|