A primitive national policy
The attitude of viewing the 'primitive' and 'tribal' as artefacts continues in the administrative echelons, even if some enlightened social scientists see it another way. As has been seen more than once in India, the attempts at reorienting the tribes' way of living, have been overwhelmingly un-intelligent. Locked up in the jungles of south and middle Andamans, the Jarawas are one of six tribes here who shun modern living. Anthropologists who spent five months between 1998 and 2001 with them found that the Jarawas maintain a lifestyle in total harmony with their environment. Much to their surprise, the researchers learnt that this aboriginal tribe is content with its hunter-gatherer lifestyle.
Though bundled together with 698 other scheduled tribes in the country, the Jarawas by definition are considered 'primitive'. For their distinctive culture, shyness from public exposure, geographical isolation and socio-economic backwardness, Article 342 of the Indian Constitution characterises them as 'primitive'. There are 75 other tribes that are thus considered primitive; together they constitute 2.5 million primitive scheduled tribes-people representing 0.3 percent of the country´s population.