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By Simply Existing, The Sentinelese Tribe Is Holding Up A Mirror To Civilized Society

The Sentinelese, who rarely make news owing to their primitive and fiercely reclusive nature, made headlines after they killed a missionary. The missionary, as per reports, was planning to establish contact with the tribe and learn their language with the intention to proselytize them.

After reading the news, many of us might have felt, “how insane… by refusing to mingle with the outside world they lost an opportunity to work in plush offices, enjoy pizzas and burgers, wear branded garments, live in bungalows, drive around in cars and indulge in selfies and social media clicks.”

True, they missed out on all these things. But to this primitive tribe, these things have barely any value. In fact, some expeditions were even made to establish contact with them by luring them with material things, but they did not accept any of them.

For them a life lived in harmony with nature is paramount. The aerial view of their island, which looks pristine with lush greenery, is testimony to the fact that they are the true children of Mother Nature. They are at least able to breath fresh air, eat natural food and lead a stress-free life that spares them from frequenting hospitals they don’t have. Yet, the way they are confronting outsiders makes it abundantly clear that they are healthy and agile.

And the American missionary who lost his life was trying to take religion to a place where there is absolutely no need of it. The entire episode makes me recall a book I read titled ‘Don’t Sleep, There Are Snakes’ written by Daniel Everett, a missionary linguist who undertook an expedition to the Amazonian rainforest to convert a primitive tribe called Piraha. He went there to learn their language and translate scriptural literature into it so as to convert the tribe.

One day, Everett, to persuade the tribesmen to convert, shared an emotion-laden personal story with them. He told them that his step mother’s suicide made him move towards God, to which the tribesmen, instead of expressing sympathy, said, “She killed herself?  Ha ha ha! How stupid. Pirahas don’t kill themselves.” This made Everett realize the futility of his mission and begin a process of slowly turning into an atheist.

Tribes who are primitive don’t worry about death and the afterlife. And as they don’t worry even about their souls, they don’t seek for souls to be saved. Normally, it can be argued that primitive way of life is more rational than current civilized way of life. The former usually believe in things which they can perceive with their sense organs and don’t waste their time in speculative theology.

As tribal societies are mostly egalitarian, they neither produce powerful ruling classes nor do they follow organized religions with powerful clergy, who aspire to control the society through deception to serve their narrow self-interests.

We, the so called civilized people, until some decades ago, identified each other as belonging to a certain religion, caste, race or nationality. Now, in the 21st century, with the advent of disruptive technologies and globalization, our identities have been further reduced to that of a consumer, a laborer, a devotee, a patient or a voter.

As a consumer, you need to go on a spending spree on various occasions such as Black Friday, Cyber Monday, Big Billion Days Sale, etc. to keep the consumer demand up to promote growth even at the expense of getting trapped in debt.

As laborers, we need to labor under the constant and continuous threat of cost-cutting, automation and offshoring.

As devotees, we are supposed to stay pious and remain loyal followers of religions that sell our souls to the clergy.

As patients, we need to wait outside a physician’s chamber to find an elusive cure for the lifestyle diseases we get after using gadgets that promote sedentary life and consuming gourmet junk food that makes us obese.

And, as voters, we need to stand in serpentine queues with infinite patience and unceasing optimism that one day our politicos will dissociate themselves from their ultra-rich cronies and think about the poor and the ordinary.

Primitive tribal people need not worry about these things as their identity always stays unchallenged and they always remain humane. They don’t need to enter into a class struggle to oppose exploiters, they need not endure consumerism-induced relative deprivation, they don’t have to torment themselves with the feeling that their religion is in danger, and they need not have to live under the shadow of lifestyle diseases such as diabetes and hypertension. Their lives, though under constant threat from various natural forces are mostly blissful in comparison.

Therefore, the rest of humanity must let them live the way they are living. As they continue to exist, they will keep reminding us of the things we lost by enslaving ourselves to the very things we created – money, religion and technology.

This does not mean the humanity should set aside all its achievements and go back to its primitiveness. Things, however, can’t continue moving at the same hectic pace as they are now, simply because it is not sustainable.

No amount of denial can conceal the truth that the threat of climate change is looming large and the prevalence of lifestyle diseases has reached epidemic proportions. So humanity, one day, must give up its greed and adapt itself to sustainable living practices. Until then, these reclusive tribal people, with their frugal but eco-friendly lives, will keep inspiring us to realize these hard truths.

Featured image for representative purpose only.
Image source: Wikimedia Commons.
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