what was the impact of outsiders on the tribals people of India
Answers
Answer:
The so called "tribal belt” embraces central and northeast India, which extends across the center of India from Pakistan in the west to Bangladesh and Myanmar in the east. The belt is home to 81 million indigenous people, whose ancestors may have inhabited India before Aryan invaders, the ancestors of Hindus, arrived around 1500 B.C.
The tribal belt is one of India's most impoverished regions. Many tribals traditionally lived off the forest. But the forest are shrinking and they have been forced to try and cultivate fields. But where they live land is often in short supply and not enough to go around. In some cases tribals are prevented from chopping trees here and there while loggers and miners work illegally or bribe politicians to gain access to resourcess.
Details about the demography of India’s tribal people are lacking. Most national census don’t gather information on a tribe by tribe basis. In some cases researchers have to go back to British data collected on the early 1930s and extrapolate from that. While few tribes are in danger of extinction, they are being challenged by the encroachment of other groups on their territory and threats from modernization, Westernization, secularization and Christian missionaries.
Explanation:
the outsider like Britisher make them
wrong use like labour ,and lie down under poverty line .Make them exclude
them from Indian socity