Social Sciences, asked by kaursukhmani72, 11 months ago

why tribal groups in India do not want to become a part of largest society explain

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Answered by Anonymous
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Answer :- Ancestral people groups comprise 8.6 percent of India's aggregate populace, around 104 million individuals as per the 2011 statistics (68 million individuals as per the 1991 evaluation). This is the biggest populace of the innate individuals on the planet. One fixation lives in a belt along the Himalayas extending through Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh in the west, to Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram, Manipur, and Nagaland in the upper east. Another fixation lives in the uneven regions of focal India (Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, and, to a lesser degree, Andhra Pradesh); in this belt, which is limited by the Narmada River toward the north and the Godavari River toward the southeast, innate people groups involve the slants of the locale's mountains. Different tribals, the Santals, live in Bihar and West Bengal. There are littler quantities of innate individuals in Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, and Kerala, in western India in Gujarat and Rajasthan, and in the association domains of Lakshadweep and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands

Answered by hotelcalifornia
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Answer:

Tribal groups in India do not want to become a part of largest society because they have their set habits and they prefer to stay within their comfort areas. In India there are two belts of tribal groups - one from Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh to Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Mizoram, Tripura. And another belt in Madhya Pradesh, Orissa and lower Andhra Pradesh. Then a few in states like Bihar and West Bengal.  These tribes are used to their own life style and they won't adopt any new kind of living. They are living in "more remote areas" where their occupation was mainly farming, livestock breeding, handicraft works etc. So, they don't have much technological facilities to live a life like us.

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